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tv   KPIX 5 News  CBS  July 10, 2022 6:00am-7:01am PDT

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and he turned the camera around. >> i had seen just a plethora of drug dealers and homeless people using, smoking off of foil, and what not, and nothing new, right? nothing new that you would see out of the ordinary that you would see, but it is overloaded with these types of the individuals and they had basically hijacked the transit stop right there on the eighth and mission. >> these little kids have to walk through this [ bleep ] and it is crazy.
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>> this san francisco resident said that he works with the recovering addicts and sights like this are not surprising. >> what made me almost well up with anger is that i had that tingly sensation in the back of your nose like you want to cry is that these people need to change the system like right now. they have to. >> on friday mayor breed's newly selected attorney general said that we need to take back the streets. >> starting today, drug crime laws will be enforced in this city. [ applause ] we know that the large percentage of children who live in the enderloin, and they should not have to walk past drug dealing and they should not have to endure violence and they should not have to watch people die on the streets of over dose
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as they walk to school. >> nguyen says he is looking forward to change. >> we are leaning to the dystopian look of hell and it is crazy and too much. >> that is betty yu reporting and the video shows a man robbed at gunpoint as he arrived home. he had just returned from the bank, and it is not clear if the attackers knew that or not. and the man was pushed to the home, and the son-in-law was in the window with the baby, and we have reached out to the police, but we have not heard back. and a boat malfunction have left the passengers left at the bay, and thanks to emergency victims from first responders they were rescued before things were worse, but in all three people were rescued from the boat, and two others had injuries. >> we were able to rescue three
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people, and tides were rising and we had about five minutes where the tides were rising and we would not have been able to return to rescue them, so it was very close. >> and we don't know what led up to the boat crash. and saturday was another day of abortion rights rallies from washington to colorado to los angeles, and thousands of people came out to support their voices for women's reproductive rights, and the same in san jose as people marched in the streets. the issue is galvanizing a new generation of voters. >> reporter: the organizers of this march at city hall just graduated from high school, and they will have the chance to vote in their first major election this year, and the threat to abortion rights is not turning them off from voting, but energizing them, and they want more people excited about the future elections.
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>> we are drained. drained of who they are >> reporter: incoming college freshman feel that abortion rights are going away and recently 18, they havener known abortion to be illegal their entire lives, but they are hoping that the first time voting can change it. >> it is something that is important, and something to have a lot of i input on your future. >> reporter: and while the supreme court decision to overturn roe v. wade has brought many people out on the streets that support abortion rights nationwide it has angered people on both parties. but high school graduates are remaining hopeful for those who are hoping to keep abortion legal. >> it is hopeful that we keep it marching on the street as we did super important, but we need both. >> they have never voted in an election, but they are excited to vote in the democratic process, but they are hoping to have more adults like them, and
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hoping to keep the issue on the election. >> reporter: and for most young voters a recent poll of cbs voters said that the ruling will have no or little effect on their likelihood to vote. >> if anything is in our hand, it is this. >> reporter: but the young leaders say it is going to motivate them, and encouraging the peers to be part of the research is going to encourage them to be the part of the change. >> we have the right to vote in this country, and we need to take advantage of this. >> shawn chitnis, kpix 5. and numbers of covid are up across the state with more than 5,000 people hospitalized across california. with 770 patients accounting for 20% of the covid cases. hospital admissions also jumped frup 63 patients last week with
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an increase of nearly 50%. and time ahead on kpix and streaming on cbs bay area, the fires burning in the national parks is threatening sequoias. and a popular movie venue is back open in the peninsula for people to travel back in time at the stanford movie venue. >> tech: when you have auto glass damage, trust safelite. this dad and daughter were driving when they got a crack in their windshield. [smash] >> dad: it's okay. pull over. >> tech: he wouldn't take his car just anywhere... ♪ pop rock music ♪ >> tech: ...so he brought it to safelite. we replaced the windshield and recalibrated their car's advanced safety system, so features like automatic emergency braking will work properly. >> tech: alright, all finished. >> dad: wow, that's great. thanks. >> tech: stay safe with safelite. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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welcome back. the time now is 6:09. on the fire watch and out of control, the yosemite fires are threatening sequoias. the fires started in southern end of the park and grown to almost 1,200 acres ap expanding 50% by friday. it is zero percent contained and as of last night, no reports of well known sequoias in the park being damaged, but about 250 people living in the nearby communities are on mandatory evacuations. >> the spotting embers are near wi woe na, and the spotting evacuations to evacuate the near by wywona communities.
