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tv   ABC7 News 500AM  ABC  September 28, 2014 5:00am-6:01am PDT

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>> good morning, everyone. i'm carolyn tyler. thanks for joining us on this sunday, september 28th. let's start with a quick look at the weather with our meteorologist lisa argen. >> hi there, carolyn. good morning to you. live doppler 7hd clearly points out a departing low over the sierra nevada. still looking at showers here down to the san joaquin valley and some will bring cloud cover over into the bay area and isolated chance of sprinkles to higher elevations. we have fog cover and temperatures on the cool side for afternoon highs. 59 in morgan hill, 62 oakland, 61 in san francisco. so we will be looking at the cloud cover. not much in the way of a marine layer but by the afternoon we
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will call it partly cloudy. the upper 70s inland. up are 60s to the low 70s in san francisco underneath partly cloudy skies. more clouds along the coastline and we will look for low 70s in oakland. still on track to warm up significantly for the october run. i'll have the details. carolyn. >> lisa, thank you. breaking news from overnight. san francisco police say they were forced to use flash bang grenades to subdue a man they say threatened to kill himself following a dui stop. it happened on the believed between clement street and gary boulevard. police pulled over a man they say was armed with a knife. the man cut himself and threatened suicide. authorities used those flash bang grenades to subdue and detain him. the man has been hospitalized. police have cleared 16 squatters from a san francisco building. they weren't just seeking temporary shelter but looking to
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live there for the long-term. it took a month for the building's owner to realize they were there. abc7 reporter lisa amin gulezian has more from san francisco. >> reporter: 16 squatters living illegally in this six unit building were forced out by police. >> i haven't seen anything this big, only because most buildings of this size aren't left vacant for this long. >> some called it a well-organized squatting operation. the three story building stood empty for six months while the new owner figured out what type of renovations to do. but word spread quickly and unattended, unguarded building was up for grabs. >> it was a good place to go. see how it went. you know, because that's what we understood to be the legal means of going about it. >> in other words, the squatters had a plan. to stay here long-term. we got permission to go inside. we found drug paraphernalia,
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bikes, power tools, high end electronics. police think most of it is stolen. the units had power and running water and it's all been for free. the owner's agent did not want to talk on camera but think the squatters started moving in september 1st. several came in and out of here but some new something was fishy. that's why this woman only stayed for a few days. >> i would much rather be outside than inside illegally. >> they allowed most people to take out some of their belongings and there was only one arrest for an unrelated warrant. the property owner is choosing not to file trespassing charges. lisa amin gulezian, abc7 news. >> police are investigating a fatal accident in sonoma county overnight. it happened on highway 121 between ramal and napa roads around 10:30 aft night. it appears one car crossed the double yellow line, slamming into a second vehicle head on.
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one of the drivers died at the scene. the driver and passenger in the other car were taken to the hospital with major injuries. all lanes of highway 121 were shut down while police investigated. they are looking to see if alcohol was a factor. it appears the effort by a group of copalestinian protesters to block an isreali-owned ship from unloading cargo from a ship in theport of oakland was successful. here's video of the ship moving away from the port around midnight. dockworkers did not unload cargo from the ship yesterday because of safety concerns. protesters blocked workers from driving into the term nil yesterday. the protesters were demonstrating in response to recent israeli military action in the gaza strip. san jose police are on the lookout for a gunman after a deadly shooting. it happened just before 9:30
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last night. police arrived to find one person shot at least once. that person died at the scene. it is the 29th homicide of the year in san jose. in the social media landscape it's facebook, twitter, instagram and now something called eddo. the upstart platform has been growing fast and billed itself as the anti-facebook. sergio quintana has the story. >> he is one of the lucky ones that's been invited to join it. he covers social media for c-net. >> people who find facebook to be cluttered and complex, this is a place they can go. >> he gave us a short tour through the bare-bones social media site. it looks like a little bit instagram and pinterest. >> he said they were getting a lot of sign-ups per hour, which
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is big but not close to facebook. >> he said it was designed to be stripped-down and simple. it's a fight to an attitude. some of the interests is being boosted by the recent brush up of facebook and drag queen over identity. >> i have tons of people asking me to invite me to it. eye come out of nowhere. it's amazing. >> they have been leading the campaign against the facebook policy that forces you to list your real name and profiles. but she has not signed up for ello yet. i know facebook is a great ally of the lbgt community and they have a problem that's discriminatory and they need address it and i need them to get the problem out. >> ello may become a smaller alternative site, but becoming a replacement is much harder.
