TV Daily Schedule: KQED World
KQED World: Sunday, April 7, 2013
Comcast 190 • Digital 9.3
Schedule is subject to change. Please visit kqed.org/tv/schedules/daily for the most up-to-date info.
-
12:00 amGlobe Trekker [#914] Queensland & The Great Barrier Reef Megan McCormick hangs ten at Surfers' Paradise on the Gold Coast and Noosa in Queensland. She catches the ferry to Fraser Island, the world's largest sandbar and home to a wide assortment of wildlife. Megan then heads to Airlie Beach and boards a yacht for a two-day tour of the Whitsunday Islands, known as the gateway to the Great Barrier Reef. Next she goes diving in Blue Pearl Bay, where she also gets tips for surviving a run-in with crocodiles from the Barefooted Bushman. Megan explores the wreckage of a cargo ship in the Magnetic Islands, learns all about coral in Cairns, meets a pearl diver on Thursday Island, hunts for wild boar on Cape York Peninsula and finally experiences the beauty of Lizard Island and Cod Hole at the very tip of the Australian continent. duration 57:30 STEREO TVG (Secondary audio: DVI)
-
1:00 amTHIS WEEK in Northern California [#2142] * Interview with Senator Barbara Boxer - US Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) discusses California's economy and her upcoming race against Republican and former Hewlett-Packard CEO, Carly Fiorina.
* News Panel - It's a delayed victory for Prop. 8 opponents as the stay on same-sex marriages is lifted, beginning August 18; Google and Verizon join forces on a proposal that could threaten equal access to the internet; and Native American tribes in California consider renewable energy farms as an alternative to casinos.
Guests: Jesse McKinley, San Francisco Bureau Chief, New York Times; David Spark, Reporter, Socialmedia.biz; Amy Standen, Reporter, KQED's Quest series. duration 26:46 STEREO TVRE -
1:30 amBold Visions: Women In Science and Technology Glimpses into the lives of extraordinary women working in the fields of science and technology: a research scientist searching for genetic causes of diseases, an astronaut applying her engineering expertise in space and a results-driven technologist responsible for numerous patents. Their exciting and collaborative work not only improves the quality of lives around the world but underscores the need for the United States to nurture its home-grown female talent in these male-dominated fields. During the documentary, Academy Award-winning actor Marcia Gay Harden (Pollack)and CSI: NY star Melina Kanakaredes recall the science-related experiences of their youth, discuss the impact of teachers on their lives and speak about the desire for their daughters to remain open to careers in the fields of math and science. In addition, high-school girls from an engineering program in southern Texas built a wind turbine to generate electricity for lights at a community center. duration 26:46 STEREO TVG
-
2:00 amGlobe Trekker [#905] Indonesia: Java & Sumatra Megan McCormick explores two of the 11,000 islands in the Indonesian archipelago. Starting in Jakarta, she learns about shadow puppets, Java's most famous art form, and visits the old Dutch trading schooners. From there she climbs the famous Krakatoa volcano and goes diving in the waters nearby. After visiting the world-famous Boroubudur Temple, Megan travels to Sumatra, learning the ancient art of batik from the people who invented it. She visits the island of Nias, home to ancient Stone-Age culture and some of the best surfing in the world. She ends her trip in the orangutan preserve of Gunung Lenser Park. duration 49:44 STEREO TVG (Secondary audio: DVI)
-
3:00 amHawaiian Monk Seals: Surviving Paradise A string of tiny atolls and islands, almost 1,000 kilometers from civilization, the northwest Hawaiian Islands are a refuge for nearly 30 species of seas birds, endangered green seas turtles and a living fossil: the Hawaiian monk seal. Once sheltered in the clear waters of remote atolls, this oldest living seal is now on the brink of extinction. duration 56:46 STEREO TVPG
-
4:00 amCurious [#102] Mind Brain Machine Neuroscientists are studying the "science of consciousness" to discover the networks where conscious thoughts and sensations originate. This program introduces Tony Grobmeier, who was born without a corpus callosum, the structure that connects the two interdependent halves of our brains: language and linear thinking on the left, emotion and visual perception on the right. Neuroscientists are trying to understand the ways this relatively rare congenital condition affects the brain. They've observed that people without a corpus callosum have brains wired in completely unique ways. When it comes to human nature, what does "normal" mean, anyway? This is just one of the provocative questions posed in this segment.