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>> it is heartbreaking, and we are afraid for the people there in the town, because it is a really cute town. it is very small, and then just heartbroken about the trees. >> national park crews are wrapping the trees hoping to protect them, and the cause of the fire itself is still under investigation. >> okay. following up on that, devin, i have the map on that this morning of the progression of the fire. the map behind me is showing the outline of the washburn fire in the area of the sequoias with which has pink there, and i don't know if you can see the details the, but there is a white snake line there, and that is the road or at least where they have done so much restoration, and more hiking trail that takes you into the heart of the mariposa grove, and the heart of the grove is up here, and down here, and
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yesterday the fire was moving into the grove, but overnight, it has turned east and working around the edge of the upper grove. this is -- it is a little too close to comfort to some of the most impressive parts of that grove, and it is still growing. by the way the community of the wawona including hotel of the 1880s is right there, and so a good sign for that community as the fire is progressing to the east there. and there is something to watch from home here from that fire in terms of the direct impact, and that could be some of the smoke. if this fire is still putting off as much smoke over the next 24 hour as it did over the previous 24shgs and it is producing a lot of smoke unfortunately, the general flow in the atmosphere is ogoing to want to take the smoke our way, so by tomorrow morning at this time, we may be seeing some to higher smoke in the sky. doubtful it would be a thick concentration at the lower elevations, but it is going to be certainly visible, and it might even reduce the air
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quality here at home, and we don't necessarily need that fire to do that for some of the parts of the bay. and looking at the fire that is burning in contra costa county, and this is the one that is burning at the power plant around the old decommissioned power plant near pittsburgh there, and in terms of the fires, confire is pretty well confident that it is contained, but the smoke is a factor. so if you are waking up in the delta, and you think that you can smell the smoke, that is where it is coming from. if you are looking at the air quality centers from antioch and downwind here, you are likely getting some of the smoke, because the air quality sensors are neegd it, and this is the update on the fires. in terms of the other stuff in the sky, like the clouds, there is a little bit of the marine layer in the heart of the bay this morning, but it is going to melt back, so if you are waking up to the gray skies in the east bay shoreline and the peninsula, and you are the ones waking up
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in the gray skies, it is sunny the inland valley, and we will get sunshine to the late morning and early afternoon even though it is impressive from the top from santa clara to the black mountain and san jose is underneath, that and the temperature around 60, and the headline is in today's forecast the warmup, and we will be 10 degrees warmer today to inland yesterday, and santa rosa and livermore, you are standing out the most, and concord, you are the most. and as we put in the numbers, we are going to go into mid-90s, and in addition to the mountainview, you will go to 92, and freemont, 95, and 94 in santa rosa, and as we go to the forecast, it is going to be the two warmest days, and call it hot for santa rosa, and we will be back into the mid-80s by the time we get into the middle of next week or the coming week, and so it does not last long, and there is an improvement coming, but the next couple of
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days are going to be noticeably warmer yesterday, and then we get some relief by the middle of the week. >> so the temperature is bumping up today and sticks around tomorrow, and tapers off. >> yes, that is a good way to sum it up, yes. >> the forecast in 15 seconds. thanks. >> see you later. >> okay. >> for two years the screen at the stanford theater went dark because of covid, but no more. and last night at the fred astair and the palo alto were delighted. we were there. >> reporter: it is like travel back in time, the people and the movie house and the 100-year-old film projector technology. all of that at the stanford theater finally coming back to life this weekend after a long pandemic hiatus. no one was more excited for the grand reopening saturday than hallsey verity. >> it was a huge part of my
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childhood. >> reporter: they dressed up in vintage clothing to watch "top hat." she has been coming to the theater since she was 12 and where she fell in love with the classic films. >> it is when i started to dress up in the vintage style outfits and whatever i could put together as a teenager, and trying to sort of look like, you know, ginger rogers up on the screen. >> reporter: so it was tough and her other classic film lovers on the peninsula while it was closed. covid shut it down in 2020, and they used the time to put in a new ventilation system and seismic upgrades. >> i am so happy it is open again and extraordinary for all of the people and they are happy and saying thank you, thank you, and say thank you. i am so thrilled to be bringing film back to the classic film back to the bay area.
