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tv   The Late News  CBS  November 11, 2023 11:00pm-11:36pm PST

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f0 from cbs news bay area, this is the evening edition. now at 11:00, the first official day of apec is in the books. what to expect as things start ramping up. then, calls for peace continue across the bay area and the world as the humanitarian crisis in gaza continues to get worse. >> we need to understand that we are all human beings. we
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have common needs and desires. >> it has been difficult to feel the pain of others, and that's why it takes compassion. also, we're honoring the men and women who have served in the military on this veteran's day. good evening, i'm brian hackney. >> and i'm andrea nakano. while apec officially began today, we are still very much in the calm before the storm. the fences and barricades are up around key locations being used for the summit. this is the first time the u.s. has hosted this event since 2011. with city leaders fully aware of the opportunity it presents. >> this is a once in a century kind of event. san francisco is going to be on the world stage, and we're going to put on our best show. this is the largest gathering of international players in san francisco since the united nations charter was signed here in 1945. >> but before all that can happen, the last touches had to be put on the moscone center
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where a majority of the events will be taking place. >> da lin was down there in the high security zone and got a final look at the preparations. >> reporter: people come not guilty and out of moscone center tell me they're mostly setting up their company tables and exhibits to prepare for monday. outside, police officers are standing at every street corner. while the fences are up, no security check points or closures, at least not yet. the major closures don't happen until monday. >> i'm already having difficulties getting around because of the gates putting up. >> reporter: alexandra lives in one of the several senior housing complexes across from the center. >> i don't think i'll be able to go out really. i've been stocking up on my household supplies. >> reporter: many seniors tell me they've rescheduled doctor appointments and are preparing the week like a pandemic lockdown. >> never been this locked down before, so you have to shop and everything before it happens. >> i did all my laundry
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yesterday. i did some shopping last night and this morning. i think i'll be okay now for the rest of the week. >> reporter: joyride pizza decided to close wednesday, thursday, and friday due to the closures. >> we'll have problems with deliveries, door dash, parking. >> reporter: the manager says business was slow this saturday compared to a typical saturday. >> my services help people and help door dash. >> reporter: the area was pretty quiet for a weekend, and despite the inconvenience, alexandra supports the conference and hopes it's a nice reset for san francisco in terms of its image. >> i hope it's going to be a good meeting between all the people involved, and, um, make the world a better place. >> reporter: a lot of seniors who live around here say they're going to make their final grocery runs on sunday. they just don't want to deal
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with the security check points. >> as da mentioned, the major closures don't start until monday, so be prepared for check points and other security measures around the center and soma, the fairmont hotel, nob hill, and the embarcadero. >> bart says it will run regular service, meaning no station closures including those near the summit. bart says it will also lengthen trans-bay trains to eight cars in anticipation of higher ridership. and just in time for all of this, guess what's on the way? not only darren peck, but rain. >> and we're within three days of that rain. which means we can now start seeing it in the high resolution models. once we get within the three-day window, we can get a clearer picture of these things. and we need a clearer picture on this one. it's been a difficult system for the forecast models to nail down. and that hasn't
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necessarily changed a lot. but we at least have a clearer picture of the more likely possibilities for the start of this rain maker, which could be with us for several days. from tuesday night, potentially into friday or saturday. that's the first band of rain right there. that gets us to tuesday morning. but that only tells you a small story because you need to look at the storm as a whole. when we pull out, we have to lose a little resolution to see the whole thing. see that band of rain? it's tied into a much larger system, the center of it out here. and watch it, it just pulls the rain back off the coast. so this has been a complicated storm all along. it remains one. but one thing this hasn't changed is the likelihood for one to three inches of rain coming for the second half of the week. it's the details on the timing we're trying to nail down. we'll look at it in more details in a few minutes. back to you. all right, thank you. so that's what's to expect around the summit. as for how important the meeting of 21 different economies is, we