Another segment takes viewers to the FlyLab at Caltech. Here, Michael Dickinson and his graduate students are researching the brain and its complex collection of neurons with help from Drosophila Melanogaster - a.k.a. the fruit fly. What they learn from this extraordinarily robust and dexterous biological flying machine might one day be used to build better robots and other machines, including safer airplanes. Though their brains are the size of a poppy seed with 300,000 times less gray matter than ours, flies squeeze a lot more performance out of each neuron than humans do. Always reverent of their subject matter, but with charm and humor to spare, the young researchers work with the lab's "Fly-o-rama" - a virtual reality environment where flies play for hours - and other devices, giving viewers a new respect for the humble fly and a new way of thinking about our brains.
Moral, social and economic decisions all happen at the level of the individual neuron, the brain's most basic unit. This segment goes inside the human brain, revealing what is essentially a huge number-cruncher that assigns a numeric value to everything from a loaf of bread to our most deeply held values. Do the emotional parts of the brain do battle with areas that control reason? How do these conflicts result in feelings and decisions? To answer these questions, scientists are attempting to catch the brain in the act of decision making using an fMRI, a heavy-duty but non-evasive method of brain scanning that is revolutionizing our understanding of the science of decision making. The program illustrates conflicts and ethical dilemmas involved in decision making by proposing theoretical scenarios. One example uses a train racing toward a group of track workers to ask whether people would make the decision to sacrifice one life in order to save four others.
The researchers aren't the only interesting characters in this program. This segment also features a fascinating cast of robots, including NASA veterans like the aging but able Mars Exploration Rover and youngsters like the tool-wielding A.T.H.L.E.T.E. (All Terrain Hex-Limbed Extra-Terrestrial Explorer). Can things we're learning about the brain be applied to robots? Will it ever be possible to create a machine that can see, learn and make decisions? Some scientists predict robots will ultimately surpass humans in intelligence, leading to prickly ethical conundrums. duration 56:46 STEREO TVG -
5:00 amSecrets of the Dead [#505] Umbrella Assassin At the height of the Cold War, the KGB used one of the most ingenious and unobtrusive weapons to murder an outspoken Bulgarian dissident. The program investigates the cloak and dagger world of Cold War espionage and political intrigue, and examines newly discovered evidence that may reveal just how the umbrella gun actually worked, and who pulled the trigger. duration 56:46 STEREO TVPG (Secondary audio: DVI)
-
6:00 amNeed To Know [#115] CHICAGO VIOLENCE - In the past two years, more than 500 young people under the age of 25 have died in Chicago. NtK travels to some of Chicago's most dangerous neighborhoods to explore both what is at the root of the violence and what is being done to combat it.
INTERVIEW: RICK KARR - Google and Verizon announced this week that they had come up with a possible solution to the issue of net neutrality. Public interest groups fear that this is an insider deal between Silicon Valley and the telecommunications industry that could trample the free flow of information and make the Internet "pay for play". NtK Correspondent Rick Karr provides a primer on net neutrality and how this issue may shape the future of the internet. < br />CARL HIAASEN - Alison Stewart interviews author and Miami Herald political columnist Carl Hiaasen about his new book Star Island.
ESSAY: THE 14TH AMENDMENT - Jon Meacham provides an on-air essay about the debate over the 14th Amendment.
note: late-breaking news developments may change this line-up. duration 56:46 STEREO TVRE -
7:00 amBold Visions: Women In Science and Technology Glimpses into the lives of extraordinary women working in the fields of science and technology: a research scientist searching for genetic causes of diseases, an astronaut applying her engineering expertise in space and a results-driven technologist responsible for numerous patents. Their exciting and collaborative work not only improves the quality of lives around the world but underscores the need for the United States to nurture its home-grown female talent in these male-dominated fields. During the documentary, Academy Award-winning actor Marcia Gay Harden (Pollack)and CSI: NY star Melina Kanakaredes recall the science-related experiences of their youth, discuss the impact of teachers on their lives and speak about the desire for their daughters to remain open to careers in the fields of math and science. In addition, high-school girls from an engineering program in southern Texas built a wind turbine to generate electricity for lights at a community center. duration 26:46 STEREO TVG
-
7:30 amGlobal 3000 [#232] Implications of a Growing Meat-Eating World KICKING THEIR WAY OUT OF POVERTY, How a Project has Given Kids a New Look into the Future - Crime, drug addiction, AIDS, and prostitution are facts of life in the Mathare slums in Kenya's capital, Nairobi. Hundreds of thousands of people live here in the most deprived of conditions.
