tv ABC7 News 500AM ABC June 30, 2013 5:00am-6:01am PDT
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>> good morning, everyone. i'm carolyn tyler. thanks for joining us on this sunday morning, june 30th. let's start with a wick first look at the weather with our meteorologist lisa argen. >> good morning. we have just a bit of a more onshore push this morning. it's still clear in san francisco. temperatures cool, at. 62 oakland. 64 san jose. half moon bay 50, 55 santa cruz. anywhere from two to four degrees cooler this morning but afternoon just as hot as we take you to oakland right now. you notice temperatures once again later on today in the city will be anywhere from the mid-80s to the upper 80s in oakland, going for a high about 86. and our beaches nice, low to
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mid-70s. with the onshore flow. up he were 90 to year 1006 degrees. the heat waive continues. it looks like by the 4th of july we will continue to see changes. but the excessive heat warning for tuesday night. we will talk in detail about the rest of the temperatures around the bay and the heat coming up. >> thanks, lisa. talks are set to resume today between bart and labor unions to try to avoid a strike tomorrow morning. bart workers aren't sounding that optimistic saying they are ready to stop the trains with no progress yesterday. we have more on the negotiations. >> the line in the sand has been drawn. >> we will not wait until the enth hour to tell the public we are going on strike when the district has made no movement. >> they came to meditation to say they were ready to spend all
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weekend, if necessary, to hash out their differences over management. but by 4:00, the unions walked out of meditation, accusing bart of delaying tactics and refuse to go come to the table. after they walked away, bart came up to this proposal. >> we increased an offer ever a pay increase from 4% to 8%. 2% a year over the four year contract. >> they want add 5% increase for three years. bart started the negotiation by offering 1% per year. >> this is an exciting offer and we will like to make sure it gets discussed and worked on and continue to work toward keeping the trains running. >> but by 8:00 the negotiators left the building and they claimed to know nothing about the offer from bart for the union. commuters are worried. >> give them what they want. >> at least make it work.
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it's 400,000 people computing every day. when they sit down it's going to be mayhem, chaos, craziness. >> in oakland, abc7 news. ac transit may not be a good am terntive in the event of a bart strike. that agency faces it's own union contract deadline. tonight ac transit said it hopes to reach a resolution by then, but bus riders should be prepared in the event of a work stoppage tomorrow. golden gate ferry and san francisco bay ferry will provide additional service in the event of a bart strike. contingency schedules are posted online. here's some advice. ferries are first come, first serve so plan on arriving early. we created lincoln to the options you will have if there's a bart strike. you can get realtime traffic reports and maps. find out about casual car pooling for download the
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exclusive abc7 news waze traffic app to help you negotiate the freeways. it's at abc7news.com under "see it on tv." we will have complete coverage on a special early ed digs starting at 4:00 a.m. the anchors and traffic reporters will bring us the latest on contract negotiations and a look at how all of that will affect your weekday commute. more same section weddings will be performed in san francisco this morning as opponents hope an emergency motion filed yesterday with the u.s. supreme court will soon stop the ceremonies. at san francisco's city hall dozens of same-sex couples tied the knot yesterday. many waited years. their happiness was cam penned by the news -- dampened by the
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filing of the motion. the motion reads in part court rules requires the ninth circuit to wait for a certified copy of the judgment before taking action, and the high court has not yet issued it's certified judgment. >> i'm hoping this is the end of the road, though, for all the legal stuff. >> we at any time even know about that news, and we woke up this morning and wanted to make sure we got in before anybody did anything to stop us. >> we weren't sure if we were going to do it this morning, but i've waited this long, but i can't it any longer. >> the opponents of same same-sex marriage say the 7 million people when voted for prop 8 deserve the proper respect of the judicial system. weddings continue this morning at the:00 in san francisco and continue tomorrow in other counties across the bay and the state. extra lurk will -- extra he --
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extra clerks will be working longer hours to handle the rush. today is the gay parade celebration. pink saturday draws people from all over the world. many say this year's event is different because of the two landmark decisions by the supreme court last week, waving the way for same-sex marriage. >> i was very proud to be here when it happened. i got to celebrate everything on the day it happened and i got to see people being happy. it feels amazing. >> i thought it was amazing that i can marry somebody, no matter what. >> organizers say they expect a much larger turnout for this week andy gay pride events due to the supreme court's decisions. this morning's parade kicks off at 10:30.