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asked a political science professor from cal. >> this is a big deal in the sense that we have real societal and governmental groupings working together thinking about, to put it very simply, how can we improve the world. including the economy, investment, green technology, high-tech, and issues we need to talk about amongst ourselves. >> there will also be the highly anticipated meeting between the chinese and american presidents. here's some of the key events. it all begins with apec meets silicon valley and a welcome reception for the ceo summit on monday and tuesday. wednesday features that meeting between china and the u.s., and everything wraps up on friday. and you can find more information to help you get around during apec, including interactive maps, on kpix.com. now to gaza where doctors and thousands of people are trapped in the city's largest hospital. the group doctors
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without borders says the hospital will become a morgue without an immediate end to israeli air attacks. patients are dying as ventilators and incubators are shutting down with the facility running out of fuel. meanwhile, arab and islamic leaders are demanding a ceasefire. israel will only accept short pauses each day to allow civilians to evacuate. here's the latest. >> reporter: palestinians are making the perilous journey south. they have a four-hour daily window where israel has agreed to a humanitarian pause to the near constant bombardment of gaza. hospitals are operating without power, near a breaking point. patients told to evacuate. israel says they've agreed to help the most vulnerable out of gaza's biggest hospital. >> the staff of the shifah hospital requested that tomorrow we help the babies in the pediatric department to get
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to a safer hospital. we will provide the assistance needed. >> reporter: arab leaders say it's not enough, calling for an immediate ceasefire. israel says that won't happen until all hostages are released. >> we know that terrorism means in france. but i think there is no justification to attack civilians. >> reporter: israel has said there will be no ceasefire until all hostages are released. >> the israeli military has accused of hamas of having an underground command center at al shifah hospital, a claim hospital staff has denied. all communication to the hospital has been shut off since it ran out of fuel. in tel aviv, thousands of demonstrators took to the streets once again demanding the release of the more than 200 hostages still held by hamas. at the same time, the israeli government is reducing
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the death toll from the october 7th attacks, lowering it from 1400 to 1200. israel is still working on identifying all of the victims more than a month since those attacks. at the same time, 300,000 people took to the streets of london today demanding a ceasefire. they clashed with far right counterprotesters and police as 120 were arrested there. hundreds more demonstrated outside president biden's delaware home. now, with more than 11,000 palestinians dead, almost half of them children, police, or people also came out in palo alto calling for an end to the violence. betty yu has the story. [ singing ] >> reporter: through song and prayer, people of multiple faiths came together outside palo alto city hall on saturday
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to call for peace amid the israel-hamas war. the founder of the american muslim voice foundation says the war has brought it highly charged emotions on both sides of the conflict. >> there are issues about palestine and israel, it's very touchy because there are rabbis and there are muslims. and it's very difficult to feel the pain of others. that's where it takes compassion and all the things we were talking about. >> reporter: there were no palestinian or israeli flags displayed in the plaza. just hearts and minds thinking of the lives lost in the war. do you feel this was a healing experience? >> definitely. definitely. and this isn't just a jewish and muslim thing. for me, it's a human thing, you know? [ singing ] >> reporter: on saturday, israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu said a ceasefire would only be possible if all 239 hostages held by militants in gaza are
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released. more than 11,000 palestinians, two-thirds of them women and children, having killed since the war began. >> i've been most personally moved as a mother, now a grandmother imagining the deep sorrow of moms, grandmothers, and parents of, you know, everyone on all sides. >> reporter: robin severance from the palo alto quaker meeting was surprised to see the turnout. >> i didn't think we would need chairs, but we needed more. we need to understand that we are all human beings. we have common needs and desires. >> reporter: some say they've experienced a heightened sense of islam phobia in the recent
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weeks. >> i held it together pretty well throughout the evening. this last song though, it became a prayer. that's why i raised my hands saying peace. >> stay up to date with everything happening in gaza and israel as well as demonstrations here in the bay area on our website, kpix.com and streaming on the cbs news app. still ahead tonight at 11:00, a rally on the steps of the antioch police department demanding accountability and reform. and how the bay area honored members of the u.s. military on this veteran's day.
