tv ABC7 News 600PM ABC May 1, 2019 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT
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>> vic lee joins us live where the city just installed the first of a series of new cameras. vick. >> reporter: that's right. >> in fact, there are actually three red light cameras at this intersection, if you zoom into the one behind me. the transportation agency said the red light cameras are being installed at the most dangerous intersecti intersections, the ones with the most collisions. red light runners, hard to miss here, a main artery to highway 101. starting today, this red light camera will be watching you, first, there'll be a 30 day warning period. municipal transportation agency spokesman, paul rose. >> if you do run a red light at these locations you will receive a warning. after 30 days, it will turn into
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actual citations. >> a citation for running a red light is close to 500 bucks. this is the first of 20 cameras installed at 13 interactions by the end of this summer. >> from our point of view, they can't come soon enough and we need more. >> brian is with the san francisco bicycle coalition. he remembers when there were some 47 red light cameras in the city. the first cameras were installed in 1996. >> since 1996, we've seen a 66% drop injury collisions of red lights across the city. the contract with the company that made them finally expired. cameras were old and parts hard to come by. >> they did break down more often and saw less citations over the last few years. >> reporter: the city quietly shut all the cameras off in january. for more than three months, red light runners got a pass. with the new company, the new cameras are state-of-the-art,
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more reliable and they can save lives. >> this is about one of the most dangerous behaviors on our streets, running red lights or failure to yield to pedestrians and people on bikes. >> reporter: the city says those new cameras will not only save lives but save the city money. the old cameras cost about $2 million to run per year, the new ones less expensive, $800,000 to run. >> you can get a closer look at this map to see if there's one in your neighborhood by going to our website. >> happening now. safe street advocates taking over streets in san francisco. you see them as people wearing yellow shirts continuously use the crosswalk to try to prevent
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drivers from turning onto market street. currently they're prevented from turning onto market only between third and 8th streets. advocates want them to force them to the downtown corridor all together. >> the mayday marchers filled the streets this afternoon. a large crowd less than an hour ago gathered at the gallo plaza and amphitheater. we saw plenty of marches and demonstrations around the bay area, the largest may have been in oakland, last several hours. live from the center of it all, the charles p howard terminal in oakland. wayne. >> good evening, dan. that's the terminal behind me. serves as storage for trucks but could eventually be a new home for oakland athletics. that is a point of contention, perfect for a mayday.
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it would not be a may 1st without this. chanting, marching, the main ingredients of mayday observed around the world. >> about workers rights, protecting public good over private game. >> it was about winning hearts and minds as they pertain to the charles p. howard terminal. they want to build a new stadium here. these warehouse workers of local 10 say not in their back yards and see it as a misguided plan with a price. >> this is just a beginning. >> we need more. we need more infrastructure. we need more stuff coming in to the west coast. we need more, we don't needless. >> from the oakland as, a statement supporting the union saying we fully support their right to express themselves. we met with them hon multiple occasions and incorporated their
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valuable feedback into our plans from the port of oakland. >> it adopted a new five year strike plan. i calls for record mara time busy growth into the next decade. the port won't do anything to jeopardize its mara time business. >> reporter: from the city council. >> we want to make sure workers get treated fairly and people get paid a living wage. >> reporter: when it all ended, nothing decided, talking points restated on mayday, 2019 in the east bay. >> we will stand up and fight for what we believe in. >> from the port of oakland today, no clue how this negotiation might go. we don't know if it's a land sale or lease or deal at all. the only thing we do know is how the long shoremen feel about it. abc7 news. >> thank you.
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>> now we go to developing news in east oakland. someone called just after 3:30 this afternoon. officers say the victim had more than one gunshot wound and died at the scene. police haven't released information about the suspects or what led up to that shooting. >> at 22nd and bartlet street in the mission district, just before 4:15 they got a shot spotter notification, police technology installed in cities to pick up the sound of gunshots and triangulate it. officers found a man shot at the hospital now and injuries considered life-threatening. the student kicked out as part of the college admissions scandal is a chinese national, whose parents paid 6.5 million dollars to get her into stanford. the sophomore moved out of her campus dorm march 30th, three
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days before the scandal was announced. a hillsborough couple pleaded guilty to the scandal in federal court. the latest in the case. >> reporter: hillsborough's parents, bruce and isackson are the first to formally enter guilty pleas to conspiracy charges. they are cooperating with the government and in exchange prosecutors say they will not face any more criminal charges and facing sentencing the low end of the guidelines. they paid rick singer for the college admissions cheating scheme for two of their daughters. sentencing set for july 31st. according to prosecutors, another parent charged, elizabeth enriquez, introduced them to singer in august of 2015.
