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Introducing Letha Hadady New York media has named Letha Hadady, D. Ac., "the best-known blonde in Chinatown." She makes traditional Chinese medicine easy to understand. She is adjunct faculty for New York Botanical Gardens and Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons. Letha is known to an international audience through her media appearances in the United States as well as abroad on European and Asian CNN and the Armed Forces Radio network. This spring, she appeared on NBC's "Today Show" and FOX's, "Donnie and Marie". She has appeared with Barbara Walters on ABC's "The View" and many news programs. This April, she was featured on German ARTE and Italian and Korean national television. She writes herbal columns for several Internet websites and has been interviewed by webMD.com and barnesandnoble.com. Her international health and beauty private practice includes a growing number of online clients. The San Francisco Chronicle wrote about Letha, "the nation's leading expert on natural Chinese remedies is leading a quiet, lady-like revolution to bring herbal medicines from the Far East and elsewhere into everyday use in American homes." Letha Hadady, D.Ac. stars in ASIAN HEALTH SECRETS, an informative and entertaining Winstar video shot in New York?s Chinatown. Newsday has called Letha ?The best-known blonde in Chinatown.? The Amazon.com?s reviewer wrote: ?Want to take charge of your health naturally? Sit down, relax, and soak up some Asian Heath Secrets with Letha Hadady, ?the Martha Stewart of herbs.? Stroll with her through a Chinese market and see the herbs, teas, and foods that can help common problems from arthritis to high blood pressure, and even aid weight loss and depression safely and gently.? Letha Hadady is the author most recently of PERSONAL RENEWAL (Three Rivers Press). Amazon?s reviewer wrote: ?Letha Hadady extends a wise, helpful hand and walks us through her vast store of alternative-medicine knowledge.? PERSONAL RENEWAL, an enthusiastic One Spirit Book Club selection, has a foreword by Dr. Bernard Jensen, the 91 year old doyen of the American natural health movement. Letha is also the author of ASIAN HEALTH SECRETS: The Complete Guide to Asian Herbal Medicine (Crown 11/96, paperback Three Rivers Press), a Washington Post and One Spirit bestseller. The book has a foreword by H.H. the Dalai Lama. ASIAN HEALTH SECRETS, a modern classic in alternative medicine, has been widely praised as a ?concise, well-written, easily understood explanation of the Asian theories about our health? and dubbed on Amazon.com, ?Chinese medicine for dummier.? Letha recent American television appearances include, FOX?s Donny and Marie; MSG Channel?s Metro Holistic; and WNBC?s Today Show. ARTE in Germany, Radio-Television Italia, and MBC national Korean television all featured Letha?s work alternative medicine this spring. Other guest appearances have included CNN?s, Burden of Proof, ABC?s The View, NBC?s Extra and B. Smith With Style. Letha is the most visible woman specialist and acupuncture expert in the United States. As B. Smith (NBC?s Smith With Style) says, ?Letha makes Chinese medicine easy to use.? Letha has an important popular magazine and internet presence. On March 24 and 29/ 2000 her live interview will be featured by www.webmd.com. Letha?s ASIAN HEALTH SECRETS video will be featured this April on barnesandnoble.com. About Letha Hadady ?She is blonde, busy and windswept.? Joan Rivers ?Letha has a lot of information to share and she looks so young.? Barbara Walters, ?The View? ?Letha Hadady is America?s foremost herbalist? Gary Null ?Letha Hadady is a blessing to those she touches. Her contribution is not only the advice she has to offer; I feel her book is a treasure of knowledge for the personal self.? Dr. Bernard Jensen, foreword to PERSONAL RENEWAL. ?I am confident that this book by Letha Hadady on Asian herbal medicine will bring the ancient knowledge of the great cultures of Asia to a larger public.? H.H. Tenzin Gyatso, the Dalai Lama, foreword to ASIAN HEALTH SECRETS. ?I love Letha?s book! They make Chinese medicine easy to understand.? Barbara Smith, ?B. Smith with Style? Daily News, ?The tall, slender herbalist found her calling after a life-threatening illness? Her encyclopedic knowledge of herbology is evident.? Newsday, L.A. Times syndicate, ?Hadady sees her role as an ambassador between curious Americans, trying to overcome their to overcome their ignorance of alternative medicine, and Chinese herbalists, who are uneasy about opening their customs to the scrutiny of outsiders.? New York Post, ?Letha unearths the wisdom of the ancients.? Newsday, ?the best-known blonde in Chinatown.? The San Francisco Chronicle ?the nation?s leading expert on natural Chinese remedies is leading a quiet, lady-like revolution to bring herbal medicines from the Far East and elsewhere into everyday use in American homes.? |
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