The radiatively generated Higgs mass is obtained by requiring that leading divergences are cancelled in both 2D and 4D. This predicts one or more viable modes; the k=1 mode mass is m_Hcong2/3 m_tcong115GeV whereas the k=2 mode is m_Hcong143GeV. These findings are interpreted within the Composite Particles Model (CPM), [Popovic 2002, 2010], with the massive top quark being a composite structure composed of 3 fundamental O quarks (Obar{O}O) and the massive Higgs scalar being a color-neutral meson like structure composed of 2 fundamental O quarks (bar{O}O). The CPM predicts that the Z mass generation is mediated primarily by a top - anti top whereas the Higgs mass is generated primarily by a O - anti O interactions. The relationship [Popovic 2010] between top Yukawa coupling and strong QCD coupling, obtained by requiring that top - anti top channel is neither attractive or repulsive at tree level at surd scongM_Z, defines the Z mass. In addition, this relationship indirectly defines the electroweak symmetry breaking (EWSB) vacuum expectation value (VEV), the CPM Higgs mass and potentially the EWSB scale.