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tv   ABC7 News 600PM  ABC  August 16, 2021 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT

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capital, the international airport. the taliban have seized control of everything else. as we speak, u.s. forces keeping the area open to evacuate tens of thousands of people. the airport has been overrun by people looking to escape. these desperate people chasing. there have been deaths reported. president bynum acknowledged the fall was faster than he expected, but is defending ending involvement. >> the military collapsed. if anything, anything, anything, the past week reinforced that any involvement in afghanistan now was the right decision. anchor 2: another battalion of 1000 u.s. troops is mobilizing to secure the airport, that will
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bring the number two around 6000. anchor 1: the stunningly fastball of afghanistan is causing great pain in the bay area, even at a distance of nearly 7400 miles. as abc found, the connections run deep between the two countries. he spent the day with organizations trying to save lives and get their people out. >> is our voice going to be heard? reporter: it's come to that. an educator who worries about taliban reprisals. >> the taliban has not changed. if anything they have become worse. reporter: the last few days have been torturous. she was born in afghanistan, came to the states in 1977, has committed her life to a nonprofit that promotes the education of women. the news she heard today is not promising. >> they are currently taking
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over reporter: it explains the situation and what inevitably will become the iconic picture of desperate afghans trying to climb aboard. >> it's been a catastrophe. reporter: her americans and afghans working hand in hand, as of today, she has six of seven americans out. but the 350 afghans are worried. >> that has made the farmers at risk for the lives, because they have now been uncovered for working for an american company one but that's run by a woman. reporter: even then, the even hope will be to spend one or two years in foreign refugee camps,
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waiting for the u.s. government. >> i have concerns that this does not go far enough. reporter: those are frustrations of trying to manage from far away. >> the average american should care because in just a few years, there will be terrorist attacks again. will stem from that part of the world. we are going to wonder how it happened again. reporter: abc 7 news. dan: it's developing very quickly. government officials are pledging to help refugees from afghanistan, you will hear more about that coming up tonight. ama: not to some breaking news. the corner confirms a body has been identified. the 80 four-year-old grandmother disappeared at the end of may, she left for a walk and was last seen at the safeway in the marina district.
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her body was found on june 10. no other details have been released. dan: multimillion dollar payouts, misconduct by deputies, ongoing corruption surrounding the sheriff. added up and it's enough to make a mayor say, enough is enough. tonight, the mayor is demanding the resignation of the santa clara county sheriff. we have covered the sheriff for many years, and b have the latest from san jose. >> laurie smith became the state's first female county sheriff in 1998. now the san jose mayor says it is time for her to go. >> times long past. sheriff smith must resign. reporter: under her watch, the county has paid out multimillion dollar settlements. jail guards. bed injuries during it jail transfer which recently settled for $10 million. >> county taxpayers have
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invested a lot of money in that jail, and it is still this to toby and --dystopian place of horrible suffering. reporter: two of her top staff face criminal charges, accused of demanding campaign donations in exchange for concealed carry permits. >> these problems have been coming for a long time. what did it take to finally take this step? >> it's been accumulation of factors. reporter: he told me sheriff smith refused to cooperate. >> for client to do so for fear of self-incrimination. that should disqualify anyone from serving. reporter: the county s has been calling for greater oversight, and he welcomes the mayor's call. >> my concern from day one is we
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keep people safe and use public funds wisely. i'm looking forward to a change in behavior, i don't think we will get that change. reporter: through her spokesperson, the sheriff declined to comment but announce plans for her own news conference tomorrow. ama: pg&e says it may besays ita to shut power to prevent wildfires as new forecast called for extreme winds. all 36,000 customers have been notified. that includes about 100 customers in solano county, 200 in sonoma county, 1800 county in napa. the power shut off watch begin tomorrow after 8:00 p.m.. conditions seem to get tougher e dixie fire. >> we have a red flag warning wr
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for southwest wind gust of 30 miles per hour. that's coming out of this direction. ama: that red flag warning run through 10:00 tomorrow evening, another major obstacle. the dixie fire exploded again over the weekend, charring another 27,000 acres, bringing the total to nearly 570,000. more than 1100 buildings have been destroyed and thousands more threatened. this fire is just 30 1% contained. we do face a heightened fire risk. drew is here attracting these dangerous conditions. drew: that has prompted a fire weather watch for the north bay mountains, east bay hill starting tomorrow night at 11:00. this is one step below a red flag warning. winds looked to be fastest in parts of napa county. we zoom in there.
