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tv   CBS News Bay Area Morning Edition Saturday 7am  CBS  May 25, 2024 7:00am-8:01am PDT

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chaos at commencement after gunfire erupts at the tail end of a graduation ceremony. >> we ducked and laid on our backs until we stopped hearing the gunshots. it scared the
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life out of me. >> skyline high students start and finish the year with gunfire on campus. bottle rock is rocking in napa this weekend drawing tens of thousands of people to wine country. we will give you an inside look at the v.i.p. experience at the music, wine and food festival. a nobel laureate who has long advocated for the rights of indigenous people in guatemala is in the bay area this weekend. the grand marshal of the carnaval parade. good morning, today is saturday, may 25th. thanks for starting your day with us. i'm max darrow. a celebration ended with gunfire. the commencement ceremony at skyline just wrapped up with gunfire erupted in the parking lot thursday night. da lin spoke to students putting a shadow on their special day. >> reporter: oakland police say the three people shot on campus
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are expected to survive. they would not tell us if the victims are students or family members here for the graduation. you see the gunshots. witnesses say a fight led to a shooting after skyline's graduation. >> we ducked flat and laid on our backs until we stopped hear gunshots. >> reporter: skyline high graduate trayvon said he heard two shots. a short time later two to three more shots. >> i was hoping that my family was okay. i hoped it wasn't them or one of my friends. it scared the life out of me. >> reporter: he had dozens of family members and friends on campus. it was supposed to be a joyous day as he and others received their diplomas. >> people were so excited. >> it went from happy tears to
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scared tears at a graduation. >> reporter: about an hour after the video was taken, gunfire erupted at around 7:45 p.m. as people were leaving. oakland police say two groups of people got in a fight in the school's parking lot. it's unclear how many people opened fire. police say the shooting injured three people. investigators say they detained multiple people and arrested one person who is an adult. they say they are looking for additional shooters. >> i will try and not let it ruin the experience. the important thing, i was with family and friends. >> it's hard to sleep. it's hard to eat. we have done this before. it's worse because our families are here. they don't have experience with this but we do. >> reporter: skyline started the school year with a shooting on september 5, 2023. no one was seriously injured and police arrested three people in that case. trayvon witnessed that shooting as well. >> they were playing, i think,
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a dice game and someone lost and shot at the dude. >> reporter: he says it's hard to start and end the school year with a shooting. skyline is one of the better high schools in oakland but he is glad he is going to college. >> shooting. that's all i will remember, the shootings. >> reporter: oakland police would not say how the person arrested is connected to the school or graduation. they are asking witnesses that took cell phone footage to contact them. madison park academy didn't allow bags and used metal detecting wands at their ceremony on friday. in san francisco, police are investigating a crash in the tenderloin that sent this silver vw beatle inside of a building. this is video posted to the citizen app. paramedics took two people to the hospital with nonlife-threatening
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injuries. investigators say drugs and alcohol do not appear to be factors. just down the road, video game company nintendo is planning to open a store in union square. it will be the company's second shop in the united states. after years of hearing about stores leaving union square, this announcement has tourists and locals excited at the prospect. >> a well-known name. i think about the pokemon centers and things like that, they have a big fan base and nintendo has a big fan base. i think it will help with people coming to visit. >> the company has not released the exact location of the star other than it will be in union square. it is late to open in 2025. roughly 40,000 people attended the first day of the bottle rock music festival last night. and they were all trying to get there at the same time. this is an aerial shot of a jam packed freeway heading to napa valley. it brings a
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star-studded lineup that brings people back every year. >> reporter: so many people look forward to bottle rock especially if you upgrade to the v.i.p. section. it was packed on the lawn and in the stands as nelly took the stage at bottle rock. this was a performer that jack and cheyenne wanted to see. they bring the whole family every year and this is 6-month-old ava's first experience. >> we bring the whole family and have a good time. >> reporter: they got tickets for the v.i.p. section and we got a tour. a private lawn area and shorter lines at the food booth. >> i'm happy with this, how the environment is over here. if it wasn't, i wouldn't have