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in san leandro a woman is dead after a shooting in the chili's parking lot. police believe it started as a fight between people that knew each other. they have identified a suspect but are still searching for the suspect and have not released any sort of description. and a juvenile recoverin tonight from a shooting in vallejo. police say it happened friday after a football game at vallejo high school. they found the victim on nebraska street with a gunshot wound. there's no arrests, but a heightened police presence is planned for the school next week. and across the bay,
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activists in antioch are calling for police accountability into the midst of a federal investigation into the department. it's related to racist text messages, corruption, and excessive force. reimagine antioch is demanding all the text messages be made public and every officer involved be fired. president biden marked veteran's day in the nation's capital by laying a wreath at the tomb of the unknown soldier followed by a speech at the national amphitheater where he touted the success of legislation he says delivered health care benefits to many veterans and their families, while acknowledging the problems they continue to face including homelessness, poverty, and high suicide rates. plenty of veteran's day events here in the bay area, like at the uss hornet in alameda where veterans and congresswoman barbara lee celebrated the 80th anniversary of its commission. and in san
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jose, the annual veteran's day parade rolled through downtown like they have every year since 1918. organizers say it's the largest veteran's day parade in northern california. november is the month rain begins to ramp up in the bay area, and looks like that's happening this week. >> yes, and given how much uncertainty there is with this storm, there's one thing that's remained pretty consistent in terms of what this is likely going to look like, and that's the rainfall totals from tuesday into friday. let me show you what that looks like. we'll go to the map, color this in. this is going from tuesday night to saturday. what's the likely potential for rain still? inch and a half, two and a half inches. that hasn't changed. forecast models have stayed pretty resolute with that idea. the models have been consistent. but it's a lot more complicated than that. first of
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all, it's not raining tomorrow or monday either. monday is a little cooler than sunday. mid to low 70s tomorrow. here's where the storm is way up there. one of the reasons this is a challenge, it hasn't even developed yet. the other reason it's a challenge, when we play it forward, and now you see it develop, it's a cut off low. it's not attached to the storm track, it doesn't have to follow the rules. and there's nothing to motivate it or help really predict, in this case, how it will move. because there's nothing driving it. one way to visualize this, if we put it into the wind field, it really helps us see what the storm is going to do. it spins counterclockwise. we'll play it tuesday to saturday. storms tied into the jet stream and storm track move from west to east. haspel that's the way it's supposed to go. for four days, it just sits in the same spot and spins. that's friday, and saturday it starts to come on shore. if we visualize it the other way and put the rain
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in it, it's a bit messier. spinning ball of rain. sometimes pulls the rain farther away from the coast, sometimes throws it to the south. very difficult to forecast the timing and amounts. but it's going to stay close enough that the potential for rain to add up over the four days, the numbers get up to 1.5 to 2 inches. remember, tomorrow is fine, we're not getting rained on. watch how difficult this storm is in terms of behavior. you think oh, we have a cold front coming our way, we're getting rain. watch what happens. no, it's going backwards back into the storm, and 12 hours later, it throws a much more impressive slug of moisture just north of the bay. but that will get sonoma county should it play out that way. that could be some of the more impressive totals before pulling the rain back off it will coast. it's going to be fun. it's complicated. we will have all the details as we get into
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this, but look what the seven-day has on it regardless. does it rain or four days straight? of course not. there will be plenty of breaks here. but the total with the on again/off again chances of rain will add up. it won't be flooding rain. it's not like the storms of last winter. but it will be the best thing we've seen so far this season. >> thank you, darren. the warriors debuting their new city edition uniforms tonight. they're a tribute to the 150th anniversary of san francisco's cable cars. the san francisco jersey text is lopsided to represent the steep hills of the city. >> i like this one because it represents the city more and the history of san francisco. you know, it's just something different. i like the color. >> and the warriors community foundation announced tonight a record $3.5 million in total grant money will be given out this year. the money will go to dozens of local nonprofits
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including oakland and san francisco public schools. all right, coming up in sports, a final 49ers injury report ahead of sunday's game at jacksonville. plus, things got a alaska airlines $99 companion fare means that you can bring your best friend... you know, one of us is gonna have to change? but we're twinning? oh yay. ♪♪ ♪ we care a lot. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪♪ is it possible to be more capable? and more practical? be able to perform here. and here. make a statement while barely making a sound. and command the road, as well as what lies ahead.