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gusting 20 to 40 miles per hour, the fire danger index shows it will likely be found in the eastern half of napa county. watch that area very closely. during the daylight hours it's about cleaner air. we have been in the forecast in a few minutes. dan: now to tonight's coronavirus headlines. california has topped 4 million total cases since the pandemic started, but the positivity rate has dropped in lower than it was a week ago, an encouraging sign that the current search may be easing. 27 million californians are fully vaccinated. because of coronavirus, it's been 17 long months since we have utter the words back-to-school. today, thousands of san francisco students returned to the classroom in person, and abc 7 senior education reporter is in the newsroom. they are back with a new safety measure. reporter: i think they did really well.
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everyone is taking the mandate to wear masks very seriously, and at this point wearing a mask for many of them is second nature. that was not an issue today. we even asked a few students if they had any concerns about the delta variant, and they said no, especially those 12 and older who are vaccinated. this was lunchtime at everett middle school, where students took their lunch outside, and got reacquainted. this morning, students arrived early, eagerly anticipating being inside >> for them, they learn a lot by socializing. they really wanted to be with each other. reporter: the superintendent greeted students, most of them into the school, with the same kind of fears with or without covid. >> probably homework. >> make sure to stay masked. reporter: inside the classroom, remind students that masks are
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to be worn at all times. >> welcome back-to-school. reporter: younger kids were also given an encouraging welcome. >> i'm happy to be back here and interact with the kids. she never met her second grade teacher because of everything. reporter: the mayor took the opportunity to encourage more people to get vaccinated. >> especially because the kids at the school cannot be vaccinated, so we need to do this to protect them. reporter: san francisco unified is offering independent study for students with medical conditions. the district challenge has been that a few other families that don't fit that description have also asked to keep their kids at home. >> we received about 677 applications, and we had only planned to serve about 450 students. >> right now, they don't have enough teachers to serve all students who applied. reporter: there are two groups of students who are signed up to
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do the independent study program. those who have medical issues and those who don't. the group with the medical issues will have a much more robust online learning experience, with a lot more online support and supervision. the school district is open that those who don't have medical issues can be persuaded to attend school in person. ama: we will see. dan: on that subject of attending, when will the school district a better handle on how many kids returned and decided to continue staying home? reporter: my experience is that it usually takes about 10 days for the dust to settle. some families have been assigned to a school, want to attend another school. a place opens up at that school and moving around continues for a few days. then you have families who have left and never told the district. in 10 days we will have a better picture of where students will be and if they have the staff.