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it goes down market and winds a day-long rally at san francisco civic center plaza. new this morning a home is destroyed following a two alarm house fire in vallejo. it began just after 10:30 last night at a home on cedar street. firefighters say the home was fully engulfed in fuames when they arrived. they were able to knock it down just after 11:00. no reports of injuries. the fire is under investigation. an autopsy may provide answers why a fremont man died after jumping into alameda creek. the unidentified 25-year-old was diving with two friends off a railroad bridge yesterday morning when he failed to resurface. his body was later found in 16 feet of water. it's not clear if he hit something under water or why he was unable to resurface. two teenagers are expected to be okay after they were shot in oakland. it happened shortly after nine last night on 95th avenue and
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sunny side street. they are both under 18. they were standing in a park when someone shot them. knoll arrests have been made. the shooting remains under investigation. an antioch man was killed after being shot twice in few days. officers found the 42-year-old yesterday morning on his porch with a gunshot wound to the leg. he was shot in the leg and lack friday at the same location. at that time he gave no information to authorities about who shot him. meteorologist lisa argen is here now. wow, this weather is something else. >> yeah. it will be nice and sunny for the parade, but right now it's cool out there with numbers in the upper 50s downtown. this is our sutro camera so the on shore flow just a little stronger today. it may make a difference, a couple degrees or so, if you are around the bay and near the coast. i'll explain coming up. >> thank you. also next, a new bay area study
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demonstrations mark the one-year office office of the president taking office. it's the culmination of a month-long campaign calling for him to step down. we will keep keep an eye on thas morning. new, president obama plans to pay tribute to former south african president nelson mandela. mandela remains hospitalized in critical condition from a lung condition. president obama has no plans to visit mantel law in the hospital, but he did meet privately with the former leader's family yesterday. the anti-secrecy group wickileaks admitted they are helping a former u.s. contractor on leak information only america's spy programs. the wick i leaks founder discusses how he is helping
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edward snowden in his quest to obtain asylum, and whether he and snowden should be considered whistle blowers. you can watch it right here on abc7 at 8:00. starting today checks will be distributed to help the victims of boston marathon bombings. nearly $60 million will go to the 200 victims and families. it's a group established to give financial assistance to the bombing victims. relatives of those who dialed in the attacks, as well as victims who suffered the most sealious injuries will receive about $2.2 million. a 5-year-old boy got quite a surprise and welcome. a visit from his mom last night in palo alto. jackson thought he was making the first ceremonial kick earthquakes game. instead his mom walked out, home from afghanistan.