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you know, my friend funshine would have loved this trip. well our companion fare is just $99 with the alaska airlines visa card, so your friend can come along with you! next time you're the legs! ♪ ♪ we care a lot ♪ the dubs were wracking up frequent flier miles after a long road trip, eight different cities. but they finally returned home to the bay area and hosted the cleveland cavaliers saturday night. the first of a six-game home stand at chase center. fireworks in the game. in the third, donovan mitchell bumps draymond. dray is teed up, and then the
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referees deem the contact a technical for draymond. his night is over because he has two technicals. mitchell had the last laugh before the buzzer. splits two, flips it, it's tipped in, and the cavaliers lead. we go to the fourth, cavs up 10. dubs lose 118-110. they've dropped two straight games. they'll play minnesota tomorrow at 5:30. there will be no excuse for the 49ers offense on sunday against the jags as san francisco gets one of its top weapons back. debo samuel will return in jacksonville. as of saturday night, trent williams is expected to play after injuring his ankle in the game against cleveland. the biggest news on defense this week, coordinator steve wilkes is coming down from the coach's box and will start play calling from the sideline. much is being made about the move after the defense's struggle in recent weeks, but wilkes says
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it's really not a big deal. >> i think we're making a bigger deal out of it than we need to be. but i just want to communicate with the guys a little more during the game. >> if it was 8 and 0 it wouldn't be a big deal. but me personally, i like having the coach on the sideline. when it's not going the way you want it to, everyone finds a reason or excuse why. i guess that's there excuse. still to come, a bay area pac-12 team picked up a crucial win to remain alive in the hunt
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when we challenged ourselves to create the world's most emotional and sustainable vehicle, we had tothink differently. we had to push the boundaries to not just create a car
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but a movement. every fisker ocean is produced with over 50 kilograms of ethically sourced, recycled materials. it's about accomplishing something bigger than itself. a clean future for all. the final year of the pac-12 has been a fun one with a couple of teams still alive in the hunt for the college football playoff. cal isn't one of those teams, but they still are playing for a bowl game. taking on washington state in beautiful berkeley today. they led the cougars in the second. mendoza finds ott, and bears up two scores at this point. we head to the fourth, and stick with me here. this is a
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confusing play because of the camera. cameron ward is stripped, he doesn't know where to go. cal wasn't confused. williams picks it up. scoop and score. returns it 52 yards. cougars made it close down the stretch, but cal wins. two games left, they need two more wins for bowl eligibility. troy taylor and stanford also hoping for bowl eligibility, but a tough task at oregon state. first the beavers up big early. the cardinal had no answers defending the run. just before half, oregon state goes back to martinez. he finds the end zone again. he scored four touchdowns in the first half alone. oregon state rolls 62-17. stanford has to bounce back for the big game next week. when you hear sign stealing scandal, houston astros is what you think. then jim harbaugh said hold my beer because he was banned from the sidelines of the remaining michigan
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regular season games while the program is being investigated for allegedly traveling to opponents' games to tape their signals. so no head coach on the sidelines. his oc coaching in his place at tenth ranked penn state. michigan had just 60 yards passing in this game, but it didn't matter. blake corum breaks loose for the 30-yard touchdown. michigan wins 24-15, remaining undefeated. and here was an emotional coach moore after the game. >> reporter: when there were doubts, what does the win mean to you? >> i thank the lord, i thank coach harbaugh. i love you man. this is for you. >> he's just suspended. he's okay. he's okay, i swear. back to the pac-12. fifth ranked washington hosting utah looking to remain undefeated. second quarter, utes give them
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a scare. explosionive play. the touchdown gave utah the lead. they lead 28-24 at the half, but the deep shot to the end zone, and the receiver hangs on to give washington the lead. huskies win 35-28. they're now 10 and 0 and remain the pac-12's lone undefeated team. >> it's interesting because i know a lot of faithful were really heart broken when jim harbaudh left, but i've never seen the love like that from an assistant coach like moore. >> maybe he'll come back to the nfl (♪♪) (♪♪) (♪♪)
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joint pain, and fever. make vaccination against covid-19 a part of your health routine. spikevax that body... ...with spikevax by moderna. ♪ >> i'm just so darn lucky, thank you. before we leave you tonight, we want to take a
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moment to recognize our colleague juliette goodrich. she was honored tonight at the silver circle awards for 25 years of distinguished service in the television industry. all 25 of them here at kpix. >> wait, she was up in redding. >> and i believe sacramento too. every year here except for redding. and except in
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