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dan: that will be interesting. ama: a federal judge dismissed the lawsuit filed by a san francisco school board member. she sued the district in march, accuse them of violating free-speech rights in connection with tweets. she lost her position as vice president on the board and was stripped of some committee assignments. today, the judge ruled her claims had no merit. dan: a lot more to come, less than a month away from california's recall election. will gavin newsom keep his job? i get it, maybe you can see just fine. but as a vsp® premier program doctor, let me tell you, everyone needs an annual comprehensive eye exam-
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have charged a woman with a hate crime. recent robberies, assaults and vandalism have affected business, and now some are dealing with racially motivated verbal attacks and harassment. our anchor brings you a story you will see only on seven. >> i put my chair to block it. reporter: you are watching a woman charged with a hate crime. this type of incident, which involved battery and vandalism, is not unusual for this shop owner. >> robberiesberies a lot of things are changing. reporter: two customers spoke to me and said the woman called them racial slurs, grab their
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glasses, and went on a harassment spree. >> back to china. reporter: oakland chinatown has had its share of criminal activity, including a high-profile shooting of a bystander. many businesses have resorted to closing early according to the chinatown chamber of congress -- commerce. >> people get scared. reporter: i learned this woman has a criminal history. she was arrested for incidents ranging from vandalism, to the most recent, assault. she was put on a 5150 mental hold, which is why we are blurring her face. while the das office does not comment on pending cases, i asked about what is being done to help those who commit crimes and suffer from mental health issues. a new navigation center was launched, but participation is voluntary. >> reaching out and working
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collaboratively with our public health partners in the hopes that the individual might be assessed. reporter: in the meantime, we will add to his collection of store surveillance cameras, which now stands at 16, in an effort to keep his shop and community safe. abc 7 news. dan: remember, you can be an ally for bay area communities. go to abc 7 news.com/take action. ama: the recall election is less than a month away. governor newsom campaigned at union hall in san jose, not far from the site of mais mass shooting. the governor went off --after leading alternate candidate. >> does not believe in an assault weapons ban. how offensive is that? ravaged by weapons. ama: governor newsom's increased
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attacks are part of a strategy to fire up democrats. his team released a new campaign antedate --add today. ballots are already in the mail, because of the pandemic, every registered voter is getting a vote by mail ballot. you can register to vote up until two weeks before election day. after that you can do a conditional voter registration all the way up to election day, tuesday, september 14. dan: we are in back-to-school season. today, the first time --nearly 20,000 students were back on campus. abc 7 was there. reporter: this is a day of great anticipation. the first time in a long, that nearly all of the district's 20,000 students return. >> this is a joyful day.
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kids have been wanting to go back for a very long time. i am here to welcome them and lend support. reporter: the new superintendent toward different campuses, looking at covert precautions. >> trust -- there was a level of distrust. is based on, this is really happening. reporter: students can only take off their masks while eating. all of 400 of the district students will be attending in person. the rest choosing a virtual academy or independent study. >> thought back to normal, but as close as we can get. we are still requiring masking indoors.
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we believe staff is doing a great job. reporter: while the expectation is there will be some positive covid cases, the superintendent is confident there are protocol in case --protocols in place. >> you won't see us closing down the school. unless it is that prevalent. reporter: the superintendent told me he is confident he can keep the campus open, in part because initial data shows that at least 90 percent of teachers and staff have received at least one vaccination. abc 7 news. ama: we will have windy weather in the next couple of days.
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ask your doctor about living longer with kisqali. starting to pick up. dan: tracking a break. drew: if you have been able to step outside, you look at the air getting plainer. outsidoutsidoutsidoutsidoutsidod a crisp view from this vantage point, but that cameras bouncing around. i would say about three hours
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ago it was hard to make out the hills, but that hayes has pushed out. wins, it's a bumpy ride. gusting to 45 miles per hour. the current wind is 20 in napa, the onshore breeze is helping to bring in fresh air. the smoke forecast, tomorrow we expect a nice day, across the region, good air quality. the thickest smokers to our east. wednesday we develop an offshore wind which prompts a fire weather watch, and you see the smoke pour back in. by wednesday, back in the moderate category. care quality over the next two days, tomorrow is the best day this week. good across the board, then by wednesday, we go back down into the moderate category as haze and smoke us back into the atmosphere. look at what is happening in santa rosa.
