In the show's first hour, Mark Dankof discussed the Barry Bonds' record breaking home run of last night, with reference to October of 1962. In October of 1962, Mark Dankof was living on a Air Force Base in Sacramento-during the Cuban Missile Crisis and the San Francisco Giants- New York Yankees World Series won by the Yankees in Game 7, 1-0, when Willie McCovey lined out to Bobby Richardson off of Ralph Terry, with Matty Alou and Willie Mays left stranded on third and second bases. Mark's Air Force colonel father was working for the secretive AFTAC organization in October of 1962, helping the CIA and AEC monitor Soviet missle sites and explosions. After Kennedy's speech on the missiles in Cuba, The Giant loss in the World Series faded in importance for young Mark Dankof-and his own relationship with God, family, and country took on new meaning. Will contemporary America learn the same lesson by ceasing to focus upon Bonds and similar irrelevances, and reorienting its priorities in the wake of a possible 3rd World War? In hours two and three of the show, Anisa Abd el-Fattah, director of the National Association of Muslim American Women (NAMAW) joined Mark Dankof for a political, cultural, and theological conversation.