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she nearly blew the surprise. >> i came back yesterday, the day before, and i had to wait yesterday. it was hard not to just go by and see them. >> oh, that must have been hard. officials at travis air force base where she's the director of psychological health came up with this idea. she has not seen her little boy for six months until yesterday. another chapter glory celebrity chef paula deen. her book company has cancelled publication of her upcoming cookbook. her new testament, 250 favorite recipes, was currently the number one best-seller in amazon.com. it was decide come out in october. many retailers have all severed ties with deen. we're one step closer to the
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america cup races. they have received their permit. it requires a safety plan to be implemented before the races. that was implemented after the death of a crew man in a cap size last month. >> a second bird has tested positive for the west nile virus. it was found in novato. district officials are encouraging residents to eliminate any standing water that will reduce mosquito production and virus activity. a new staffer study finds charter schools are performing better, in part because of good schools have remained open and some of the bad ones have closed. education reporter lyanne melendez has the details. stanford researchers looked over test results and found for the most part students in charter schools it slightly better in reading than kids in
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traditional public schools. in math they were just about even. study compares apples to apples, meaning it compares students with same demographics and academic profiles in both traditional public schools and charter schools. the study reveals low income families, black students and his hispanic english language learners benefited the most from charter schools. one is the schools serving primarily low-income hispanic children. >> everyone knows that our mission is to eliminate the achievement gap in our lifetime. >> this is the second study of its kind done by stanford. first in 2009 showed charter schools doing worse than public schools but now four years later the situation has gotten better
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for charter school. the movement got started about 20 years ago. they said despite all those years and efforts, charter schools have failed to deliver the promised big gains. >> all of these people who promise you greats changes by doing this tweak or that tweak, essentially people are people. children learn the way children learn at the rates that they learn at. >> still, the demand for charter school continues. the study foundins 2009 there has been an 80% increase in enrollment. lyanne melendez, abc7 news. high temperatures between 115 and 120 degrees are expected in parts of arizona, nevada and california again today. yesterday in death valley temperatures hit 126 degrees! that's just 8 degrees of the 100-year-old record. the highest temperature ever recorded. oh, boy.
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definitely not that hot here burks not enough, lisa. >> yes, 105 in concord yesterday, 70 half moon bay. quite a spread. 35-degree spread. today very little changes except if you are in the city as many of you will be or along the coast. you may feel the stronger onshore push and as a result this morning we are starting out with temperatures a little cooler. the live doppler, no fog to speak of right now but here's the view from mt. tam. it's clear and pleasantly clear in san francisco at 58 degrees. 55 emeryville with the clear sky. upper 50s santa rosa, 57 the warm spot, as well as livermore 69 and 62 los gatos, 63 union city. the exploratorium camera showing the clear sky. we will have continued hot weather. excessive heat warning through tuesday night.
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looks like we could see triple digit temperatures through wednesday. hopefully it is turning cooler for everyone on the 4th of july. but we are looking at the subtle changes today. warmest days look to be tomorrow and tuesday. high pressure. the bubble still with us. it looks to stay right on through wednesday. but as for tomorrow, the couple degrees of cooling today at san francisco and our coast. tomorrow we will be back up to 70s half moon bay and 80 forecasted high tomorrow. that's about five degrees warmer for oakland and really no change for walnut creek. 104. 106 in antioch. let's take you further into the week ahead. this is san jose with a high of 96 today. that's what we had yesterday. we are going hotter tomorrow and then look at the cool-down. really doesn't take place until thursday and friday. so we will be looking at this
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extensive long period of heat in most cities around the bay. so keep that in mind. have a plan for the heat. 96 again. we talked about that. 95 santa clara. 101 los gatos. the numbers on the peninsula very warm with upper 90 palo alto. 86 milbrae. but the comfortable 70s return to the coast, 68 in the sunset, 78 downtown. look for 99 today in sonoma with more heat as you head further north. 86 in oakland. we could see or tie a record in hayward if we hit the 90. out over the hills notice the numbers still very little change with very, very hot temperatures. 105 livermore, 104 walnut creek. later on today a beautiful day in san francisco with 10:00 temperatures in the up he were 60s. mid-70s 1:00, going for the high in the up he were 70s and breeze city. notice very, very hot tomorrow and tuesday and then we will begin to see a little cooling
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around the bay on wednesday. more generous cooling on the 4th of july and by friday and saturday looking pretty decent around here. we will let you know how it will be in your community and you can keep track of the weather on twitter @livedoppler 7hd. >> we hope everyone is using a lot of caution out there, using sunscreen and doing what you need to do to protect yourself. >> the beaches out of control yesterday. >> i can see why. thank you, lisa. up next, trash piling up across california but it's getting
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>> deyoung museum had a special ceremony yesterday honoring japanese veterans who fought in world war ii. the honor honors three units. and also the fighting 442nd with the model "go for broke." the man fought, even though their families were subject to internment. none of us thought we would come home alive. we had to produce a record and then the government would overturn what they had ton in is the 42. >> members of the 442nd were award the 21 medals of honor and
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were known as the purple heart battalion. >> californians are creating less garbage and last year was a record low. in 2012 the average people threw away about 4.3 pounds of garbage every day and in 1989 it it was twelve pounds. starting tomorrow platt plastic bags will be banned in palo alto. the law is building on a 2009 ordinance that barred only large grocery stores from supplying the bags. retailers will also have to start charging customers at least ten cents for reusable or paper bags. restaurants have to starts complying with the law on november 1st. facebook's new advertising policy takes effect tomorrow, pulling ads from people who post violent or sexual content.