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bit of an offshore wind at the airport, just an hour ago we were in the mid 90's. since then we have warmed up significantly, 102. that the hottest temperatures since mid june. it's a warm one in parts of sonoma county. 88 in nevada, down to 70 in oakland, san francisco is cloud free at 66 degrees. overnight tonight, despite the lack of marine layer, it will come back tonight we have some coastal cloud cover. some drizzle likely, temperatures in the upper 60's, lower 70's. there is that fog first thing in the morning. it is slow to clear, the warming is low. by tomorrow, right around lunchtime, in the 70's. tomorrow is going to feel very nice. not only good air quality, it is much cooler and a lot of our hottest cities tomorrow. tomorrow in the upper 80's, 80 eight in concorde. santa rose feels a major
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temperature drop. upper 80's tomorrow, 67 in the city, 70 one the high in oakland. here is the seven day forecast. better air tomorrow and a cooler day for the hottest cities. by wednesday, the smoke comes back. watch the hills for the gusty winds. very short window saturday and sunday, 70's and 80's. dan: that is nice. coming up next, the latest from haiti. a powerful earthquake over the weekend claiming lives, the situation might be about to get even worse. we explain. also ahead. >> we are already working in terms of refugees coming and. ama: calif
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fix housing and homelessness. and make life in california affordable again. i'm a businessman, the only cpa running. shouldn't we choose ability this time? we must have a competent governor with management experience and outsider integrity. [sfx: bear roar] that describes only john cox. this is abc 7 news. >> i am now the fourth american president to preside over the war in afghanistan. i will not pass this
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responsibility to a fifth president. dan: 20 years of war and this president says, he has had enough as afghanistan falls to the taliban overnight, panic people chased planes on the tarmac in a desperate attempt to get out. ama: look at this. the throngs of people at the airport visible to satellites. for some, a flight out of the country will mean the difference of life-and-death. u.s. military is sending another 1000 troops just to help safeguard the airport. dan: despite all of this, the president is defending his decision. despite the chaos but behind, some scenes echo the fall of saigon. never reporter has a look at the situation. reporter: president biden cutting a trip to camp david short to address the chaos. >> our mission was never supposed to be nationbuilding. reporter: outside the u.s. embassy, the taliban celebrates.
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while at the airport, crowds cling to american military planes, desperate to escape. >> people are crying out for help, to not be abandoned. reporter: among the fearful, interpreters. >> is gut wrenching. these are people we relied that we promised, that we would not leave them behind. reporter: civilians struggling to understand the rapid speed. >> i feel nothing right now. we want peace. reporter: back in the u.s., many are doing the same. >> afghanistan's political leaders gave up, fled the country. reporter: the white house is shifting t bthafghan government and troops. >> american troops cannot and should not be fighting in a war and dying in a war that afghan forces are not willing to fight for themselves. reporter: now, the state
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department says they are working with other countries to bring vulnerable citizens to safety. >> we defend our people. dan: the bay area is home to a large population of african-americans. the mayor pro tem is the first afghan american elected to public office in the united states. we asked her how afghan americans are feeling, on our program, getting answers. >> i believe the larger community in the diaspora, in particular, feel very helpless, and very abandoned as to what will happen in the future. ama: restfully afghanistan, gavin newsom says they are welcome here. melanie woodrow has a story reporter: images of people rushing to flee afghanistan has hundreds swarm planes.
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gavin newsom address the situation today, saying refugee are and have always been welcome dear. the governor took the question at a rally. >> i am proud of the fact that california has taken in more refugees than any other state, and i'm proud a disproportion number of afghan refugees are here in northern california. sacramento county. we are working in terms of refugees coming in. we want to make sure they feel welcome and celebrate. reporter: u.n. secretary general told the council all countries must be open to accepting refugees. >> we cannot and must not abandon the people of afghanistan. reporter: a representative also address the need to welcome those who have fled.
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abc news. ama: on wednesday, president biden will sit down with george stephanopoulos for his first interview since the withdrawal from afghanistan. you can watch that right here. you can find latest stories and more about the situation in afghanistan on the streaming app. scroll down to our collection and keep up-to-date. dan: let's turn your attention to haiti, where the country is reeling from a devastating earthquake and is now being hit back tropical storm. the 7.2 quake leveled hundreds of buildings, more than 1400 people are dead and that the 6000 more injured. the rescue effort is being slowed because many roads have been blocked by debris or have crumbled. help is pouring in from all over the country and world, including the u.s. and coast guard.