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brought her. but it's so inviting that it's nice. >> reporter: part of the extended family includes alex pierce that got a taste of what bottle rock has to offer. >> fried chicken sandwich, fries, strawberry lemonade. >> reporter: he has seen how much the event has grown since bottle rock first started in napa. >> my family started going then we kept coming back. we were impressed. the first year i went was 2013. >> reporter: now cousins from across the country join in on the fun including ian from utah. >> it's mooching, it's like family. it's hard to afford a festival ticket on my payroll. >> reporter: the music festival has a lot to offer, even if you have general admission tickets. the spa had an iv lounge and kids and adults blinged out at
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the sustainable sprinkle bar. >> i am gemstone eye liner. we can create more embellishments on the side of your face. there are 40,000 people a day brought in. it is a boost to many nice businesses. many say this is uniquely napa and enjoy the event year after year. >> the beer, the wine, you can't go wrong. >> reporter: bottle rock continues through the weekend with pearl jam coming up saturday an ed sheeran on sunday. >> looks like a lot of fun up in napa. for a full lists of the performers and everything else you need to know about bottle rock, head to kpix.com or on the free cbs news app. coming up, a voice for change leading this year's carnaval parade. b we will introduce you to the grand marshal and how she risked her life to speak up for indiginous rights. >> she said the quiet things out loud. a dangerous thing, the fact that she kept going
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despite the tragedy. as a woman, to be able to speak up. >> plus, lake tahoe is just about full for the first time in five years. why that could pose a challenge for people hitting the beaches any time soon. a live look outside at the bay bridge toll plaza. traffic is moving nicely on this saturday morning. stick around, we will be right back.
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san francisco's carnaval kicks off later today. as we get ready to celebrate we want to highlight the amazing people involved. that includes the grand marshal. she is a nobel peace prize winning activist. as len ramirez shows us, it is sparking pride among the local community and supporters. >> reporter: ancient dance traditions passed down from the maya and aztec are kept alive by people in the bay area. she
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is a guatemalan-american whose family was forced to leave the genocide of her people in 1975. today she credits the face of the human rights movement and honored as the carnaval grand marshal. >> the traditions were passed down for thousands of years and were lost during the war. >> reporter: she won the nobel prize after dedicating the plight of the guatemalans during the civil war when hundreds were killed or vanished. she lost her father, brothers to the violence. >> she said the quiet things outloud speaking about the
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violence against indiginous people, women in a country with political unrest. that is a dangerous thing. the fact that she kept going despite all the tragedy was an important piece. as a woman, to speak up. >> we lived in an era of the genocide. >> reporter: she is still speaking up. she was forced to leave her own country and come to the u.s. for a time, she was able to return to guatemala and uses the platform to continue to fight for the rights of the people. her influence has resulted in good in the bay area. there are now places like the indiginous healing center in marin dedicated to the special needs of indigenous families. >> everybody matters. everybody deserves to be safe. her work is a testament of how someone can speak out load and make changes. >> reporter: a person to be
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celebrated at carnaval. so, here is what the parade route will look like. it starts on bryant and 24th street then down to mission street and moves to 15th street and lands on harrison. harrison from 15th to 24th will be closed until monday morning and treat avenue from 15th to 22nd. if you can't make it to carnaval this year, we have you covered. the special coverage starts sunday at 10:00 in the morning on pix plus and streaming on cbs news bay area. yes, it will be a carnaval forecast with temperatures that will be noticeably warmer on sunday than saturday by a few degrees. we look at the other microclimates. there are big differences this weekend between saturday and sunday. a noticeable warm up, much more than what carnaval will experience. being in the city, you don't go through the big
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swings but you will have a warmer and slightly sunnier sunday for the parade. sunday when the parade goes, there will be some marine layer leftover. more sunshine coming back for sunday in the mid-60s. this is the bottle rock forecast. now you see the difference from one day to the next. saturday mid- to upper-60s then in the upper 70s by the time you get to sunday. then the temperatures go up from there by the time we get to monday and to round this out, here is the saturday-sunday-monday forecast for all three microclimates. the one that tells the story is inland. the difference from saturday to sunday. big changes, mainly because we are going to weaken the onshore influence and a warm up that happens because of it. another review, here is what happened today. we saw the onshore winds come back. look at the bright bands of yellow off the coast. as they come in off the golden gate, you can see the intensity. this was today. a stronger onshore influence.