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>> taking on a multibillion-dollar company is hard. it's smart of them to say we're not trying do do that. we are trying to offer you more privacy and we will never show you an adams. >> they had to temporarily freeze invites to the sites because they were getting overwhelmed by so many new users wanting to join. as for facebook, they will be hosting the lbgt community a second time to identify their policy. abc7 news. >> firefighters make significant progress battling the fire east of sacramento, and a new concern emerges. the fire has burned more than 97,000 acres. it is an area larger than the city of san jose. the fire is now 84% contained. evacuation orders for two communities have been downgraded. 300 homes remain threatened, which is down from 3,000.
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the u.s. forest service are now worried about ash and mud polluting the treatments and rivers after the rain. >> if the water quality is compromised. the cost of cleaning it, the threat of contaminants in the water is a big concern. >> to prevent ash from getting into the water, crews will spread straw on the ground. the u.s. forest service expect it will take years, even decades to restore the fire-ravaged land. there is snow in tahoe! this is the view yesterday from heavenly mountain resort courtesy lake tahoe tv. it is live, not from yesterday. the resort reported three inches of snow fell early yesterday morning. the resort could see some additional snow today. and, wow, that's great news. >> yeah. it is raining at lake levels, tahoe valley airport. temperatures in the 30s there.
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upper 30ths and highs in the 50s. another rainy and cool afternoon in the sierra. but right now we are looking at emeryville where numbers are in the low 60s. the extra cloud cover will be hanging on throughout the day, impacting our temperatures. wait until you see the outlook for october. that may surprise you. that's coming up. >> thank you. also ahead, frustration and desperation remain for earthquake victims in napa. a look at how far they have come and the the long road to recovery still ahead. also the catalog customers love to hate. but 7 on your side's michael finney said another massive mailer may be coming yo
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>> breaking news in almeda where right now crews are
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investigating seven suspicious fires. a fire broke out just before 2:30 this morning on the 2200 block of san antonio avenue. at least two homes and a car are involved in that fire. crews are also working a fire involving multiple businesses and vehicles that broke out around 4:10 in the 1600 block of park street. crews from the oakland fire and almeda county fire departments have been called in to help. and firefighters are also at a rubbish fire nearby in the 1500 block of park street. that started a short time later around 4:40. these fires are all part of a series of at least seven of that broken out since 1:00 this morning. if we get more information, we will bring it to you right away. rescuers in japan have found more than 30 unconscious body near the peek of an erupting volcano. the volcano erupted shortly
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before noon yesterday spewing gas and ash high into the sky and blanketing the surrounding area in ash. about 250 people were initially trapped on the slopes, but most were able to make their way down. senator barbara boxer toured quake-damaged napa yesterday. she wanted to take a look at the damage for herself to help residents put their lives back together. colonel barnard has the details. >> barbara boxer got a private eye-opening tour of napa, more than a month after the quake. >> it's so strange to be on the street and see the beauty of the napa streets and all of a sudden there's other home that's yellow tagged or red tagged. >> but the downtown looks-like a construction zone. historic buildings that crumbled during the craig are surrounded by tarps and fences. many businesses have reopened but not all. this one remains closed for
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repairs. boxer is promising fema assistance. >> people get very hopeless if they don't see help forthcoming. we know this private assistance is so important. it will provide grants up to $32,000 to help people repair their homes. >> i really need some help and i need some help now, not tomorrow. >> but many homeowners like kristina jamison are still struggling. were 1889 victoria was red tagged after the foundation collapsed during the quake. she doesn't have money for repairs. the bank turned her down for a loan. >> i wake up every morning cries. and i can't -- >> the stage is being set for sunday rocks, a concert to raise money for the quake victims. promoters say napa needs help. >> a lot of people don't realize how many people are struggling, how many businesses are struggling. there are 16 businesses alone
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that are still closed down in napa. >> business and homeowners who were trying to rebuild and determined to make it happen. cornell barnard, abc7 fuse. last week president obama delivered a message of america leading the way in the fight against the terrorist group isis. coming up on "this week" more on the latest air streaks gains isis targets in syria and iraq. plus a one-on-one interview with house speaker john boehner. you can catch "this week right right right here on abc7 at 8:00 this morning. new details. new mom chelsea clinton is showing off her baby girl. clinton posted this photo on her twitter page showing her and her husband, mark works their daughter charlotte, born on friday. and here is former president bill clinton and former secretary of state hillary clinton with the new addition to the plan. the parrish you'd a statement yesterday reading in part, we are, quote, blessed, grateful