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the company is expanding their list of pages that cannot carry ads. more than a dozen sponsors temporarily pulled their ads back in may when a group called women in action had a boycott on pages that encouraged violence against women. the company said they will review guidelines, train workers and hold people more accountable for the material they post. the ban on buying shark fin take place tomorrow. tens of millions of sharks are killed each year to collect the fans. the ban is designed to eliminate the large market in the u.s. a federal proposal being considered would preempt plan because it would being inconsistent with u.s. fishery regulations. two bay area lawmakers are fighting the proposal.
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representative gerald huffman of san rafael and another signed a letter opposing the rule. final decision is expected in july. straight ahead, as the stifling heat wave continues, a new law that will help workers who have to stay out in the high temperatures during the take. and digging for business. we will show you what developers are hopi
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>> welcome back, everyone. let's start this half-hour with a quick look at the weather with our meteorologist lisa argen. >> hi, carolyn, good morning to you. lots of sunshine in emeryville right now with temperatures ranging from the upper 50s in santa rosa. so we have cooled off. i am he were tuesday in fairfield and livermore. no 70s to speak of. in the upper 40s at the coast w the cooler start we will look for temperatures maybe two or three degrees cooler around the bay, closer to the coast, but not here. this is san jose where high temperatures today will be in the mid-90s once again n oakland we should see high in the mid-80s so very little change for you. at the coast low to mid-70s. pleasant weather here. this will remain the place to be with the onshore flow in the
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afternoon while the inland temperatures stay well above average. in fact, over 100 degrees. looks like through tuesday our excessive heat warning continues through tuesday night and we could see the triple digits stick around through wednesday. i'll have a look at the 4th of july forecast coming up in a few minutes. carolyn. >> thank you, lisa. as the heat wave tapes throughout the southwest, outdoor workers are faced with hard work and high temperatures. but as nannette miranda tells us, a new law could help save lives. >> we are very concerned about this heat wave. >> despite searing temperatures, work must still get done through the heat wave, particularly in california's agriculture fields. inspectors will be scanning farm lands, making sure employers abide by the nation's first and toughest heat regulations to keep workers safe. >> if we find those employers, in addition we can shut the job
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sites down and we are prepared to do that. >> regulations implement biped then governor schwarzenegger in 2005 after he became aware of the heat fatality rate for outdoor workers. employees must provide water and breaks. shade must be available when an employee asks for it. and someone must be trained to look for the signs of heat stress. osha has done an expensive education campaign to make sure kansas know the law. >> once you start feeling these symptoms, they can cascade rapidly into heatstroke and death. >> the laws on the books are not the laws of them. >> the enforcement of the heat regulations is needed. >> in 2007 there were 75 complaints filed on behalf of farm workers who were denied shade and filed those complaints with cal osha and in only three cases did cal osha issue citation. >> even with them in effect for
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three years, over 200 farm workers have died from excessive heat. they have had resources challenges but insists the enforcers are very aggressive. the law has been upgraded to include other professions, including construction and landscaping. nannette miranda, abr7 news. scorching temperatures from the east bay across the u.s. are posing problems for pilots. it makes it harder for planes to get off the ground. pilots know it as diminished lifts. long runways give pilots the distances they need to take off and land safely, but smaller airports with shorter run ways have to shut down when temperatures soar. >> it will be too hot to fly. >> when it's that hot the air is thinner. the thinner the air, the left lift on the airplane. major airports in place likes palm springs international are built to take the triple digit temperatures. talks are set to resume