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>> the isacksons face a maximum 20 years in prison. prosecutors are expected to recommend a lesser sentence. bruce isackson may face additional spents from additional charges. we are keeping track of each of the bay area people involved in the scandal. the family of an apple engineer who died when his tesla crashed are suing the carmaker. they broke the story last night ahead of the family's news conference today. >> he was a really good guy for our family and kids. we miss him so much. >> walter left behind a wife and two children. the lawsuit says march 23rd last year the autopilot of his tesla model s steered him into into io accident. >> i believe tesla did know
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there were problems and glitches with the car, with the autopilot and nonetheless put it out there where people could become injured. >> the i-team reached a spokesperson for tesla but the company declined to comment on the lawsuit. fighting homelessness is a big part of our effort to build a better bay area. >> the ceo of sales force and his wife are meeting the challenge with a $30 million gift. you will hear the difference they want to make only on nbc7 he did with me next. i'm spencer christian. the month of may has arrived. it does bring rainfall sometimes. a look at that in my accuweather forecast. tonight, the long journey the sea lion made before he hopped into the back of a san francisco cruiser yesterday. warriors are up two games to none against the rockets. a great series so far. next is saturday. coverage father at 5, tip-off is
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you might or joints.hing for your heart... but do you take something for your brain. with an ingredient originally discovered in jellyfish, prevagen has been shown in clinical trials to improve short-term memory. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. solving homelessness is a big part of bettering our bay area. this week the bay area received $30 million from salesforce owner and his wife. he talked about his decision to make a difference only on 7. >> mark, you've been so generous to this city and community and you and lynn are being generous
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again with a $30 million donation. why? >> dan, lynn has really inspired me to make homelessness my number one philanthropic priority in the city. you can see we need it now more than ever. >> reporter: it is that sense of urgency, that sense of homelessness in san francisco has tipped from crisis to catastrophe that is fueling mark to take his commitment to the problem another step forward. he and his wife, lynn, donating $30 million to usf to study the causes of and solutions for homelessness. >> this is an opportunity for them to scale and research and be the north star how to clean up the homelessness problem. >> reporter: margo, this gift is really exciting. >> it is exciting. we're thrilled. bit how that money will be used. >> we will use it for three purposeses, we want to end
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homelessness. the head of homeless operations and will spearhead the 50 the fund. >> taking what we already know and being sure we candice sem nate it and the pathways to end this crisis. we can distribute it and the pathways to end this crisis. >> reporter: when it comes to health, housing, the doctor says, is the best medicine. >> reporter: what do you want to tell people today you think will come out of that study and that amount of money being spent? >> we realize it's a large amount of money and think of it as an investment to get to policies that will solve this problem. >> reporter: roughly 7500 homeless on the streets, the mayor pushed for a controversial plan along the embarcdero. the problem compelled mark
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benioffs to lobby for a tax last year to generate roughly $300 million a year. that money is being collected not yet spent. >> reporter: so you're pleased it has passed and optimistic once that money is released you will see a difference. >> there is a lot to do. walking down the streets in our city, everybody needs to be focused on homelessness. the number one issue. >> reporter: you mean for this economic research to be used on the street? >> just walking down the street i know there's many things we can do and research says so. many people are confused what we should do. this gives people clarity, what to do, how to do it and why it works. it's been proven through a scientific process. not just one person coming wake up an idea. >> everybody has an idea, right?