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he >> we bring 52,000 pounds of equipment. that is enough to set up base camps, search equipment. dan: tropical depression graces passing just south of the country. the storm could drum up to 10 inches of rain and trigger flooding and mudslide. certainly, we know that earthquakes are something we face every day here. to get prepared, but abc 7 news.com --go to abc 7 news.com here's a tip. don't forget your pets, always a member the peds. ama: what is the top priority for students going back to school? next, we give you an answer of what people can agree on. >> it feels like i'm a freshman. i don't know people here. dan: students go back to school to a campus they have never seen before. tonight, the latest episode of
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ad i'm greg, i'm 68 years old. i do motivational speaking in addition to the substitute teaching. i honestly feel that that's my calling-- to give back to younger people. i think most adults will start realizing that they don't recall things as quickly as they used to or they don't remember things as vividly as they once did. i've been taking prevagen for about three years now. people say to me periodically, "man, you've got a memory like an elephant." it's really, really helped me tremendously. prevagen. healthier brain. better life.
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learning, one san francisco neighborhood set their priority regarding when used to be addressed. while i don't agree reporter: every child has been impacted by the pandemic. a lack of exercise, academic challenges. in san francisco's visitation valley, the special partnership has formed. alicia has a nine-year-old daughter starting fourth grade. >> no matter how difficult things get, they have someone or somewhere they can rest their cares that if they feel like it's not the best candidate. reporter: real options study to set priorities. students listed social and emotional learning as their top priority. families listed academics at the top of the list.
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teachers but mental health concerns first. >> we want a good bal between the three of those, not emphasize one over the other. reporter: moms are aware the kids are under pressure. >> academics are important but i want to know where you are at rid -- where you are at. so mom can gauge or rework what is going on. reporter: partners with teachers. >> we works directly at schools, we had teachers at summer camp. i had staff that did literacy games. reporter: priorities may differ from one neighborhood to another. visitation valley, it's a team effort. dan: today was the last really hot day of the week. drew will show you what we have to look over
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dan: turned out to be a roller coaster of emotions. here is an exit from our series. ♪ >> the first day of school's always exciting, especially for us. we have been away for 18 months. getting back to our normal routine. covered. >> most of your classes are here. >> today we have 50% of our students who have never been on campus, ninth graders are new to the campus, and last year's 10th graders had not been on campus. >> i am in the 10th grade. it feels like i'm a freshman. i don't know people here. >> today's the first day i am
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excited. i've seen a lot of student outside. they are ready to come to school, ready to learn. >> it's a lot noisier, a lot more rambunctious. it's livelier. you could see smiles and feel them. last year it was different. nobody show their face to the cameras. a couple of students at hi. i remember your name. >> we are welcoming all of ouwec students back to campus, but there is no mandates on vaccination. the only thing that is mandatory is all students and staff wear masks, all day. >> on magic mountain there is a ride called the buccaneer, it goes like this. swings back the other way. your stomach goes like this.
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that is how my stomach has felt. >> we have a lot of teachers who are anxious about students returning, due to the variant, the fact that a lot of young folks are coming down with the virus. i cannot assure anyone that they won't get the virus, i can't do that. what i can assure them is we will take all necessary protocols. >> i'm feeling good about the first day of school.
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there will be changes to the vaccination mandate. if you're not vaccinated, you will need to test once a week. >> we are following up today to align our school strategy become the first state in the country, to require all staff, not just teachers, to submit verification of vaccination. >> it should be for not just for the teachers and staff. >> >> these kids and not have to wear masks when they were at home. math to get acclimated. they just need the education. >> we have to do something to reduce the spread, that's it.