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>> reporter: all of the films were well attends, and even with all of the new invention, there is still room for an old moviehouse that is 90 years old. >> the screen, and the wurlitzer organ and it is a throwback to another time. >> it made me so happy. >> reporter: for halsey, it is good to be back at the happy place. >> i am a 12-year-old, and i feel like e am rediscovering it again. >> reporter: i don't mean to feel like an ad, but in the inflated world, they still sell two movies for a buck, and you can still get a soda for 1.25.
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and last night, carlos rodon did everything he could for the giants, but would the we call it oleyumi. you call it california. our land, our culture, our people once expansive, now whittled down to a small community. only one proposition supports california tribes like ours. while providing hundreds of millions in yearly funding to finally address homelessness in california. vote yes on 27.
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tax online sports betting and protect tribal sovereignty and help californians that are hurting the most.
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giants news to lead off the show. jake mcgee is most likely done in san francisco after he posted a team high 31 saves and his spot is filled with luis
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gonzalez returning from the 10-day injured list. and last night it was carlos rodon with the heater, and rodon, this time, 98 on the outside corner and he got him again with the high heat, and the next inning, manny machado down and gets the dirt, and 98 miles per hour, and he was lights out. and the eighth inning, the game tied 1-1, and tied no more. wilmer flores, and it is high and far and just gone over the left field wall. wilmer flores with the two-run shot to give the giants the lead. the ninth inning, rodon went out there looking for the complete game. and jorge alfaro up, and now, you don't stand a chance. sit down, and the giants win 3-1, and rodon with the complete game, and 12 strikeouts and only two walks. >> rookie zach lowe on the
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mound, and alex bregman was up, and high twist with the high heat, and logan with two inning baseball, and it was a wild one in the fifth. a tapper rolls maybe three feet, but it was enough for sean murphy to come home. sheldon neuse comes to the plate, and pass ball going off of the glove of maldonado, and elvis andrus comes in to score, and the game is tied at 2-2, and sheldon neuse is still up, and two pitches later, another run comes up, and with sheldon neuse at the plate when two runs come in, but he had nothing to do with it. well, he took the pitches. and stephen piscotty came in to score, and they took the lead, and they got three not getting the ball past the pitcher, and zach lowe getting the lead in favor of oakland. 15 months since we last saw james wiseman suit up, and this is going to change today.
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the former second overall pick is set to play in the warriors summer league game against the spurs. wiseman did not play a single minute last season after coming off of the meniscus tear, and he averaged 11 points and 6 boards. and now, in tennis, it is ons jabeur battling rybakina, and jabeur could not do much about that one, and fast forward to the set point, the match point, and the championship point, and rybikina point, and the response, that is going to do it. and elena rybikina is the winner. and now, 18 more holes to decide the winner at the centure ri championship, and steph currey who is a good golfer
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himself is tied for 20th. derek carr is in 29th. the team's off season was not just solid, but stellar. the raiders were already good coming up one play short of the play against the bengals and now carr is one of the most dangerous the throw to, and his former college teammate davon ta adams. >> talk about number 4 to 17, and if you are reading social media, you are the only one on the team. >> yeah, yeah. this is the going to be the first time, you know, davon ta is going to be opposite him when he is the featured guy with darren and hunter, and what is beautiful is that we don't have ra group of guys worried about the numbers, but getting each other playing good football, and that is going to help each other. and now, the earthquakes taking on toronto fc, and 20th minute, and no score, and the touch of the fire finds the back of the net, and the quakes
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surrender the lead, and now down 2-1, and jack skan gets behind the quake, and that is going to be evened up, and 2-2 draw. that is going to do it for sports this morning. i'm charlie walter, and i hope you have a great day. still ahead, civil unrest is prompting sri lanka civil unrest as the top two officials are stepping down. the u.s. secretary of state is announcing that he is going to make a stop in tokyo to offer condolences in person after friday's assassination of the japanese prime minister.