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this gift will allow the center to give decision-makers hard data to develop the most effective strategies to deal with homelessness. we want to hear your ideas building a better bay area, share it on facebook. california saw its slowest population growth rate since 2015. it had a population of 39.9 million people. the growth rate in 2018 was .47%. the sluggish rate was driven by a significant drop in birth and uptick in deaths as the baby boomer generation gets older. the two biggest cities were chico and sacramento. officials say the increase is people relocating to those cities from paradise that lost 90% of its housing in last year's campfire. experts say we will have a
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heavy wildfire season this year. they predict it will be bad along the west coast in california and washington. in california, we've had so much rain bringing us out of the drought, now, there's actually a lot of grass, which wen dry, then turns into fuel for fires. new at 6:00, about 20 minutes ago, the white house has approved a disaster declaration for including what we saw with napa valley february 13th through the 15th to help folks recover. sonomo is not part of this and the severe damage was in late february. >> spencer christian has the forecast. >> we may get some rainfall soon. we have bright sunny skies
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across the bay area right now. a little breezy out there and warmer this hour by several degrees than this time yesterday. check out the 24 hour temperature change. 6 degrees warmer in san francisco and 4 degrees warmer in oakland. all around the area we had a nice day as may arrives. fog, low clouds pushing through the golden get a looking down. otherwise, big blue sky, 60 degrees in san francisco, 65 across the bay. 70 in san jose, santa cruz, 68 and 67 at half moon bay. here this is view from mount tam on ocean beach and a little bit of cloudiness. temperature readings, 72 at livermore and from the east bay hills, this is the view of the golden gate, these are our forecast features, sunny and breezy and mild and chance of
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showers developing sunday into monday. we do get rainfall in the month of may. this is the average rainfall totals, .7 of an inch in san francisco is the average, just under half an inch at sfo. oakland, just over three-quarters of an inch. it can be a partly wet month. looks pretty dry. overnight lows mid to upper 40s. highs tomorrow, low 60s at the coast to low to mid-70s at the bayshore line and close to 80 in the warmest inland spots. looking ahead to sunday, a system that will produce showers offshore. one or two of those showers may make it onshore. as of 3:00 p.m., it's indicating dry conditions and we will see clouds. late sunday into early monday, you may see some showers pushing inland. looks like the best chance is in
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the north bay usually our weddest area when we get -- wettest area when we get wet weather. it will produce a little bit of dampness. nice and mild and warm the next two days, high temperatures friday, low 80s inland. mid-70s on the bay. it will get cooler and breezier over the weekend as a few extra clouds come in and chance of showers sunday to early monday morning. we get partial clearing late monday to tuesday and warmer weather midweek next week, much like we have right now. >> thanks. a neighborhood shooting left a bay area woman feeling vulnerable. now, she's doing something about it. it. >> she's part you know when you're at ross and you find that perfect spring dress at that "oh, yeah" price? yes! that's yes for less. score the latest spring dresses at 20% to 60% off department store prices, every day. at ross.
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yes for less. tto harrison, the wine tcollection.. at ross. to craig, this rock. the redwoods to the redheads. the rainbows to the proud. i leave these things to my heirs, all 39 million of you, on one condition. that you do everything in your power to preserve and protect them. with love, california.
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exactly what you need... yes. ...for your growing family? that's yes for less. everything your pet needs at 20 to 60 percent off specialty store prices. at ross. yes for less. developing news on the shooting at charlotte, the student, riley howell died and ellis parlier. he had withdrawn from the school earlier this year. making bullet-proof clothing, a growing industry
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with so many school shootings these days. >> the story. >> what you're wearing looks like an ordinary jacket. i will knock on it. this is bullet-proof. >> yes, this was bullet-proof. >> reporter: it was designed by the person wearing it. the founder of the bay area startup, wonder hoodie designed an entire line of bullet-proof clothing including the first bullet-proof hoodie. >> the sides of your face banged of your head right here. we only use kevlar. >> reporter: drawn from a dramatic personal event, a fatal armed robbery in our hometown of seattle. >> last year, my neighbor, vietnamese mother of two was walking home approached for her purse and she wouldn't give it up. they had a struggle and the person ended up shooting her eight times in the chest. she died right there in front of her home and mine.
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>> reporter: random shootings and school shootings, a reality for bullet-proof gear for people who never used to need the armor and teachers and children. and like witnessing her neighbor's brutal murder was enough to change the trajectory of her career. >> i looked for something to buy. i couldn't find anything made for women or children or a price point i could afford. >> reporter: with her background in material science she got working on prototypes and founded the company in 2018 and started selling her line as soon as it met the national justice institute's standards for body parts. >> this is for someone like me or my mother or mom or little brother was looking for a product like this it was made available to them. >> reporter: the sadness of the products especially kid sizes not lost on its inventor. abc7 news.