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today between bart and labor unions to try to avoid a strike that could impact thousands of computers. well,well, if it happens it woud impact them tomorrow morning. bart workers say they plan to strike at midnight tonight after talks with management broke down yesterday. the two sides are still far apart on the issues of wage increases, safety and pension contributions. bart said it made a wage offer to workers to meet them halfway of a workers walked out of yesterday's meditation. >> we have increased our offer of a pay increase from 4% to 8%. 1% per year over the 4-year contract. >> while union members say they want a 5% increase for three years, talks are set to resume at 11:00 this morning. adding to the possible computer chaos is a threatened strike by ac transit workers in alameda county. their contract also expires tonight. the union has called a special
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membership meeting at 3:00 p.m. today. bus drivers have authorized tomorrow's potential strike. to absorb all the riders who could be stranded by a bart strike, ac transit is planning provide additional transbay service tomorrow morning but that is if the bus drivers don't walk often the job. we have put together a full range of transportation resources for you at abc7news.com. we have information on all your commute options, including where to go for casual car pooling and where you can park your car for free. we also have realtime traffic maps and you can download the exclusive abc7 waze traffic app to help you navigate the freeways. we will have complete coverage on a special early edition of abc7 morning news tomorrow starting at 4:00 a.m. the anchors along with traffic reporters will bring you the latest on contract negotiations and a look at how all of this is
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affecting the weekday commute. expect to pay more at the pump tomorrow. that's when a state gas increase kicks in. this hike was approved back in february, officially giving california the highest gas tax in the nation at nearly 72 cents a gallon. right now the average cost her gallon of unleaded gas in san francisco is just over four dollars. in oakland it's three dollars the 6. it is also three dollars ninety six cents in san jose. abc7 news business and technology reporter david louie has a story. >> groundbreaking ceremonies are filled with promise. they are building a 23 story
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high-rise apartment tower. >> a project like this will have families and individuals down here going to our restaurants, going to other businesses, and that supports the neighborhood businesses. >> downtown has dozens of systemty store fronts. with only 800 people living downtown it's quiet at night after office workers go down or on nights there are no events by the events center. >> she moved downtown two years ago. >> after 9:00 p.m. it's quiet. only on weekends you find something but after that nothing is going ton. >> the 315 unit one south market apartment tower could add 500 residents. san jose's goal is to have 500 downtown residents, lead to go revitalization. >> my goal is to make it cool, and that means a lot of activity on the sidewalks. >> ethics property trust is betting big on san jose. it already has 35,000 apartment units in other parts of the city but this is their first downtown
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project. it was influence billeted a 50% break on taxes and seats and expedited permitting. but at the don't know if it will make downtown a livelier place. >> for whatever reason, people don't i'm to come to downtown san jose to do things. >> one reason may be preallot dominance of bars and restaurants that are filled the nights the sharks play but less appeal to families and children. >> nor family-friendly environment would be good. >> would that change your mind about living downtown? >> possibly. >> in san jose, david louie, abc7 news. >> up next on the abc7 sunday morning news a photo exhibit that chronicles 25 years of blood, sweat and tears of that gone into rebuilding the bay bridge. and here is a beautiful live look from our exploratorium cam, showing you a bit of the island and the bay bridge in the background there. hot, hot day on tap here and everywhere. lisa argen will have your