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even though the stream lines weaken down south. this was strong enough to have an influence on daytime highs everywhere today. we looked at those a moment ago. what i want to do now is show you what it means for tomorrow. we lose the wind and bring in tomorrow's daytime highs, 60s inland. look at the south bay numbers. you are going to the mid-60s. this is saturday. but sunday and monday, even down here will be noticeably warmer. let's go to the imagery forecast. we will take a look forward to is the increasing influence that the marine layer has. that is tomorrow morning. you can see the marine layer thickens up so much tomorrow that you get light mist on the coast. look how far inland it's going. saturday we wake up and it's a may gray feel. the north bay
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might escape this. santa rosa, you are in a gap here. then we have a relatively clear saturday afternoon. even though it's grayer to start the day on saturday, by saturday afternoon you get more blue sky. then sunday, the clouds will filter back in again. we will have more marine layer. it won't be as intense as saturday. you can get light rainfall totals saturday morning. in the seven-day forecast, we will say good-bye to the forecast imagery and dissolve the virtual map and go to the seven-day forecast. you take a look at the warm up that comes in by the time we get to the middle of next week, low to mid-80s. there is a bit of a jump here. if you were enjoying those, they are coming back. you have to get through the holiday weekend when we go through a bit of a dip. and the forecast for the interior of the bay shows you the same trend. you don't get quite as warm inland but you still warm back up 10 degrees by the time
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we get to the middle of next week. for the first time in about five years, lake tahoe is just about full of water. thanks to the past two wet winters we experienced. a full lake means a lot of things. less fire danger, better boating experience, healthier vern. a full lake tahoe can provide water supply for three years even if future snow packs are below normal. but more water means less beach. >> it means, perhaps, the beaches -- you may be closer to your friends or closer to your new friend. >> the lake could reach capacity in about a month. right now it's about a foot below the mark. coming up, college athletes in several major conferences are about to get paid. the deal the ncaa just made to settle a class action lawsuit.
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ahead in sports, the giants are starting to hit their stride and provide another thriller on friday night. plus, a huge game in the nba with the western conference on the line. we know you care. [music plays] but if this is all too real for you and your loved ones. make the call. because we care too. ♪♪ home instead. to us, it's personal. (♪♪) i'm getting vaccinated with pfizer's pneumococcal pneumonia vaccine. so am i. because i'm at risk for pneumococcal pneumonia. come on. i already got a pneumonia vaccine, but i'm asking about the added protection of prevnar 20®.
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i'm a papertarian, sue me. and you can recycle those papers too. let's go gary! [ struggling ] ok. what, you don't get fan mail? cardiac kids. giants mounted major comebacks. they stored six runs in six of the last seven games. kyle harrison got the start in new york. a rough fifth inning for harrison. a solo shot here to j.d. martinez then a homer again. new york got a 5-2 lead. with one swing, patrick bailey gives san francisco the lead with a grand slam. third straight game the giants
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rallied down four or more runs. bottom nine mets load the bases. down a run, 3-2 pitch, slow roller. this is a great bare handed play. giants win 8-7. they are the first team since 1999 to come back from down four or more in three consecutive games. impressive. some youngsters checking out the a's and the astros. top of the fourth, jake meyers down the left field line. three run blast. astros scored all six of the runs in the fourth. they went on to win 6-3. to the nba. mavs luka doncic playing through the pain. six minutes left, tied. doncic gets tripped up and makes the shot falling down.