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and so happy to be the grandparents of a beautiful girl. remember when luxury retailer restoration hardware mailed out 17-pound catalogs to millions of people who did not even want them? it caused quite the backlash. surely they won't do the same thing again, or will they? here's michael finney with the 7 on your side follow-up. >> it was a bundle as big as a cinder block and some joked it could be used as furniture and others said it was a colossal waste of natural resources. you think the company would pull back but there was talk about putting out another one. >> this is the bundle that came to doorsteps across the country. 3300 glossy photos of eclectic furniture at restoration hardware. >> paper is too precious, trees
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are too precious for this kind of junk mailing. >> when nancy of wood side and her neighbor saw the catalogs, they gathered them at nancy's house. >> i had a littleton of magazines on my front door stop. >> they piled them into trucks and wheeled them back to the store. nancy hope the retailer got the message. we asked restoration hardware about all the backlash against the giant catalogs. it did not respond. however, in its latest address to investors, the ceo wasn't ruling out an even bigger catalog next year. >> we are questioning how much bigger the book can be, how much the bigger the drop can be. >> the retailer is expanding product lines and that could mean expanding the catalog. however, freedman did acknowledge some folks didn't like all that marketing material. >> with the book being this big is a positive there's nothing like it and it breaks through and it's dominant and so forth, but there's also a bit of an intimidation factor and
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customers that didn't want it. >> in fact, freedman admitted even he got one on his doorstep. he hasn't read it either. >> i run the company and my big set of books came, and last night i said, look, it's sitting on the counter in my kitchen and i haven't even went down and gone through the book yet because it's a lot. >> freedman said it took a huge effort to produce all those books. the printer built three extra machines just for this mailing. he joked about using them as step stools or all the books to dump them in the recycling bin. but only how to do it better next year. >> i don't think he's in touch with reality. >> freedman said he may try to -- and they will try not a to mail them out to folks who don't want one. nancy said she's ready to organize another mass return if they do get them again next
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year. i'm michael finney, 7 on your side. >> did you get one? i did not get one. >> no. >> send them to people who want them. that's the solution. we want a little presteptation. is it coming? >> if you are headed into the sierra nevada, yes. but there is a slight chance over in our east bay, the higher elevations of santa clara maybe an isolated shower and here is why. wide doppler 7hd showing not only the precip and the snow in the mountains and some of this extends down through the san joaquin valley and the rotation around this could bring this a few showers in the higher elevations. we are looking at more cloud cover today and that will keep the temperatures a little cooler than average. here's a look at some of the snow. you have to go up above about rainfall maybe a quarter inch and we aren't looking at
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thunderstorm activity. pretty cloudy and cool in the mountains. it will take three or four days to turn around and warm up, but it certainly will. and that's also our forecast back home for a warmer second half of the week. emeryville right now this morning in the low 067s. we are looking at 61 in oakland. san carlos 67. good morning morgan hill, 59 for you and half moon bay at 61 degrees. san francisco, sfo, no delays as of yet. 59 in napa. 62 in concord and 59 in livermore. so you saw a few sprinkles yesterday. and today wouldn't be surprised if we can squeeze out a few more. certainly in the higher elevations. the exploratorium camera, some of that cloud cover. the deck of low clouds and fog not defined too well but we will have enough cloud cover to call it partly cloudy this morning and throughout the afternoon. we will look for the warming trend to get significantly better on wednesday. a little bit of warming tuesday,
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but by wednesday and thursday we are talking about a strong ridge of high pressure building in. there's the low u see the rotation of the clouds, the precip on the back side of it, and a little bit of energy once again throughout the morning and afternoon hours. it will allow for some of the rain perhaps. probably more than anything cloud cover in parts of the bay. with that, we will keep our sites on the high pressure that's out in the pacific. this continues to get closer. and as it gets closer, the no is offshore and we could see temperatures in the city near 80 degrees come thursday. so today, though, eats about cooler temperatures and the cloud cover with 75 in san jose. we will call it partly sunny, 73 in sunnyvale, and redwood city in the mid-70s. san francisco normal at 70 degrees and in the north bay look for 77 petaluma, 80 calistoga. near east bay low 70s for oakland. head inland, upper 70s for concord.