THREATENED DIVERSITY, How Sustainable Tourism Can Protect the Rainforest - The Amazon basin is home to trees, water and scores and scores of rare animals and plants. It is also the location of an enormous oil reserve. Decades of exploitation have devastated large parts of the rain forest, but up to now, Yasuni National Park in eastern Ecuador has been spared.
MEAT CONSUMPTION WORLDWIDE - Though meat consumption in the industrialized world has been on the decline for years, consumption is increasing globally.
LIVING FREIGHT, Why Animals Have to Endure Lengthy Transport Times - Animals are treated like any other agricultural product. They are carted from point A to point B to suit merchants' preferences. duration 26:25 STEREO TVG -
8:00 amWorld Business [#1025] No Smoke Without Fire - Nick Mackie COVER STORY: NO SMOKE WITHOUT FIRE - Tobacco is one of China's most powerful state monopolies. The industry provides 8% of the country's tax take and invests heavily in rural roads and reservoirs. But the business also kills over a million Chinese people every year.
BEES BUZZ OFF - The drone of honeybees is one of the classic sounds of summer, but over recent years it has been a sound we have been hearing less and less. Across the world bee populations have been in rapid decline. This isn't just a problem for honey lovers; it could have disastrous economic implications for us all.
IT'S A SMALL WORLD - Many modern buildings in cities started life as intricate models; models that take thousands of man hours to build and despite their small size can cost staggering amounts of money. But this business, much like its bigger brother construction, has had to scale down in the downturn.
EDUCATION ENTREPRENEURS - These days the word 'entrepreneur' usually conjures up images of tech start ups and small businesses. However in the USA, a new type of entrepreneur has arisen over the past decade whose goal is to transform an ailing education system.
THE GLORIOUS TWELFTH - This week thousands of people made the trek to the moors of Scotland and Northern England for the start of the grouse shooting season. We don't know how this season will shape up yet, but last year we took a trip north to find out the impact of this sport on the rural economy. duration 26:46 STEREO TVG -
8:30 amConsuelo Mack WealthTrack [#707] Financial Thought Leaders: David Rosenberg This week, a Financial Thought Leader who called the credit and housing bubbles way ahead of the pack. Gluskin Sheff's prescient Chief Economist, David Rosenberg, shares his economic and market outlook, plus advice on how to invest in it. duration 26:46 STEREO TVRE
-
9:00 amMoneyTrack [#304] At Work- Your 401k One of the best ways to take the emotions out of your investment decisions is by investing in your 401k. This nuts and bolts explainer piece makes sure you take advantage of the best retirement plan available to you. duration 26:46 STEREO TVG (Secondary audio: DVI)
-
9:30 amInside Washington [#2217] 1. Wall Street chokes on fears of a double dip recession and other grim economic news.
2. The House approves a $26 billion spending bill for cash-strapped states. Republicans say we can't afford it.
3. Democrats take heart from primary election results.
4. The Secretary of Defense announces major belt-tightening at the Pentagon as the American troop commitment in Iraq winds down.
5. Ted Stevens and Dan Rostenkowski, two old congressional lions whose careers were scarred by corruption charges, meet their final reward. Meanwhile, Charley Rangel fights to hang on in the face of corruption charges of his own. duration 26:46 TVRE -
10:00 amMcLaughlin Group [#2833] Rep. Charlie Rangel Fights Back James Pethokoukis, Thomson Reuters; Monica Crowley, Washington Times; Eleanor Clift, Newsweek; Bill Press, The Bill Press Show. duration 27:30 TVRE
-
10:30 amWashington Week [#5007] * There were just a handful of primary election races this week, but reading the tea leaves from results in Colorado, Connecticut and Georgia proved to be fascinating. The storylines included a Democratic Senate primary in Colorado where one candidate was backed by President Obama while the other has the support of former President Bill Clinton. On the Republican side, it was an establishment GOP candidate losing to a Tea Party backed candidate. In Georgia, endorsements were also front and center in the Governor's race where Sarah Palin and Mitt Romney supported one candidate and Mike Huckabee and Newt Gingrich supported another. Plus, the founder of the WWE wrestling empire won the GOP nomination for the Senate in Connecticut. We'll have detailed analysis from Dan Balz of The Washington Post and Charles Babington of the Associated Press.