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gives the mavs the lead. final seconds t-wolves up by two. a step back three. rudy is on skates. three ticks left. dallas has the lead. mavs win and take a 2-0 series lead heading back to dallas. in softball, stanford ace in the circle against lsu. game one of the super regionals. tigers leading in the fifth. this is a three-run shot. lsu run rules, cardinal 11-1. they lead the best of three series 1-0. tigers one win away from the women's college world series. david escar and stanford baseball. hoping to continue their unlikely run. scoreless against arizona. bottom of the third, wildcats brandon
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summerhill with a three-run shot. wildcats play usc who beat cal in the other semi in saturday's championship. that does it for sports. have a great day. after years of pushing current and former student athletes are about to get paid. the deal allows the big five conference schools to pay athletes out of a $21 million annual budget. the ncaa agreed to settle a class action lawsuit that brought about the change. in starting next year, anyone plaguing in the power five has a shot at a decent salary. >> how much money will these athletes get from the settlement? >> we haven't settled on it. i imagine the range will be from a couple thousand to over $100,000. >> someone like caitlin clark stands to make thousands? >> yes, easily. >> in 2021, college athletes were first allowed to make
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money from their name, image and likeness. with memorial day upon us, millions of americans are hitting the road. what you need to know heading out the door. alex baldwin more likely to stand trial in the accidental and deadly shooting on a movie set nearly three years ago. the new ruling from a judge in new mexico. a live look outside. it looks like a gray day in san jose. stick around. we will be right back.
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this weekend. bradley blackburn shows us how things are looking. >> reporter: before americans hit the boardwalks and beaches this holiday weekend, millions face the gauntlet to get there. jamaica packed highs and busy airports as memorial day travel surges. >> tsa line was the longest i have seen it. >> reporter: more than 18 million fliers will pass through security around memorial day. up 16.4% from last year. >> i didn't think it was memorial day and traveling. >> reporter: the faa is monitoring thousands of flights and bands of severe weather that could disrupt them. >> managing volume is easy. managing the weather is not so easy. >> reporter: most americans will hit the road traveling by car. it's up 4% from 2023 and close to an all time record set in 2005. gas prices are about the same as last year at 3.57 a gallon nationally. >> this is bad.
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>> reporter: once you get there, the water is fine. on the texas gulf coast, galveston expects up to half a million visitors, lifeguards at the ready. lake tahoe is picture perfect filled to the highest level in five years swelled by winter snow melts. >> you never know how high the lake will go. >> reporter: summer's unofficial start already underway. >> the tsa expects the busiest day to be monday as travelers rush to get back home. actor alec baldwin now likely to stand trial for involuntary manslaughter on friday. on friday, a new mexico judge rejected baldwin's request to dismiss the case on the deadly shooting on the set of rust. they claim the prosecutors are not showing sufficient evidence to grand jurors. prosecutors say baldwin is avoiding his legal responsibility. friday's
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ruling makes it likely of a trial in july. prosecutors are requesting a gag order in the case of former president trump's classified documents case to limit his ability to talk about law enforcement searching his resort in 2022. this comes after he repeatedly and falsely criticized the fbi over a policy. he claims his life was threatened because of the poem that details officers can use deadly force during searches but the policy is standard policy in limiting agents actions. no rulings have been made so far. today marks four years since the murder of george floyd, the 46-year-old black man killed in police custody in minneapolis. this past week congresswoman sheila jackson lee reintroduced the george floyd justice in policing act that got stuck in the senate in 2021. the bill includes police
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training and policy reforms and seeks to hold law enforcement accountable for misconduct. as for the floyd case, former officer derek cho vin was convicted and sentenced to 22 years in prison. he pled guilty for depriving floyd of his civil rights. young american missionaries in haiti were killed in gang violence, according to their family. dania back has has more from los angeles. >> reporter: criminal gang members in haiti's capital abducted, shot and killed an american missionary couple and a local man according to a family member. two of the victims in their early 20s were davey and mat takely lloyd. they were working for a nonprofit run for 20 years by davey's parents. the third victim was the local director.