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77 in pleasanton. and a little more cloudy today with temperatures in the mid-60s over in pacifica. the accuweather seven-day forecast, temperatures will come up maybe a couple degrees tomorrow, stay there on tuesday. and here comes the high pressure ridge building wednesday, and thursday, friday and saturday not in the only the inland highs but the coast land temperatures steadily rise up through the early part of next weekend. we will tell you how warm it will be in your community and keep track of bay area weather on twitter and live doppler 7hd. we will give you more of what you didn't ask for, some rain and slowly warming up and drying up. >> you said we will show you how warm or cold. not cold at all. >> no. >> thank you, lisa. up next, eligible no morris. the woman who made gorge clooney an honest man and pictures of the happy groom arriving at his italian ceremony
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george clooney married human rights lawyer amal alamuddin in a private ceremony yesterday. the one line statement is expected to be the only public comment on the marriage. there was a host of celebrities joining the couple in the ceremony at the luxury hotel overlooking the grand hotel. before the wedding he was followed by a plethora of photographers and he rubbed his hands in anticipation there before disappearing inside the hotel at sunset. here's a closer look at the woman who swept clooney off his feet. amal alamuddin comes from a prominent lebanese family. her family escaped lebanon before the war hit. she grew newspaper the finest schools. and went to nyu she has worked mostly at the u.n.. her appointment in august was looking at possible war violations during this summer's
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israeli-gaza conflict. much more ahead on the abc sunday morning news. developing news in ferguson, missouri where two police fires have been fired on in separate shootings with one hit. and caltran is under fire for not protecting e
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>> welcome back. we are starting this half-hour with a look at the weather with meteorologist lisa argen. >> good morning, carolyn. we still have more weather to speak up. this is the same system that brought up the cold front thursday. right now he's situated over the san joaquin valley and some rotation around the low igniting energy in terms of showers. look for thunderstorms to the south. but for the bay area, extra cloud cover and a little cooler today. anywhere from 2 to 5 degrees below average. 62 oakland, 60 morgan hill. we will look for partly sunny conditions today 60s at the coast. about 70 san francisco. mid-70s san jose. a warmup that's still on the way. we will talk about the temperatures coming up. carolyn. >> thank you, lisa. developing news in ferguson, missouri. police are investigating after an officer was shot. last night the officer was checking out a community center
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after dispatch received a call. someone opened fire, shooting him in the arm. he is expected to be okay. the suspect is still at large. and early this morning a second officer who was off-duty was shot at while driving his own car. he was not hit, but sustained minor injuries from broken glass. as you know, there is tension between ferguson police and the community since an officer killed an unarmed teenager michael brown back in early august. the navajo nation has received the largest settlement ever paid to a single indian tribe. the u.s. government has she would out $554 million. federal initials and tribal representatives sealed the deal with a ceremony in ozolinsh marking the end of a long-running lawsuit over the mismanagement of trust lands. the navajo nation originally sought $900 million when the lawsuit was filed in 2006.