*As the draw-down continues in Iraq and the fighting intensifies in Afghanistan, Defense Secretary Robert Gates took a step this week to cut Pentagon spending by proposing the elimination of a $700 million command center in Virginia and cutting back significantly in the use of contractors by the DOD. The rise in defense spending in the past decade has come under intense scrutiny by Congress during the economic downturn. Nancy Youssef of McClatchy Newspapers, who has reported extensively from both war zones will have details on the impact of the Gates' proposals and whether it might be more symbolic than significant.
* Finally, Todd Purdum of Vanity Fair will join us around the table following his extensive take-out on the way government works and whether the whole system may be broken. It has much of official Washington buzzing! duration 26:46 STEREO TVRE -
11:00 amTHIS WEEK in Northern California [#2142] * Interview with Senator Barbara Boxer - US Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) discusses California's economy and her upcoming race against Republican and former Hewlett-Packard CEO, Carly Fiorina.
* News Panel - It's a delayed victory for Prop. 8 opponents as the stay on same-sex marriages is lifted, beginning August 18; Google and Verizon join forces on a proposal that could threaten equal access to the internet; and Native American tribes in California consider renewable energy farms as an alternative to casinos.
Guests: Jesse McKinley, San Francisco Bureau Chief, New York Times; David Spark, Reporter, Socialmedia.biz; Amy Standen, Reporter, KQED's Quest series. duration 26:46 STEREO TVRE -
11:30 amBBC Newsnight [#113226] duration 28:46 STEREO TVRE
-
12:00 pmBold Visions: Women In Science and Technology Glimpses into the lives of extraordinary women working in the fields of science and technology: a research scientist searching for genetic causes of diseases, an astronaut applying her engineering expertise in space and a results-driven technologist responsible for numerous patents. Their exciting and collaborative work not only improves the quality of lives around the world but underscores the need for the United States to nurture its home-grown female talent in these male-dominated fields. During the documentary, Academy Award-winning actor Marcia Gay Harden (Pollack)and CSI: NY star Melina Kanakaredes recall the science-related experiences of their youth, discuss the impact of teachers on their lives and speak about the desire for their daughters to remain open to careers in the fields of math and science. In addition, high-school girls from an engineering program in southern Texas built a wind turbine to generate electricity for lights at a community center. duration 26:46 STEREO TVG
-
12:30 pmInside Washington [#2217] 1. Wall Street chokes on fears of a double dip recession and other grim economic news.
2. The House approves a $26 billion spending bill for cash-strapped states. Republicans say we can't afford it.
3. Democrats take heart from primary election results.
4. The Secretary of Defense announces major belt-tightening at the Pentagon as the American troop commitment in Iraq winds down.
5. Ted Stevens and Dan Rostenkowski, two old congressional lions whose careers were scarred by corruption charges, meet their final reward. Meanwhile, Charley Rangel fights to hang on in the face of corruption charges of his own. duration 26:46 TVRE -
1:00 pmMcLaughlin Group [#2833] Rep. Charlie Rangel Fights Back James Pethokoukis, Thomson Reuters; Monica Crowley, Washington Times; Eleanor Clift, Newsweek; Bill Press, The Bill Press Show. duration 27:30 TVRE
-
1:30 pmJohn McLaughlin's One on One [#2611] duration 27:30 TVG
-
2:00 pmTo The Contrary with Bonnie Erbe [#1923] RICH WOMEN RUNNING: A look at female self-funded candidates, California gubernatorial candidate Meg Whitman and Connecticut US Senatorial candidate Linda McMahon, who are breaking spending records on their political campaigns.
GOODBYE GIRLHOOD: The span of time between childhood and womanhood is slowing shrinking as a new study finds American girls are entering puberty sooner than past generations.
LOSING OUR RELIGION: Conservative atheist and author S.E. Cupp worries Christianity is under attack in America.