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natalie's father is a missouri state lawmaker. >> their lives represent that true love and that deep consideration of others before yourself. >> reporter: cbs affiliate spoke to davie's father. >> they barricaded themselves in our home. the gangs were shooting up the place, busted the door down and shot and killed them and set their bodies on fire. >> reporter: miami herald reporter jacqueline charles says haiti was davie's life work. >> when he went to college, he told every girl that came to him, if you are not ready to spend the rest of your life living and working in haiti, i'm not the guy for you. natalie was that young lady. they were married for two years. >> reporter: the u.s. state department is aware of the killings and offered their condolences to the family on their loss. >> the state department has a
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do not travel advisory for haiti and urges u.s. citizens in the country to leave as soon as they can. morgan spurlock died due to cancer. he was known for the film super size me. that prompted my to re-evaluate fast food. spurlock only ate food from mcdonald's for 30 days. in 2017 he admitted to sexual misconduct in his past. in a statement during the me too movement, he stepped down as ceo of his production company. he was 53 years old. coming up, how human hair could limit the effects of climate change. the topic of the latest project earth report. meet the north bay man bringing his neighbors together through his distinctive art projects. we will introduce you to this week's jefferson award winner.
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because breathing should be beautiful, all day and night. welcome back. here is a live look across the fran bay at treasure island and the bay bridge. not as foggy when we first started but a gray start
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to the day. to project earth now. long, short, curly or straight, many of us grow our hair without much effort. scientists are discovering more ways the hair can save the planet. we showed you how human hair is being used in the fashion world and turned into sustainable clothing and how a local company collects hair. now we are learning about another potential benefit thanks to an experiment in the bay area. researchers at a top university and he colo gifts at a local park are digging into the question, can human hair super charge the soil helping us impact the effects of the climate change. anne makovec shows us what happens when scientists scattered human hair into soil.
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>> reporter: when it comes to hair, some research at cal is a cut above the rest. in the department of environmental sciences, dr. wendy is studying the biochemical effects of climate change and possible ways to curb it. one strategy, grow more plants to pull the climate warming co2 out of the atmosphere and lock it in the soil. one way to do that may actually involve human hair. >> if it turns out this is the case, it would be exciting. >> reporter: they collected untreated hair from a beauty salon. they were ground up and put in tiny bottles. >> a small amount, .2 grams and distribute it into the soil. >> reporter: bad soil harvested in marin. small amounts of the hair was put into jarred soil
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samples. eight weeks later, preliminary results. >> we began to see evidence that the hair is beginning to break down. we started to see the changes in the hair. we have a higher nutrient content. >> it changed the bad soil into good. >> hair contains nitrogen. it breaks down slowly and the nitrogen is packaged in the hair in such a way that it's released slowly. >> reporter: in the jars scientists measured nitrous oxide. but in this case no worries. >> in our experiment there were no plants but if the plants had been there, there is a good probability that they would have been able to capture the nitrogen. >> reporter: resulting in slow and prolonged growth, which is what appears to be happening with hair experiments at the presidio. >> we scattered it over the
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tiny plants that could barely make it. that resulted in this beautiful meadow of bunch grasses that wouldn't have happened if we didn't put the hair down. >> reporter: he is blown way by what he has seen. >> i never could have thought hair would be productive to -- to help us with these soils. >> reporter: the green growth occurred with the hair. >> there is much more growth in the plots of hair than just the fertilizer or the compost itself. >> this is hair. this is hair. >> reporter: lisa head's up matter of trust, a nonprofit based in san francisco that collects donated hair. they have partnered with the presidio and funding the research at cal. mother nature had it right. >> a renewable resource right in front of your eyes. mother
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nature was like look at this, this is useful. >> when i take hair off my cat or kids' hair it goes in the garden. >> i am thinking what else can hair do. >> reporter: making everyday a good hair day. >> who knew a fair share of hair could be good for your flowers and more. if you are inspired to toss your hair in the backyard plants, stay away from long hair. kittanning letter up birds and be harmful. matter of trust recommends small bits of hair or pet fur to incorporate in the soil. to learn more, head to kpix.com. it will be a carnaval forecast with temperatures that will be warmer on sunday than saturday by a few degrees. when we look at the other microclimates, there are big differences between saturday and sunday. a noticeable warm
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up much more than carnaval. being in the city, you don't go through the big swings but you will have a warmer and slightly sunnier sunday for the parade than saturday. but sunday, when the parade goes, there will be some marine layer left over. if there is, there is more sunshine coming back for sunday afternoon. here is the bottle rock forecast. now you see what i'm talking about when i say the difference from one day to the next. saturday 60s, mid-to-upper 60s, actually. then the upper 70s by the time you get to sunday. then the temperatures go up from there by the time we get to monday. here is the saturday-sunday-mon day forecast. the one that tells the story is inland. the difference from saturday to sunday. big changes, mainly because we will weaken the onshore influence and a warm up that happens because of it.