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opening statements are complete in the ghost ship trial. the next phase, testimony. two men are charged with 36 counts of involuntary manslaughter for the fire that gutted a warehouse named the ghost ship. >> the trial is finally under way. in court today, when the defense claimed the deadly fire was no accident. >> we strongly believe it was arson. >> reporter: outside an oakland courtroom, defense attorney, tony serra, reiterated what he told jurors inside, a claim the deadly ghost ship fire was arson. >> one witness close by heard popping sounds, like glass breaking right before the fire,
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and then he saw people run out the back door. that suggests that molotov cocktails. >> reporter: investigators never clearly identified a cause for the december 2016 fire. the attorney for ghost ship defendant acknowledged he has no physical evidence of arson. it's a theory also raised for attorneys for co-defendant max harris. >> we have multiple witnesses to prove arson. that will exonerate max harris. >> reporter: serra described almena as a family man, not a criminal who created a museum like setting that provided a working and living place for artists. >> the child protective service was there and they thought it was beautiful and awesome. they never told him it was a fire hazard. >> reporter: in their opening
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statements tuesday, prosecutors called it a death trap created by harris and almena. on monday, witnesses will take the stand, the first expected to be the mother of a victim. she will talk about the heart breaking text she received from her daughter from inside of the ghostship on the night of the fire. laura, abc7 news. the ghost ship trial is expected to last several months. we will cover every part of it. read about it on our website. a democrat is stg the attorney general to resign following a judiciary senate hearing today about the handling of the mueller report. >> you accepted the report as the evidence? >> yes. >> you did not question or look at the underlying evidence that supports the conclusions in the report? >> no. >> attorney general william barr says he will skip tomorrow's
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house hearing. he objects to questioning from a judiciary committee staff lawyer rather than from lawmakers. it comes on the heels of a letter from special counsel robert mueller who said he objected to barr's characterization of the reports' conclusions. democrats learned today the justice department will not comply with a house subpoena fo an unredacted version of that report. >> if negotiations don't result in compliance, the next step is a contempt citation against the attorney general. >> the white house responded to today's hearing saying democrats sound desperate and must be mad at mueller for not doing their bidding. a pastor in a small texas town is coming to the defense of a bay area woman kicked off the train by a conductor. >> here with this woman's story tonight. >> it's pretty wild. wait until you hear this. this widow boarded a train in
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texas to make the move to the bay area to be reunited with her daughter. mom almost didn't make it. she watches over her dog at her home. she is one of two support dogs that belonged to her late husband. the other is sunny. >> a big girl. >> reporter: juanita rode the train from the former hometown in texas. she said everything was fine until the new attending came on duty. the attendant ordered her off the train and said the dogs were make doing much noise, which she denies. >> they're not, i'm saying. i was in the sleeper car with them and i would know if they were barking. >> reporter: this is video off youtube. >> we have more cows in our county than people. >> reporter: that's pastor joanna notified of her plight by police. >> was scared to death.
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>> reporter: both the pastor and police brought food to her and put her up in a hotel and called her daughter. >> of course i was upset about the situation. my mom was very tired and frail. >> reporter: she and her boyfriend made the 24 hour drive to pick her up. the pastor says he sees two to three passengers kicked off every month in alpine for reasons she doesn't always agree with. she suspects she was the victim of discrimination. >> she was a woman, alone, perhaps because of race, african-american. >> reporter: she contacted so much on your side and we contacted amtrak and gave us a laundry list of reasons someone could be kicked off ranging to health and safety. it declined to talk about her case but did agree to refund
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ticket. she is thrilled she reached out for help. >> it means there is somebody out there on the side of people. >> reporter: the pastor says the religious alliance she leads had to help so many stranded amtrak organizations her organization has almost gone bankrupt. i want to hear from you, my 7 on 7 hotline open from 10:00 to 2:00 p.m. you can also reach me on my facebook page. >> good news. breaking news to tell you about. a major bart delay for people heading to san francisco. these pictures are from the embarcadero station where the gates are closed. just an hour ago bart announced the delay because a person was on the tracks in oakland. we're in mid-spring. it's the start of mosquito
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our effort to build a better bay area means tackling things like the big issues, safety, housing and the environment. sometimes these issues come into conflict. >> they really do. tonight's story is one example of a landmark known as painted rock. there's a deadline coming up the end of the month. >> reporter: these painted boulders on this 84 acre property are a landmark and they have been used by the students to express their views. >> painted rock has been there forever and the students post their messages. >> reporter: when the owner died, it was marked for development for $15 million. the owner's widow happens to be very conservation minded and offered to sell the property to a trust for $2 million.