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live from the cbs bay area studios, this is kpix 5 news. welcome back. it is 6:28 and thank you for joining us. i'm devin fehely. and we want to update you on the fire in pittsburgh. the fire has been burning for week, and it starred several weeks off of willow-pass road, but there were smoldering flames in a marsh, and there was hope that the rainy weather would help to control the fire, but now, confire has to take a different approach. >>ed a digitsal alarms were called to set up to prepare for
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the structure control in case it pushed for a different direction, and crews to keep it from jumping over into the residential direction. >> okay. to followup on that with the smoke coming off of that what you could think of as a grass fire out in the marshy weeds to the north of pittsburgh and right along the outskirts of the decommissioned pittsburgh power plant. so it is certainly reassuring to hear from confire, and they are on this fire. and they have been on this fire technically for weeks. they have thrown everything at it. they are feeling confident in the containment in general, and even if it is not out, but you cannot deny the fact that the smoke is going to catch a lot of people's attention this morning and a quick update on that, and first, the concern is the air quality and going downwind from that, the fire is burning on the outskirts of pittsburgh, as we put a look at the camera on it, pittsburgh is fine, but antioch,
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you are getting the smoke, and the air sensors are reading unhealthy, and wide perspective from the wide look at the bay from where the camera was looking north of the fire, we can look at the winds maintaining strength similar to yesterday in terms of the ability to throw the smoke around. meantime, the other stuff in the sky, and the low clouds hanging out over the immediate bay, and most of us in the bay waking up to the low gray clouds and the fog, and oakland, you are reporting the fog there, and for the most part of inland, you are starting state sunny, and right on the state in the terms of the current numbers and add the current highs inland, and we will talk about the daytime highs and a lot more detail coming up and the complete forecast now. back to you, devin. >> the supreme court decision of roe v. wade is continuing to divide the nation with more protests this weekend.
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the president signed an executive order on the abortion control friday. we have more details. >> reporter: from los angeles to odessa, texas, to chicago, abortion right supporters hits the streets. >> for me, this is hitting personally, because i am a united states veteran and i did not serve my country to my rights usurped away or your rights usurped away. or anybody's rights usurped away. >> it is not just about abortion, but it is about rights and our health care. >> reporter: they called on the biden administration to protect the abortion rights. >> no matter what people feel, abortion is going to happen, and there going to be underground abortions, and when i was a young girl in high school, there were underground abortions and people were dying. >> reporter: friday, president biden issued an executive access to wider abortion medication,
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and contraception, and legal help for providers and the right to travel out of state for abortion. >> we cannot allow an out of control supreme court working in conjunction with the extremist elements of the republican party to take away the freedoms and personal autonomy. >> reporter: at least ten states have enacted a near total ban on abortion, and others have taken more legislation to restrict rights. and now, thousands of people have taken to the street to say that the president has been mismanaging the country's finances and leading it to economic ruin. he has not been seen from since the officials have stormed his residence saturday. and there have been
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protesters who broke open the gates of the finance ministry which is the site of a sit-in protest in sri lanka as it is exhausting sources of financing, but it is unclear what the next government is going to be looking like as it addresses the fuel, and medicine and fuel and other shortages. after a missile smashed into an apartment building in eastern ukraine, it is said that more than 20 people may be trapped in the rubble. and russia says it is only hitting targets of military value in the war. and now, in kharkiv, the second largest city, there are bombings in the center of the city, but there are reports that nobody was killed can, but several are injured. that is the latest of the attacks on civilian structures. japan is in mourning following assassination of former prime minister shinzo
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abe, and he was killed by a single gunshot compared to thousands here in the u.s. elizabeth palmer is in tokyo with more. >> reporter: as a hearse carried shinzo abe's body to -- from tokyo to his hometown, the revelation that the gun was homemade, and this crude device was easier than buying one legally. when rafael, a well known japanese youtuber applied for his license, he knew it would be an ordeal. from the time you began the process until you got your license, how long did it take? it took me a year, he said. and he told me that the police had even interviewed his wife. there is mandatory training, and you to pass a written exam, and physical, and mental exam and