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another review, here is what happened today. we saw the on shore winds come back. look at the bright bands of yellow. there is more intensity. the brighter color in the yellows and oranges, the stronger the winds. this is today. stronger onshore influence. they weaken down south. this was strong enough to have an influence on daytime highs everywhere. we looked at those a moment ago. what i want to do now is show you what it means for tomorrow. we will lose the wind and bring in just tomorrow's daytime highs. you are still going into the 60s inland. look at the south bay numbers. you are going to the mid-60s. let me show you some of the forecast imagery over my shoulder and say good-bye to the forecast numbers for tomorrow and the holiday. we will take a look forward to is the increasing influence that the marine layer has. that's tomorrow morning. you can see the marine layer
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thickens so much tomorrow that you get light mist on the coast. so, look how far inland it has gone. saturday we wake up and it's more of a may gray feel. the north bay may escape this. look at santa rosa. you are in a gap. you should have a relatively clear morning. then we will all have a clear saturday afternoon. it's grayer to start the day on saturday. by saturday afternoon, you get much more blue sky. then sunday the clouds filter back in again. we will have more marine layer. it won't be as intense as saturday's was. you can get light rainfall totals saturday morning. in the seven-day forecast, we will dissolve away the beautiful virtual map and go to the seven-day forecast. the warm up by the middle of next week, low to mid-80s. a jump here. if you enjoy those,
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they are coming back. you have to get through the holiday weekend when we go through a dip. and the forecast for the interior of the bay shows you the same trend. you don't get quite as warm inland but you still warm back up 10 degrees by the time we get to the middle of next week. a mill valley man answers to several names including the heart guy, the fork guy and the fairy door guy. he is known for his public art projects that bring his neighbors together. sharon chin introduces us to this week's jefferson award winner. the vibrant flowers that fill tim's backyard don't need water. they are rooted in community spirit. >> just joy. that's why i do it. >> reporter: tim tries to
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create joy and healing through public art. >> it's easy to find darkness if you look for it. here is the point of the heart. >> reporter: he took metal rings from wine barrels and bent them into heart shapes. then he left them outside his home with a note attached to give them a way to folks that are struggling. people snatched up the hearts. one woman came back. >> i didn't give it away. my dog died that morning when i found the heart. i kept it and i look at it every day. >> reporter: he bought more metal rings to make more art and touch hundreds more hearts. it's emotional for this volunteer. >> it's the hearts. i made a lot. people have cried when i give them. i gave them to people whose husbands passed away, wife, dad, mom. they are
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really -- they mean things to people. >> anybody want gloves. >> reporter: dozens of volunteers meet on weekends to work on another project. his float in the mill valley memorial day parade. they are painting hundreds of wooden and 3-d flowers. the art is the glue that binds the people together. in tim's backyard, strangers become friends according to jill sampson. >> he is such a community treasure. >> reporter: in the last few years, tim's volunteers decorated other parade floats. they felt their spirits soar through his wings project. now fairy doors are finding homes all over the bay area.
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>> when a kid comes around the corner and has to interact with a fairy door, their response is magic. it's real. i want to be the adult that wish i had in my life when i was a kid. >> reporter: bringing his community together through art, this week's jefferson award in the bay area goes to tim ryan. >> thank you, tim, for all you do. tim's goal is to give away 2,000 of those metal hearts. he and his volunteers have around 1800. in his day job he works at the san rafael city schools running the bond program for new construction. nominate your hero at kpix.com/hero. we would love to hear from you.