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>> we looked to stop spending money on lawsuits and spend money on the things that are really important to the the navajo nation. >> starting next month tribal leaders will hold community meetings to decide how the money will be spent. some will be used to fix roads and bring water to parts of the reservation. the department of the interior has paid out nearly $8 million to native-american tribes all over the country. new trouble for an embattled caltrans freeway project. it they have been investigating the by pass for more than a year, when it meets environmental regulations, violation of the clean water act and serious cost overruns. now they are of it is for destruction of no one
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archeological sites. hundreds of ancient artifacts are being unearthed as the construction continues in mendocino county. here's dan ashley with the details. how many lives the indian peoples have to take? >> he's a spokeswoman for this band of indians. she's one of thousands of native americans who trace their ancestry back to little lake valley. the same valley where caltran is building a major freeway by pass. >> they are bigging our villages up. you are destroying our culture. >> the by pass will move freeway traffic around the town of willis on highway 1201 in mendocino county. but native americans group say caltrans has failed to protect their heritage. local tribes say seven indian villages once dotted this area. now they are being torn apart by construction along the six mile freeway fruit. it was a lush wetteland full of
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salmon and reads they we've into baskets, some considered the best in the world. in the mid-8000s european settlers changed anything. >> they brought the army in and took our land and killed our people. >> the native people that survived were forced out. the ground around willis is full of things they left behind. 5,000 years of history protected by federal law. now artifacts are turning up all over the construction site and on caltrans property that's being dug up to comply with environmental requirements. >> they find stuff daily. >> mike is chairman of this band of indians in willis. he said caltrans has found close to 30 potentially important sites. we saw some of them, but we aren't sharing the location toss protect them from looters. >> the tribal monitors come through and the archeologists will find arrow heads, pedestals, all kinds of artifacts. >> they say caltrans is playing
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catch-up with sacred artifacts. they didn't protect before construction start the. >> you hire all these experts and they failed. >> caltrans insists the archeological information is confidential. officials refuse to talk with abc7 news on camera. last fall a spokesman told us the department met its legal requirements. >> we try to identify every known potentially archeological or cultural site and then we plan our by pass project to avoid those areas. >> caltrans did not avoid all those areas. a few months after construction began, crews seriously damaged or destroyed a known archeological site. >> we actually plotted it on the map. we realized that the description that we've been using was not correct and that actually sent it into our construction area. >> the site was somewhere in this field, but crews didn't know about it. they inserted 80-foot long
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plastic drains into the ground and covered the area with tons of dirt. >> we will probably never know exactly what was on that site. caltrans won't discuss it publicly, but the case is it may have been an ancient trash pet, often considered a treasure trophy for archeological discovery. >> so how could caltran make such a major mistake in our research found documents that concerned serious issues at the site. caltrans environmental impact statement showed just one site. but this letter from the office of historic preservation showed before construction began, caltrans already discovered six more sites that were assumed eligible for historic listings and required protection. caltrans promised there would be no adverse effect on historic properties if protective measures are taken. those measures include signing,
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stakes, sensors and monitors, part of what is called an environmentally sensitive area action plan. >> they did not use one element of their environment talenstive construction plan prior to starting. >> she's an expert on the national historic preservation act, section 106, that governs this type of case. >> i have personally conducted reviews over approximately 3,000 individual section 106 projects and i've never had one this egregious. >> they call it a major breach of the protection of a historic property. caltrans did eventually start the required protocols, but in june a caltrans e-mail to the tribes indicated another unmarked site was impact bid a construction crew installing a waterline. caltrans has been in formal consultation was the indians for month and has met with the coyote valley tribe but there's no formal agreement on how to proceed. >> as we are sitting in meetings
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and talking to caltrans, they are still out there doing construction. we need to protect the sites. >> dan ashley, abc7 news. >> a lifeline has been granted to a struggling east bay hospital. governor jerry brown signed a bill giving $3 million to financially strapped doctors medical center in san pablo. the bill will provide emergency bridge money while long-term, more secure funding is pursued. doctor's medical center has been in danger of closing for weeks. financial problems face the hospital on die version status in august, allowing ambulances to be rerouted to other hospitals further away. still ahead on. abc7 sunday morning news, the racial disparities of breast cancer. less frequent but more deadly among african americans. the race for a cure and how you can help this morning. and here's a live look from our golden gate bridge cam. sunny and sunnier this week.
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lisa argen along shortly with the full accuweather forecast.
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totino's pizza rolls... ...gets you there in just 60 seconds. >> happening today, oracle's annual open world conference kicks off in san francisco. tens of thousands of attend december are expected to flood moscone center. oracle's ceo, larry ellison, will deliver the keynote address for the conference. it runs through october 2nd. i hope those attend december know that fall is our hot time of the year. >> exactly. and as october arrives, the weather will be changing.
