This Week on HearSay, January 8-11
Monday, January 8
New Year, New You Series - Part One
How is that New Year's resolution holding up so far? We kick off our two part series,"New Year, New You" with a visit from author MJ Ryan. Her new book is "THIS YEAR I WILL . . . How to Finally Change a Habit, Keep a Resolution, or Make a Dream Come True". Ryan's book guides you through resolution obstacles and gives you the tools to make personal transformations last. If you're resolution is to make 2007 a healthier one, then have your questions ready for guests Dr. Tom Berenguer, a physician with the Age Management Center in Hampton Roads, and Dr. Terry Lee, associate professor of English at Christopher Newport University, and the author of “A New Path at Midlife: Transformative Relationship & Story for Men."

Tuesday, January 9
HearSay Classic: RAISING CAIN: OUR BOYS AT RISK
They're kinetic, energetic....and failing. Why are our boys at risk in the classroom? On today's HearSay, we examine why education performance is deteriorating for male students and why success is such a challenge. Join Cathy and her guests for a look at the obstacles young men face and what can be done to change the current trends.
www.pbs.org/opb/raisingcain/
www.pbs.org/parents/raisingboys/
www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10965522/site/newsweek/

Wednesday, January 10
Special Programming: Early Signs - Reports from a Warming Planet
The early signs of climate change are showing up across vastly differing landscapes: from melting outposts near the Arctic Circle to disappearing glaciers high in the Andes; from the rising water in the deltas of Bangladesh to the "sinking" atolls of the Pacific. "Reports from a Warming Planet" takes you to parts of the planet where global warming is already making changes to life and landscape, and demonstrates how climate change is no longer restricted to scientific modeling about the future. It's happening now.

Thursday, January 11
HearSay Classic: A Time To Kill?
Two-thirds of Americans support the death penalty for people convicted of murder, but developments in DNA technology and high-profile news stories about wrongful executions have sparked new debate over the public policy issue. In Virginia, capital punishment took center stage in the last Gubernatorial race. We'll examine the politics of death on today's HearSay with guests Deborah Denno, Arthur A. McGivney Professor of Law at Fordham University, Richard Dieter, Executive Director of the Death Penalty Information Center and Attorney Nash Bilisoly.