Panelists: Rep. Donna Edwards (D-MD); Independent Women's Voices' Sabrina Schaeffer; National Council of Negro Women's Dr. Avis Jones-DeWeever; and Independent Women's Forum's Nicole Kurakowa. duration 26:46 STEREO TVRE -
2:30 pmBold Visions: Women In Science and Technology Glimpses into the lives of extraordinary women working in the fields of science and technology: a research scientist searching for genetic causes of diseases, an astronaut applying her engineering expertise in space and a results-driven technologist responsible for numerous patents. Their exciting and collaborative work not only improves the quality of lives around the world but underscores the need for the United States to nurture its home-grown female talent in these male-dominated fields. During the documentary, Academy Award-winning actor Marcia Gay Harden (Pollack)and CSI: NY star Melina Kanakaredes recall the science-related experiences of their youth, discuss the impact of teachers on their lives and speak about the desire for their daughters to remain open to careers in the fields of math and science. In addition, high-school girls from an engineering program in southern Texas built a wind turbine to generate electricity for lights at a community center. duration 26:46 STEREO TVG
-
3:00 pmNeed To Know [#115] CHICAGO VIOLENCE - In the past two years, more than 500 young people under the age of 25 have died in Chicago. NtK travels to some of Chicago's most dangerous neighborhoods to explore both what is at the root of the violence and what is being done to combat it.
INTERVIEW: RICK KARR - Google and Verizon announced this week that they had come up with a possible solution to the issue of net neutrality. Public interest groups fear that this is an insider deal between Silicon Valley and the telecommunications industry that could trample the free flow of information and make the Internet "pay for play". NtK Correspondent Rick Karr provides a primer on net neutrality and how this issue may shape the future of the internet. < br />CARL HIAASEN - Alison Stewart interviews author and Miami Herald political columnist Carl Hiaasen about his new book Star Island.
ESSAY: THE 14TH AMENDMENT - Jon Meacham provides an on-air essay about the debate over the 14th Amendment.
note: late-breaking news developments may change this line-up. duration 56:46 STEREO TVRE -
4:00 pmBBC Newsnight [#113226] duration 28:46 STEREO TVRE
-
4:30 pmWashington Week [#5007] * There were just a handful of primary election races this week, but reading the tea leaves from results in Colorado, Connecticut and Georgia proved to be fascinating. The storylines included a Democratic Senate primary in Colorado where one candidate was backed by President Obama while the other has the support of former President Bill Clinton. On the Republican side, it was an establishment GOP candidate losing to a Tea Party backed candidate. In Georgia, endorsements were also front and center in the Governor's race where Sarah Palin and Mitt Romney supported one candidate and Mike Huckabee and Newt Gingrich supported another. Plus, the founder of the WWE wrestling empire won the GOP nomination for the Senate in Connecticut. We'll have detailed analysis from Dan Balz of The Washington Post and Charles Babington of the Associated Press.
*As the draw-down continues in Iraq and the fighting intensifies in Afghanistan, Defense Secretary Robert Gates took a step this week to cut Pentagon spending by proposing the elimination of a $700 million command center in Virginia and cutting back significantly in the use of contractors by the DOD. The rise in defense spending in the past decade has come under intense scrutiny by Congress during the economic downturn. Nancy Youssef of McClatchy Newspapers, who has reported extensively from both war zones will have details on the impact of the Gates' proposals and whether it might be more symbolic than significant.
* Finally, Todd Purdum of Vanity Fair will join us around the table following his extensive take-out on the way government works and whether the whole system may be broken. It has much of official Washington buzzing! duration 26:46 STEREO TVRE -
5:00 pmInside Washington [#2217] 1. Wall Street chokes on fears of a double dip recession and other grim economic news.
2. The House approves a $26 billion spending bill for cash-strapped states. Republicans say we can't afford it.
3. Democrats take heart from primary election results.
4. The Secretary of Defense announces major belt-tightening at the Pentagon as the American troop commitment in Iraq winds down.
5. Ted Stevens and Dan Rostenkowski, two old congressional lions whose careers were scarred by corruption charges, meet their final reward. Meanwhile, Charley Rangel fights to hang on in the face of corruption charges of his own. duration 26:46 TVRE -
5:30 pmMcLaughlin Group [#2833] Rep. Charlie Rangel Fights Back James Pethokoukis, Thomson Reuters; Monica Crowley, Washington Times; Eleanor Clift, Newsweek; Bill Press, The Bill Press Show. duration 27:30 TVRE
-
6:00 pmTHIS WEEK in Northern California [#2142] * Interview with Senator Barbara Boxer - US Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) discusses California's economy and her upcoming race against Republican and former Hewlett-Packard CEO, Carly Fiorina.