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even then the police can go to ask your family and friends if you have any violent tendencies. the only ones licensed to carry the handguns are the police. anyone else has to buy one at a gun shop like this one in central tokyo. the owner is catzumi. are you a hunter? >> yes. >> reporter: he explains that the relatively few people who have a gun license can own rifle, air guns or conventional shotgun, and even buying ammunition needs police authorization. shooting in japan is more tightly controlled than almost anywhere on earth, and so gun violence is rare. in fact, there was only one gun death in japan last year compared to more than 40,000 in the united states. but sadly, friday's murder of japan's longest serving prime minister shows that no law,
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however strict can offer perfect protection. elizabeth palmer, cbs news, tokyo. a 41-year-old man has admitted to shooting abe, and little is known about the suspect, but he says that he holds hatred towards a certain group that abe is linked to, and the police have not named that group. the secretary of state anthony blinken is going to travel to tokyo and he is going to pay respects to the japanese people following the assassination, and meet with japanese officials as well as meet with the u.s. alliance for peace and stability, and he was already in thailand for a previous plan for peace. and there is a buddhist plan for peace after a two-year hiatus. the japantown was bustling with people enjoying to be together again. >> it is great to see everybody out and without masks and for a
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lot of people, it is just great to be out with the japanese community again. >> and it is a time of remembering and of expressing our gratitude for all of the individuals who make our lives possible. you still have a chance to enjoy the festival continuing from noon to 8:00 p.m. today. and still to come, the firefighters are trying to control a wildlife that threatens businesses. and a child is using music to help him connect with his culture. vice president kamala harris, and our in depth conversation and her thoughts on abortion, gun violence and the economy, and also, vir
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multiple states are under a red flag warning and that is the highest alert for high heat and low winds and dry weather. >> reporter: hundreds of firefighters are battling the
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washburn fire, and flames are out of control out of yosemite and forcing evacuations and threatening giant sequoias. >> it is oldest trees, and they are 2,000 years old, and massive giants when you stand next to them. >> and heavy smoke blankets yosemite, and that is how quickly the wildfire exploded with 700 acres when it started on thursday. in utah high record heat is fueling wildfires. >> i saw a puff of black smoke, and immediately my thought goes to fire. >> reporter: the authorities are ordering evacuation of homes and camp grounds after more fires scorched 8,000 acres. at glacier national park in montana, the problem is snow, too much of it. the tourists can drive the iconic going to the sun road as the crews are working to clear
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it out. it is now slated to open next week. also, welcoming heat, the yellowstone national park where the roads are dried up and reopened after last month's floods. cbs news, los angeles. all right. let's pick up on both of those fires. we are going to backtrack a little bit to the fire that we mentioned a moment ago in terms of update stog the status on the outskirts of pittsburgh, and this is a liveview on the top of mount diablo on the outskirts of delta, and to san joaquin river, and there is a lot of smoke in the river to this part of the bay, and confire is working this fire for quite some time, and they feel confident it is contain and no structures are threatened, but it is dealing in a difficult part of the wetland out there to suppress a fire, and they are just going to monitor it and keep it corralled and because of the process, there is smoke continually put
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in the air and if we look at the sensors, pittsburgh, you are fine, and looking downstream as the onshore breeze takes it to blow to antioch, you are seeing that it is not healthy air quality, and looking back to hills as it is corralled back towards the terrain. so, just be mindful of the air quality if you are in the vicinity of the fire burning on the outskirts of the pittsburgh power plant, and back to the fire lilia was showing us in yosemite, and it is burning on the south side of the park in mariposa grove, but that is what it is looking like in yosemite now, and that is what it is looking like in the network of cameras, and the yosemite association has available, and the reason that have for that is the shift in the wind over the next 24 hours, and much of the smoke is going to be drawn our way, and by the way, before i show you the smoke forecast for us tomorrow, here is what the
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footprint looks like right now, and it is outlined here in pink, and this is updated from yesterday, and we can watch the growth of this fire for orientation, and the mariposa grove is sitting over here, and you can make out the white curvy line, and the old road that goes through the heart of the grove and the higher grove here, and the lower is here where the grizzly giant is, and i know that a lot of people care deeply about this place, and the fire has burned through the lower elevation, and giant sequoias have been impacted, but looking at the latest map, the majority of the grove appears to be escaping the worst of the flames, but however, the community of wawona is right up there, and it has been making a steady progression with the fire, so a lot to be watching in termgs of that fire. and in terms of smoke, if there is as much smoke coming off of the fire as there was yesterday, and there was a lot of smoke yesterday, the general flow of the atmosphere by tomorrow morning, it will start to bring the smoke to our sky.
