Radio Daily Schedule
KQED Public Radio: Monday, November 26, 2012
88.5 FM San Francisco • 89.3 FM Sacramento
Schedule is subject to change. Please visit kqed.org/tv/schedules/daily for the most up-to-date info.
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12:00 am
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1:00 am
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1:30 amLatino USA Somos: How American are Puerto Ricans? Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens, but are often made to feel like outsiders. And those residing on the island see their identity differently from those living in the U.S. mainland. The future of the island's political relation to the U.S. is still in question, but many feel their cultural identity as Puerto Rican first.
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2:00 amMarketplace Money Four Years After the Housing Collapse Four years after the U.S. housing market collapse, the ripple effects continue. Marketplace Money has a report on the latest home-buying battle.
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3:00 am
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5:00 amMorning Edition
The California Report 5:50am, 6:50am & 8:50am
KQED News 6am, 6:30am, 7am, 7:30am, 8am, 8:30am, 9am, 10am, 11am, 12pm, 1pm & 4:30pm
Perspectives 6:06am, 7:35am & 11:30pm -
7:00 am
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9:00 amForum Ethics and Medical Research The U.C. Davis School of Medicine's neurological surgery department is the focus of ongoing multiple investigations after two of its doctors experimented on dying cancer patients. Now its dean has announced her resignation. We'll discuss safe and ethical approaches to medical research, and how to balance those with faster access to innovative therapies for the terminally ill.
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10:00 amForum A History of Love (via French Literature) Is French really the language of love? Stanford scholar Marilyn Yalom explores the topic in her latest book "How the French Invented Love." Part memoir and part literary history, Yalom discusses why the French have championed themselves as the ultimate experts in love for centuries, and how they've kept the flames of romance burning to the present day.
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11:00 am
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12:00 pm
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1:00 pm
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2:00 pm
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3:00 pm
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4:00 pmMarketplace WalMart and Labor WalMart. They're known for their low price guarantee. But some say those low prices are leading to sketchy labor practices.
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4:30 pmAll Things Considered
KQED News 4:30pm, 5:04pm, 5:30pm & 6pm
Leadership Change at SEC -- Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC )chairwoman Mary Schapiro is stepping down. She took over the agency in 2009 as it was reeling from criticism over the financial crisis and the Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme. Schapiro is credited as a consensus builder who restored some stability to the SEC. She is being replaced by SEC commissioner Elisse Walter. -
6:30 pmMarketplace WalMart and Labor WalMart. They're known for their low price guarantee. But some say those low prices are leading to sketchy labor practices.
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7:00 pm
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8:00 pmIt's Your World (a broadcast of the World Affairs Council) Our World in 2050: More Equitable and Sustainable - or Less? Helen Clark, administrator for the United Nations Development Program, will consider the impact of growing social inequity and environmental degradation and introduce poverty, inequity and environmental sustainability as inter-linked global challenges. She will also examine how innovative countries and communities are employing integrated approaches to simultaneously address these challenges, linking this to the outcome of the Rio+20 Conference on Sustainable Development.
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9:00 pm
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10:00 pmForum Ethics and Medical Research The U.C. Davis School of Medicine's neurological surgery department is the focus of ongoing multiple investigations after two of its doctors experimented on dying cancer patients. Now its dean has announced her resignation. We'll discuss safe and ethical approaches to medical research, and how to balance those with faster access to innovative therapies for the terminally ill.
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11:00 pmAll Things Considered Leadership Change at SEC Leadership Change at SEC -- Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC )chairwoman Mary Schapiro is stepping down. She took over the agency in 2009 as it was reeling from criticism over the financial crisis and the Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme. Schapiro is credited as a consensus builder who restored some stability to the SEC. She is being replaced by SEC commissioner Elisse Walter.
MORNING
AFTERNOON
EVENING