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friday was an exciting day for students. ahead of the graduation ceremony in about
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two weeks. we have a look at the special ceremony. >> reporter: few things match the anticipation of a commencement ceremony. here in oakland, graduation might be the second most exciting day of the year. >> this is all of my sacrifice and my families combined in one day. >> reporter: ever since she was a little girl, she dreamed of going to college. today she gets to announce where she is heading during the school's so-called college reveal day. >> i'm excited to brag about where i'm going. >> committed to usc. >> cal state. >> san francisco state university. >> reporter: also known as
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declaration day. >> i'm going to the university of san francisco and majoring in computer science. >> reporter: the ceremonies are becoming popular in recent years. what makes this different is that for the fact for the third year in a row, every single senior here has been accepted to a four-year university. if that's not impressive enough, all of them come from low income families where few of their parents had any opportunity for higher education. >> the tradition that it has done for the past three years. >> reporter: she is the guidance counselor. she says the reason the school is so successful is that every student has a team of academic advisers that work with them one on one and are available to them for six years after graduation. >> every student deserves an opportunity and they are all college bound. >> reporter: the school has a unique approach that gives
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students both classroom and real world experience through a work program that offsets tuition. >> we have wonderful program partners that mentor them over the course of four years. >> reporter: as for marisol 2, she is not just going to any college, she is heading to -- >> hi, i will be majoring in english and i committed to u.c. berkeley. >> reporter: being accepted to a top tier university, clearly a class act with a high degree of difficulty. a live picture from san francisco into the east bay. you can't see far into the east bay with the thick layer of fog. that should clear up throughout the rest of the day. we have a warm up coming later in the week. we will keep you updated as we know more when it
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comes. stick we know you care. [music plays] but if this is all too real for you and your loved ones. ♪♪ make the call. because we care too. ♪♪ home instead. to us, it's personal. you know what's brilliant? boring. think about it. boring is the unsung catalyst for bold. what straps bold to a rocket and hurtles it into space? boring does. boring makes vacations happen, early retirements possible,
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and startups start up. because it's smart, dependable, and steady. all words you want from your bank. for nearly 160 years, pnc bank has been brilliantly boring so you can be happily fulfilled... which is pretty un-boring if you think about it. an earth like planet has been discovered that could be inhabitable inspect theory. it's about 40 light-years away. the location is in the pass pisces constellation.
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it's about 107 degrees fahrenheit. but for humans to get there, it would take around 225,000 years on the fastest method of space travel that we have. we a see if anyone gets there. a navy submarine that sunk 80 years ago has been found. it is 3,000 feet down in the south china sea. according to the navy's history and heritage command it was found in an up right position and mostly intact. it has sunk in a battle august 24, 1944 as the u.s. sought to retake the philippines from occupying japanese forces. the submarine went down with its entire crew of 79 men. thank you for watching kpix this morning. the news continues all day on cbs news bay area. we are here tomorrow at 6:00 a.m. don't forget our special coverage of the carnaval parade starts sunday at 10:00
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we know you care. [music plays] but if this is all too real for you and your loved ones. make the call. because we care too. ♪♪ home instead. to us, it's personal. we pulled people off the street and asked them about their hearts. how's your heart? my hear's pretty good. you sure? how do you know? you're driving a car, you have the check engine light. but the heart doesn't have a hey, check heart sign. with kardiamobile, you can take a medical-grade ekg
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in just 30 seconds from anywhere. kardiamobile is proven to detect atrial fibrillation, one of the leading causes of stroke. checking your heart anytime, anywhere has never been easier. don't wait. get kardiamobile today for just $79 at kardia.com or amazon. brandon: i'm brandon mcmillan, and for seven years, i had the for just $79 at incredible job of finding new forever families for over 150 lucky dogs. today, watch along with me as i revisit one of my favorites, a one-year-old german shepherd named luna and the woman who was

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