* News Panel - It's a delayed victory for Prop. 8 opponents as the stay on same-sex marriages is lifted, beginning August 18; Google and Verizon join forces on a proposal that could threaten equal access to the internet; and Native American tribes in California consider renewable energy farms as an alternative to casinos.
Guests: Jesse McKinley, San Francisco Bureau Chief, New York Times; David Spark, Reporter, Socialmedia.biz; Amy Standen, Reporter, KQED's Quest series. duration 26:46 STEREO TVRE -
6:30 pmBold Visions: Women In Science and Technology Glimpses into the lives of extraordinary women working in the fields of science and technology: a research scientist searching for genetic causes of diseases, an astronaut applying her engineering expertise in space and a results-driven technologist responsible for numerous patents. Their exciting and collaborative work not only improves the quality of lives around the world but underscores the need for the United States to nurture its home-grown female talent in these male-dominated fields. During the documentary, Academy Award-winning actor Marcia Gay Harden (Pollack)and CSI: NY star Melina Kanakaredes recall the science-related experiences of their youth, discuss the impact of teachers on their lives and speak about the desire for their daughters to remain open to careers in the fields of math and science. In addition, high-school girls from an engineering program in southern Texas built a wind turbine to generate electricity for lights at a community center. duration 26:46 STEREO TVG
-
7:00 pmGlobe Trekker [#915] Globe Trekker Food Hour: Lebanon The rich soil and varied history of Lebanon have resulted in a world-class cuisine. Merrilees Parker travels to the capital of Beirut and then in to the countryside of Lebanon to learn more about its people, their culture and their cuisine. duration 56:05 STEREO TVG (Secondary audio: DVI)
-
8:00 pmG-Man: The Rise and Fall of Melvin Purvis Melvin Purvis skyrocketed to fame in the 1930s as the leader of the FBI team that took down gangsters John Dillinger, "Baby Face" Nelson and "Pretty Boy" Floyd. This program explores the complicated relationship between Purvis and FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, the man who some have said was responsible not only for Purvis' meteoric rise, but also his rapid descent back into obscurity. duration 56:41 STEREO TV14
-
9:00 pmModel T's to War: American Ambulances on the Western Front, 1914-1918 Between 1914 and 1917 - prior to the United States' entry into World War I - more than 3000 American volunteers, paying their own passage, set sail for France to aid the war effort. This program focuses on the valiant work of the American Field Service, ambulance sections assigned to help the French Army in its fight against German forces.
These young men drove Ford-built Model T's to the frontlines and saw their greatest glory in the battle of Verdun in 1916, when Field Service ambulances transported more than 250,000 wounded. Although American readers regularly followed the adventures of these brave ambulanciers through numerous accounts published in local and national newspapers of the era, few today know about their heroic deeds. This documentary seeks to shed light on this forgotten story. It takes viewers on an archaeological journey of discovery - from French battlefield sites still littered with World War I artifacts to recently discovered silent-film footage and hundreds of previously unpublished war-time photographs. duration 56:46 STEREO TVPG -
10:00 pmPackard - An American Classic Car From its birthplace in Warren, Ohio in 1899 to its final days in Detroit, Michigan and South Bend, Indiana in the late '50s, this program chronicles the history of the Packard automobile through interviews with Packard owners, vintage film and Packard archive photographs. duration 59:01 STEREO TVG
-
11:00 pmHistory Detectives [#808] Hot Town Poster, Face Jug, Lost City of Gold This poster tells the story of a battle brewing. We see a clenched fist, what looks like a stern police officer, and the words: Hot Town - Pigs in the street. Who made this poster and why?
Then, did the artist mean to scare someone with the grimace on this face jug? What's the story behind this peculiar pottery?
And, if this inscription on a rock in Phoenix is authentic, Spanish explorers arrived in America much earlier than records show. duration 56:46 STEREO TVPG-V
MORNING
AFTERNOON
EVENING