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that's the middle of the week. but right here emeryville right now, it is mild. 64 degrees with cloudy skies. we still have the clouds in the forecast throughout the afternoon. maybe a sprinkle. we will talk about our cooler than average highs today and the warmup coming up. >> and also we know larry ellison is stepping down. but moving on to sports, the a's with another opportunity to clinch a wildcard. all they had to do was beat the rangers. could they get it done? mike shumann has the highlights coming up in sports.
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with something terrible to admit. m a doctor f i treated thousands of patients, risked their lives, while high on prescription drugs. i was an addict. i'm recovered now, but an estimated 500,000 medical professionals are still out there, abusing drugs or alcohol.
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police, airline pilots, bus drivers... they're randomly tested for drugs and alcohol... but not us doctors. you can change that: vote yes on proposition 46. your lives are in our hands. >> hanged to thousands of runners will crowd san francisco's embarcadero this morning to help fight breast cancer. they will be competing in the
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susan g coman foundation. it will help fight breast cancer in the bay area and provide for research to test african-american women. here's cheryl jennings with the details. >> ucf researchers, rina, is fighting breast cancer by tapping the spirit of the bay area's african-american communities. >> african women have a higher percentage of breast cancer than white woman. but they are much more likely to die once diagnosed. >> with nearly a million dollars in grant money from the susan g coleman foundation, the doctor is studying ways to attack that disparity. genetic factors can lead some african-american women vulnerable to a form of the disease known as hereditary breast cancer. one of her goals is to identify families who are particularly at
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risk so they can receive genetic screening. >> there are preventive treatments that can be given so that these women or children, their grandchildren can avoid getting breast cancer. >> the doctor is working to spread that message through a program called the ucsf abundant life ministry. it identifies pass stores and other volunteers and churches to spread the word about breast cancer risks in their community and the need to receive the appropriate screenings. >> to hear this message from them has much more credibility can virtually any other source. >> the grant money is raised almost entirely by the annual susan g coleman annual event staged across the country. three quarters of the money stays in the community. it can be spent in the fight
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against cancer. cheryl jennings, abc7 news. >> and there is still time to get involved today. we have a link posted at abc7news.com. lisa, it might be a little warm for those runners. of course, that's not going to stop them but a little hot. tell dehydrate. >> you are right. the overnight lows have not been that low, in the 60s. but the afternoon highs will be held down with cloud cover and from the influence of this area of low pressure that keeps churning out just a little bit more precip in the sierra nevada. some high-elevation snow and even a thunderstorm down through the san joaquin valley. for the mountains here we are looking at a lot of dense cloud cover ask the rain that continues to fall. so back home on the back side of that low we will be looking at some clouds and still a possibility of a shower. at south lake right now it's cloudy. you can see higher elevations above 8,000 feet.
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kirkwood, bear valley, maybe another additional inch or two of snow. from our roof camera right now we have cloudy skies in san francisco. 61 degrees. 62 in oakland. so it is a bit on the muggy side. morgan hill 60. half moon bay 61. and no delays as of yet from sfo where temperatures are running from the low 50s in santa rosa. really the only cool spot except petaluma as 50. by the delta with partly cloudy and mostly cloudy skies. concord near 60 trees. and from you are exploratorium camera we are looking at cloud cover that will stay with us throughout most of the day. not only here in san francisco, but in the east bay and the south bay will hold on to that. partly cloudy throughout the day today. the warming trend not getting slated really until the middle of the week. once it does. it's going to warm up. in fact, it looks like temperatures will be pretty warm on the coast.
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in fact perhaps near 80 degrees at some of our beaches by thursday and friday. as for today some circulation around the low. so the back edge pumping up clouds into the higher elevations of san benito county, santa clara and also the east bay hills. it's slow to move out. another rainy day in the mountains and partly cloudy skies here. high pressure far enough offshore we won't feel the influence of this in terms of the middle of the week. so between now and then the sea breeze, the extra cloud cover and temperatures anywhere from two to five or six degrees below average. 67 monterey. pretty mild. 77 in sacramento, though. look at it rain. 55 in the southern sierra. we will look for temperatures in and around the range of yesterday. but maybe a few degrees cooler. 75 in fremont. san jose 73. 68 half moon bay and at&t park
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this afternoon. it will be breezy with clouds. upper 60s. and for the game in santa clara, 70s underneath a partly cloudy sky. the accuweather seven-day forecast. temperatures coming up a few degrees tomorrow. tuesday pretty steady, and by wednesday we have 80s inland. but look at the bump-up by thursday and friday, 80s, 90s. and at the coast on friday into next saturday. so, you know, that's what happens in october. so far it's going to be a nice warmup. >> let's check out sports. a big day on the gridiron for bay area teams today. the rangers are playing the miami dolphins all the way in london. kickoff 10:00 a.m. our time from wimbley stadium. and the 49ers host the 3-0 philadelphia eagles. that game starts at 1:25. this morning cal fans are celebrating the bears exciting double overtime victory over colorado yesterday.