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>> just a real generous spirit. she's been wonderful to work with, very patient and generous and very committed to the notion of conservation and open space preservation. >> reporter: if the sale goes through the 84 acres will merge with the already existing 124 acres of beautiful open space offering this community 585 acres of trails and a recreation area accessible from maroga road. it's hard to find anyone here that opposes the plan. the area would be called "painted rock part." >> many of those in this area come here because of the nature and hiking trails. >> reporter: so far the land trust has raised $1.8 million. they're short $200,000. we have a ticking clock, essentially 30 days to get to the finish line with $200,000. >> reporter: the deadline to come up with the money is may 31st. what they want to avoid is more of this. housing in open areas.
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>> traffic is getting kind of heavy here. it would be nice to have open space. >> reporter: open rock would be the portal to the rest of the land. >> we think this is a great outcome for the region and town of morada. >> reporter: we want to take a moment to congratulate her. this is a special day. >> she quoted it is college decision day. 18 years ago when i was very pregnant with my twins, i never imagined they would end up at columbia college, chicago and carnegie mellon. congrats! >> and craggs to you, lyanne. >>
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new details now on the she lion rescued in san francisco. veterinarians have named the 10-month-old pup, kid. he was slightly malnourished and vets believe he was separated from his mother too soon. turns out kidd ended up in southern california where he had been tagged by wildlife certainty. research shows it's unusual for sea lion pups to travel so far.
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he was spotted on 181 near the split yesterday. the officers say he hopped right into the back of their patrol car where they drove him to safety. >> pretty chipper fellow there. to something a lot smaller and a lot less cute, mosquitoes frustrating and a nuisance and back. >> most cause pain and itchiness but some carry disease and that could be deadly. >> eric thomas shows us how contra costa county is mobilizing to fight them. >> we are getting into spring, the warmer weather. this is when we typically start to see the beginning of mosquito season in contra costa county. >> reporter: it's also when chris, the vector of contra costa county looks for the usual suspects. he is a taking water samples to take back to the lab to see what species it belongs to.
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>> this is an example of a creek that becomes a mosquito source. >> reporter: since adult mosquitos lay eggs every year, he's not waiting for confirmation. he is seeding the creek with the fish of the guppy family that can each 200 larvae each. when it's flowing because of winter range, that's their time to mobilize. >> they like standing water. >> reporter: standing water is like a maternity hospitality for mosquitoes. if you think they need a lot of water in which to breed, they only need about that much. >> we have 23 different species of mosquitoes here in contra costa county. ses transmit west nile virus. >> reporter: that virus can cause fever, body aches and vomiting in some. 1 in 150 can develop deadly
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swelling of the brain. >> it creates what mosquitoes don't like. >> reporter: it is right next to their backyard and why they put out these mosquito repellents but the mosquito problem isn't too bad, she say, when you're not the target. >> they go after my husband so i'm usually okay. >> reporter: pet owners may not be okay. one local species can cause heartworm and fatal damage to the dogs and cats. . >> they're so annoying. >> let's check on our weather. >> not a lot of water for those mosquitoes. >> not a lot. speaking of annoying, thank you for that. >> no, no. >> a look at doppler 7, beautiful skies today. mild going into the afternoon. sun sets at 8:00. this is the sunset tracker the 1st day of may.
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8:25. summer solstice at 8:34. look for mainly clear sky, perhaps a patch of fog at the coast. upper lows in the 40s. tomorrow, another sunny and mild almost warm day, highs inland almost 80 degrees there. low 60s on the coast. and the 7-day forecast thursday and friday, nice bright warm days but will start to cool down rather sharply over the weekend as clouds move into the picture. cool and breezy. a slight chance of showers late sunday to early monday and partial clearing tuesday and bright sunny showers next wednesday. >> sounds nice. warriors up two games to nothing. going well so far. >> remember when you were worried during the regular season and i kept counseling you to calm down? >> i was worried, too. >> the key to the warriors >> the key to the warriors taking a 2-0 lead over the
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tto harrison, the wine tcollection.. to craig, this rock. the redwoods to the redheads. the rainbows to the proud. i leave these things to my heirs, all 39 million of you, on one condition. that you do everything in your power to preserve and protect them. with love, california. ♪ you want a fresh-smelling home, but some air fresheners use heavy, overwhelming scents. introducing febreze one; a new range of innovative air fresheners with no heavy perfumes that you can feel good about using in your home to deliver a light, natural-smelling freshness. febreze one neutralizes stale, stuffy odors
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and releases a subtle hint of fragrance like bamboo or lemongrass ginger. to eliminate odors with no heavy perfumes, try new febreze one. brand power. helping you buy better. when you can't get to the mountain... that's cool. ...we bring the mountain to you. let's go hike over there. i'm out. i'm out. me too. guys! crystal geyser alpine spring water. always bottled at the mountain source. kay good evening, another day, another kevin durant rumor saying he might consider signing with the nets this summer. whatever happens, a constant reminder to appreciate the basketball greatness we have seen in the past five years from the golden state warriors. you never know when it will end. it might soon be over.