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and that is something to notice, and it is not necessarily a major impact of the lower elevations, but it is going to be visible perhaps tomorrow. this is obviously not smoke. we will switch gears tomorrow, and get back to the weather forecast and looking at the low clouds and the fog, and the marine layer has appear and inland and waking up to sunshine, and the temperatures are around 60 for most of us, and if we are watching the marine layer melt back, and it is going to be in the immediate golden coast yesterday and warmer and the real headline in the first alert forecast is a 10 degree warmup above yesterday, and santa rosa and liver more, you are 11 degrees warmer, and so if you are going to be seeing it, we will see where it is going to be, and on the redwood, and mountain view to 58, and so if you will see, the two hot
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days, and san jose, you can see this hot around 90, and cooldown at the 80s for the middle part of the week, and it does not last long, and looking at the microclimate, and it is the warmest for the inland valleys and east bay valleys and cool down before the end of the week before warming up by the end of the week, devin. >> and the so the wind shift is going to bring the smoke to sacramento, and to us as well? >> in the forecast, it looks like we should see it in the sky, but being 24 hours out, it is dependent on the behavior of the washburn fire itself, and the atmosphere going to bring the smoke this way as it is putting this much smoke in the sky yesterday, and so let's hope as we make progress today and not only for the air quality tomorrow, and also for the southern part of yosemite. >> gotcha, and we will keep an eye for it. >> and some say the music is
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rising above the scholar issues and that they need the personal stories and to honor the language. kpix 5 report er elizabeth has this story. >> reporter: when you hear the music, it is hard to believe alex was not even in the band. >> and you start this at first. >> reporter: and so he did not want to be in music even when his father put him in music when he was 4 years old. and he would cry >> reporter: but he does not cry now, but he does feel sad now. >> i think about the people that i knew from the small town that
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i grew up, and no matter how hard they work, it is going to be hard for them to leave the town, because those people have gone through hard lives. i believe that the hard lyes have helped me to develop the music. >> reporter: those lives have helped to find their way into alex's music, and pain, because they alex and his family came to the united states with nothing. >> i remember that day like yesterday, because we had cherrios for dinner and we slept on mattresses on the floor. >> reporter: and his family struggled for years and his mother worked at any low-wage job for years so they could survive. >> we slept in one room for years. >> reporter: and alex hated practicing the music he learned. >> i remember it well. >> reporter: and now it is music that is healing.
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he left the classical for cuban beats and paired with hip hop and rock and jazz. >> i love the combine the genres and i discovered that music can be a form of expression, and the way i express my background and the feelings that i have. >> reporter: it is a self-expression that alex explores carefully and deeply with the deep respect for the colombian music that he knows it is not entirely his own. >> context is very important when it comes to music, and a lot of the music has history, and that history may not be so positive. i can see me reconnecting with my roots through that music and connecting with the people, and understanding them better. >> reporter: for students rising above, i'm elizabeth cook. >> alex is living in l.a., and his goal is to write music for movies and other projects. to learn more about the students
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rising above, go to kpix5.com and we will also look at >> tech: when you have auto glass damage, trust safelite. this dad and daughter were driving when they got a crack in their windshield. [smash] >> dad: it's okay. pull over. >> tech: he wouldn't take his car just anywhere... ♪ pop rock music ♪ >> tech: ...so he brought it to safelite. we replaced the windshield and recalibrated their car's advanced safety system, so features like automatic emergency braking will work properly. >> tech: alright, all finished. >> dad: wow, that's great. thanks. >> tech: stay safe with safelite. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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some east san jose projects
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are called "untold dreams" and some of those projects include cesar chavez and jim plunkett and others coming out of san jose. >> yes, it is great to be a great day for east san jose to be highlighted in this way, and as i said long overdue. >> you can see the display at san jose's martin luther king library until september 24th, and to see some views of the universe that we have never seen before, and nasa is going to see the high resolution photos taken by the james webb telescope. this is from nasa that also has a lot ofy promise that it is going to show the deepest view
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of the universe ever taken, and this tell schoop is called the most powerful and complex ever built. and it is going to focus on the nebula and one of them is the 7600 light years
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it is 6:55, and the interim
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stance that the new d.a. is going to take against drug users. recent high school organizers organized a march at city hall to overturn roe v. wade and they will hope that more young adults like them can make a difference. the washburn fire in yosemite has burned more than 1,000 acres and still zero percent contained. it has grown more than 50% since friday. and the evacuations remain in effect. the prime minister of sha ree lanka have agreed to resign amid country finances leading to the country's economic ruin. and friday, the assassination of the long-time
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assassination of prime minister shinzo abe by a man who says that he was against a group that he believed that abe was linked to. and now, the issue of the wildfire is the smoke that has been coming from this for the last several hours and the air quality has gone downhill, and so in antioch, go easy on yourself outside, because the air quality is unhealthy for the sensitivity groups. and the amount of smoke more importantly of the smoke in the air. in san jose, we will cool down to mid-80s, and the same for the microclimates and the mid-90s in the inland valleys and the cooling down by the mid-80s in the middle of the week. thank you for joining us, and jane pauley is next on cbs.
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enjoy the rest of your sunday.
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. ♪ ♪ ♪ good morning. i'm jane pauley and this is "sunday morning." he was the force behind more than 100 motion pictures, and he's won dozens of academy awards, but harvey weinstein was also accused by more than

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