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here's mike shumann with the highlights in this morning's sports. >> good morning. well, cal head coach sunny is in his second year with the bears but he's yet to win a game against a pac-12 opponent. colorado was in town. they hold off the buffalos and go to overtime. and mike mack tier, the head-man in colorado. 7td passes. three in the first pass. 21-7 colorado. second quarter bears answer. three guys in front. somehow avoids them. goes 92 yards. longest pass in cal history. the berries were down 28-14 at the half. start of the third quarter. mohamed finds the gap. 10 yards. tie game at 28. this is like fast-break basketball. now tied at 42. finds chris harper. his sixth td pass of the day. ends with a career high 7. great throw, great catch. and double overtime. james lines up for the 34-yard
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field goal. good. sunny's first win over a pac-12 opponent. ed cardinals against the huskies. finds ty montgomery gumry. he will did the rest. he's a player. 10-0, stanford. huskies respond. perfect place on this pass. 25-yard strike. they miss the two-point conversion. 10-6, cardinals. strange play here. just over two minutes to go in the first half. third and one. he rips it away. 32 yards for the score. they reviewed it. and in the fourth. kevin hogan does it himself. pump fake, five yard touchdown. cardinals go on to win. stanford now 3-1. the a's season coming down to game 162. the magic number for the postseason is coming down to the final game of the season. after an injury scare friday
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night, donaldson adding to the first pitch. crushed. a's on the board 1-30. didn't last long. bottom of the first. the single to right. the catch. josh reddick. not a good idea normally. slides in, beats the taking, game tied at one. now the fourth. the fastball. 3-1, texas. in the seventh, samardzija again. two-run shot to left. 5-2, rangers. lowry singles to right. the ranger lead town to one. last chance in the eighth. coco crisp on first. he strikes out swinging and a's lose 5-4. a giants and padres. a beautiful day. brandon belt. johnson into the right field corner. rbi double, scores. padres tie it up in the fifth.
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skies one to center. he trotz home on the sac fly. randy crawford breaks the tie in the eighth. bases loaded. 3-1, giants. they will win by that score remember they will face either the cardinals or pirates in the game on wednesday. that's the way the ball bounces. i'm mike shumann. see you again tonight at 5:00. have great day. >> up next, why today is a free day to explore the exploratorium.
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>> the public can stop by the exploratorium for free today. it's from the hispanic professional engineers. families can stop by and explore and celebrate the contributions of engineers by checking out exhibits, crash testing pinatás or building small electric motors. the free day runs from ten to
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five at the exploratorium. abc7 is the official tv partner of the exploratorium. up next on the abc7 sunday news at six, a dramatic capture. why san francisco police say they were used to use flash bang grenades to subdue a dui suspect. and an entire building taken over by squatters in san francisco. police tell us it's a common problem, but this incident stands out.
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♪ turn around ♪ every now and then i get a little bit hungry ♪ ♪ and there's nothing really good around ♪ ♪ turn around ♪ every now and then i get a little bit tired ♪ ♪ of living off the taste of the air ♪ ♪ turn around, barry ♪ finally, i have a manly chocolatey snack ♪ ♪ and fiber so my wife won't give me any more flack ♪ ♪ i finally found the right snack ♪ ♪
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>> good morning, everyone. i'm carolyn tyler. thanks for joining us on this sunday, september 28th. let's start with a quick look at the weather with our meteorologist lisa argen. >> hi there, carolyn. we are looking outside from the roof camera where there are plenty of clouds around. sfo, 34-minute delays right now. keep that in mind as you are heading out. 61 san francisco. 58 san jose with low 60s on the coast.

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