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this has been deep thoughts with larry. they are up two games in houston. the fourth game of the post-season, a one game suspension and reset to three. warriors turned up their defensive intensity in this series and impacting the offense. kevin durant has been everywhere. rockets scored 114 points per game in the regular season and averaging 10 fewer points per contest in the losses to golden state. all about the d. >> it's very important they get going and they can become impossible to stop. to start the defense the way we did is kng up 2-0 in the series. >> making the shots and live with the results. the majority of the game we did that. >> you just want to get that win. doesn't matter if it's ugly or pretty, a win's a win. i'd rather win ugly than lose
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pretty. >> you can catch game three of the warriors-rockets series saturday night at 7:00, not because they're in the mile high city after taking a lead over the colorado avalanche last night, they may be on the verge of getting a big boost. skated in san jose for the first time since that head injury, suffering a serious injury, probable concussion, miraculous win over the vegas golden nights a week ago. his status when sharks return home still uncertain. >> i don't know. he's getting better every day. he was facetiming us after the game last night. he's feeling better. we're all excited about the progress he's making. i wouldn't say he's not going to
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be available, no. >> the as at fen way, winless on their five game east coast trip. the calendar flipped to may and maybe that's the reset they needed. maybe not. looking for answers in beantown. slice hit to right, khris davis around to score. 1-0, as. you heard of this luck. that hop off the bad over the shoulder of chad. a sac fly. as killer deep to left center. his 22nd homer against oakland. 2-1, boston, sixth ben -- benintini. losing streak, 7-3 the final.
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giants called up former as catcher, 34-year-old vote signed a minor league with the giants trying to come back from shoulder surgery and can play first base and dh and catch. and just tearing an achilles tendon and then opening the door for marshawn lynch to return who would consider unretiring to play for the raiders. played two seasons for his hometown team. the unofficial word is he was retiring. keep in mind they hired to replace dorell. approaching manny machado for an autograph. he's nice that. just signed a huge contract in the off-season, 10 years, 300 mill. wait. it's a check he signed to blooper for $300 million! and off blooper goes!
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very sly. very sly. the trick, these are papers i'd like you to sign. right here. >> i'd like that. >> thanks, larry. an update of trains moving out of san francisco and the gates are open at the embarcadero station. >> there was a door problem and another being held by police, so all the delays. cable channel 713, a woman may have been exposed, has been exposed thomislo measles after an avenger movie. more at 9:00. a hand shake, reaction to some companies planning to ban all physical contact. >> that is our report. we appreciate your time. look for breaking news any time on the abc7 news
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♪ this is "jeopardy!" let's meet today's contestants-- a disa systems analyst from orlando, florida... a realtor and stay-at-home mom from philadelphia, pennsylvania... and our returning champion, a professional sports gambler from las vegas, nevada... whose 19-day cash winnings total... and now here is the host of "jeopardy!"-- alex trebek! [ cheers and applause ] thank you, johnny gilbert. thank you, ladies and gentlemen. you know, we've been so busy, so preoccupied with the great success enjoyed my james
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over the past few weeks on our show that we have neglected to mention a very special upcoming event, and that is the teachers tournament which starts this coming week. all right, kate and imar, welcome aboard and good luck. here we go-- the jeopardy! round. let's take a look at the categories, shall we? each correct response will be a food with a domicile in its name. all right? next... that happens a lot with me. ...in each correct response. and then we'll deal with... and, of course... james. 3 "i"s, $1,000. imar. - what is libidinous? - good. let's do i could live in that food for $200.
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