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>> the man who designed the new eastern span of the bay bridge predicts some day it will be deemed an icon and people will look back to see how the unique bridge was built. how do we capture that history? one man already has. take a look at this picture he took. he spoke to abc7 news reporter wainwright -- wayne freedman. >> the new bay bridge, we see it in passing along with all those face less dots of people working on it. but joseph hasn't missed anything. >> how people position their feet, what they do with their hands, thousand they adjust
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their tools. >> he's captured them a frame at a time. a body of work, a sum. its parts. >> other people may see the bridge as beautiful. i wanted to see the work as beautiful. >> joseph has been documenting this project since its inception in -- since 1989. it's the culmination of both art and history. >> it's a gorgeous time capsule. >> she runs an art gallery in the basements of city hall where some of joe's pictures have gone on display. imagine selecting 185 from a quarter of a -- 85 from a quarter of a million. >> it was a difficult task. >> aside from taking pictures most of his life he's a union guy, a retired boiler make who are has earned the trust of his subjects because he is run of them. >> they are tough as nails. >> what kind of tough do you mean? >> mentally tough, physically
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tough, extraordinary stamina. >> barring bad bolts or calamity, the new bay bridge should last 150 years. by then it should be more of a backdrop than it is today. but if, in the future, anyone wonders what went into it, they will have joe's pictures and the people in them, 21st century iron workers digitalized and memorialized. >> have you thought of your work as a legacy? >> no. >> you are kind of humble about this thing. >> they will are just pictures. >> abc news 7. >> just pictures? pretty great pictures. >> yes. >> and if you like it hot, you would consider the forecast hot as well. >> and it's not hot everywhere. there is a range out there. the coast at san francisco in the upper 50s. but warm early in san francisco and oakland and mid-90s
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today it's going to be very, very warm. lisa argen along in just a few with the full accuweather forecast. let's check out sports. this afternoon soccer fans around the world will be watching the con federation's cup final between brazil and spain. that game is being televised at 3:00 this afternoon over on our sister network espn. last night more than 50,000 packed stanford stadium to see the earthquakes battle the galaxy. san jose it not disappoint the fans. here's schu with highlights of this morning's sports. >> good morning. we kickoff with the california class cotown in stanford where the earthquakes played host to their bitter rivalry, the galaxy. 50,000 on hand for the match-up. galaxy score first. 289-0 lead in the 56th minute -- the 2-0 lead in.
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56th minute. san jose went down a man. bernard gets his second yellow card of the game, despite a flop. off the flow and shea finds the lose ball. ties it up at two. earth quakes, could they go for the win? he chips it to gord for a second goal of the game. what a comeback and the california class co, 3-2, your final. the giants cannot buy a win. they lost 11 of their last 14. the game was on the mill as usual they got no run support. do people still wear turks seed dough t-shirts? >> cuddyer, hitting streak to 26 games and rbi, 1-0 rockies. the trouble scores scutaro, 1-1 game. he was able to retire the last 20 batters he faced. jeremy affeldt starts the ninth.
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two out, nolan right up the middle. rutledge scores from second. walk-off winner and giants lose their sixth straight game. 2-1, the final. and ernie bobblehead day. one run on five, struck out eight, his 11th wing of the year. a's pitch he were jared parkerrer retired the first batters he faced but he left in the fourth with hamstring tightness. cramps due to the heat. then the three-run bomb by matt adams. blevinsen had two home runs and we have one a's highlights. you don't get a bobblehead unless you make plays like this. coco, the sliding catch bull they still fall, 7-1, the final. the women's.