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at minimum if we can get ourselves safe, if we don't go to school, what happens? we shut the world down. dan: you can watch the entire streaming series on our abc 7 bay area streaming app for roku, apple tv, android tv and amazon fire tv. check that out. ama: let's get to the weather. dan: looks like the smoke is easing. drew: the winds will help us a bit tomorrow, cooler air and better air quality. and everything goes downhill late tomorrow night, which checked the offshore wind. that prompts a fire weather warning 40 east bay hills, and the focus is parts of the north bay. wicked have gust of 30 miles per hour. tonight, it's all about better air quality.
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we have a little bit of fog, temperatures in the mid-50's. upperperperperperperperperperper nice. quality. we find cooler temperatures, hazy skies, smoke comes back and watch as temperatures stay pretty steady. reporter: after the 80 yard touchdown, you could hear, and
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since savior for 49ers. what is jimmy garoppolo state?
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the casino. >> and 80 yard touchdown touchdn
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jimmy garoppolo, first preseason game. he was sufficient, not spectacular. 3-3, 26 yards. lance, five of 14 for 128 yards. 80 yard missile. concerned about being replaced. >> i have said this before, all of us coming together. it will be good for me to go
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through and watch it. excited to go back and watch. reporter: the 49ers have signed a veteran linebacker. up a series with the mets. 70 6-42, the giants have the best record in baseball. their best record in 118 games since 1993. that was the year they won 103 games, but the race 104. they mess the class by one game. the current giants getting it done thanks to great depth.
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giants got him in the off-season. great throw yesterday's win over the rockies. tommy la stella's liking what he sees. >> team depth is huge for us. they're going to have to work, earn their outs. getting close to full health. reporter: 80's in chicago.s in . matt chapman, three homers. 18 for the season. the a's are up one-zip. mark canha delivers. base knock, judge harrison's
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voice. a sub two-zip. metals and trying to go for the knockout blow. right now they are to- are fifth. new home, san marshawn lynch remains part of the ownership group. >> people coming into san you have an outstanding franchise. excited to see them compete. >> we are fired up. it's great to see the panthers here. in this building behind me, we're going to have the sharks, barracuda and pathos. reporter: shark tank is going to be busy. sports sponsored by river rock casino. 49ers are at the charges. it's going to be interesting to see how they divvy up the planck time.
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in ama: coming up tonight on abc 7 edit :00, bachelorette paradise. stay with us for abc 7 news at 11:00. that's going to do it for this edition. thank you so much for joining us. dan: we appreciate your time. have a great rest of your evening. we will see you again at 11:00. homelessness, housing, taxes, water, electricity, crime, wildfires. [sfx: bear roar] gavin, you've failed. we have to immediately cut taxes twenty-five percent. fix housing and homelessness. and make life in california affordable again.
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hi. i'm tie domi of the toronto maple leafs. watch "jeopardy!" or you're gonna have to drop the gloves with me. [ sticks clatter ] come on. you want a piece of this, huh? [ laughter ] this is "jeopardy!" please welcome today's contestants-- a graduate student from bloomington, indiana... a musician from lincoln, nebraska... and our returning champion-- a software engineer from salt lake city, utah... whose cash winnings total... [ applause ] and now here is the host of "jeopardy!"--alex trebek! thanks, johnny. hello, everyone, and welcome to our show. there's always another bridge to css another mountain to climb, another record to break.
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the current record for most money won on a game or quiz show is $2,180,000, set by a man named kevin olmstead on regis' show, "millionaire." our champion, ken jennings, is within a couple hundred thousand of that. but graham and k.c. are here to prevent him from breaking that record. they wanna start winning money. let's see what happens. good luck. jeopardy! round starts us off with the one daily double in one of these categories. first off, we have... we'll give you the kids. you identify the pres. next we have... and... "i-c-k" in quotation marks. ken, you're the champ. you go first. presidents by kids for $200, alex. - ken. - who is john adams? - right. - presidents for $400.

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