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nb park, 171 on the day. 10-under for the tournament. she has a four-shot lead coming into today's final round. tiger woods your host at the at&t national but couldn't play, elbow injury. the second shot on 12, goes way past the hole, someone in the gallery muff said something because he gave them the middle finger. 4-over on the take. castro shot an even par and managed 8-par on 18. after findth water, who needs a putser when you make shots like this. a four-way tie for first coming into today's final round. that's the way the ball bounces. i'm mike shumann. that's the way the ball bounces. see you again at five. >> the fans will be sweltering today. >> cardinals have one and the a's have one. if game today. good luck to the a's. temperatures there well into the 80's. bull numbers have dropped in
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san francisco. upper 50s and at the beach up he were 40s. upper 60s in our inland east bay. here's the view from mt. tam. you see the clear conditions. 58 in the city, 61 oakland, 65 in mountain view and 64 san jose. mid-50s santa cruz. another beautiful day there. on the warm side, though. upper 80s to near 90 santa cruz. emeryville clear and looking at at in santa rosa. pretty soon you will be working your way to a warm morning with numbers in the 70s. but at least now it feels good there. 63 union city. from the exploratorium camera, we're clear. continued hot inland through wednesday. we will have the warm evening. so it's kind of the up-side. we will look for cooling for the 4th of july. that really extends the heat into another take wednesday in the inland and also mountain areas. we are looking at a little bit of a breeze around san francisco today and the beaches again. but this morning most places are
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a couple degrees cooler from san jose, three degrees cooler, and from two degrees at the san carlos airport. we will be looking at, once again, the excessive heat warning through tuesday night and that's all two to this continued massive dome. high pressure that has encompassed much of the west coast, including all of california. but the sea breeze kicks up later on today. so once again, we will be just shy of 80 degrees in san francisco. but take a look at the highs today of just a little bit further east. sacramento, 107, 108 chico, and 117 palm springs and 93 los angeles. you see some of the cloud cover being vected to the north. there may be some dry lightning next week. that wouldn't be a good case. but today maybe a degree or two cooler around the bay and closer to the east. but otherwise still hot. 96, no change there. the #* 99 napa.
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104 morgan hill. half moon bay a nice afternoon at 75 degrees. over at the coliseum today, plenty. 80s with another warm one there. i am early 80s, plenty. sunshine in oakland today. we will look for the temperatures to stay very hot inland. in fact, even a few degrees warmer tomorrow. 107. 108 on tuesday. still in the 70s at the coast. mid-and upper 90 around the bay. wednesday we should get some cooling around the bay. if we break the 100-degree mark on winstatious we will have to wait and see, but it looks like the cooling continues into the fourth of july friday and saturday so hang in there. >> yeah. what are you to go to escape the heat? >> you know, moving around. i think going to the cooler spot like everybody else. the coast has been really the place to be. so trying to make my way there. >> all right. thank you, lisa. we have a new abc7 news smartphone app to keep you on top.
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the latest breaking news, weather and traffic. the app is easy to download. you just go to abc7news.com/apps for all the details. if 6 our current app, need to download the new one because the old one will be going away soon. again, the website, abc7news.com/apps. straight ahead, how you can get a firsthand look at a spacecraft that went
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>> hereto are the winning numbers from last night's $50 million power ball draw. the power number 16. no one correctly picked all six numbers. wednesday night's jackpot is estimated at $60 million. >> the space shuttle atlantis has new life this weekend as the centerpiece after new florida tourist attraction. yesterday smoke billowed from the replica solid rocket boosters as organizers counted down to the opening of the space shuttle atlantis exhibit at the kennedy space center. the shuttle is secured 30 feet in the air and it's at an angle that gives visitors a once in a lifetime look at a rocket ship. up next on abc7 morning news at six, tensions heat up as negotiations break down. we are one step closer to a bart strike this morning. and record-setting temperatures.
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>> good morning, everyone. thanks nor joining us on this sunday, june 30th. i'm carolyn tyler. let's start with a quick first look at the weather with meteorologist lisa argen. >> you see the winds up to 25 miles an hour from mt. tam. a little hazy. we have some fog and temperatures are a couple degrees cooler this morning. san francisco, 58. low to mid-60s from oakland in san jose with half moon bay at 52 degrees. feels pretty good out there right now but through the afternoon once again we have the heat in our inland areas with up to 106 degrees. 70's at our coast. notice the range in morning, upper 50s to
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