tv News at 5pm FOX October 22, 2010 4:00pm-5:00pm PST
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the cemetery two jars buried in the ground, each had a heart in it and a photograph pinned to it. police are exploring the possibility that the hearts came from a mortuary. as for the photographs that were found pinned to the hearts >> the pictures are of two different couples, a male and a female of latin decent. it's a picture that could have been taken at any holiday party, a casual picture. >> reporter: leading them to suspect a religious practice. but practitioners of santaria say they have no such rituals. >> in santeria you don't use human parts, you don't do things like that in the cemeteries. what we do in here, i mean we bless candles, we pray for people. not to harm people but to help people. >> reporter: and police say
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they are now listening to a religious that does use body parts which is called talamayumbe. this shows talamayumbe. >> it's a cuban, afrocuban religion, so we're going to be looking into that further. >> reporter: police are looking for the people on the pictures, but they don't believe that they are related to whoever the hearts. >> reporter: possessing a human body part is a felony. reporting live, rob roth. there's an emergency health advisory in place right now in the east bay. health officials are telling people to stay inside because of fumes from an oil refinery in rodeo. contra costa county officials released the alert early this
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afternoon. that after the conoco phillips refinery released an unexpected volume of fumes into the air. now we just spoke with the county hazmat department they say they are not sure how long this advisory will be in effect. the release could include unburned hydrocarbons. those fumes can be dangerous for anyone with respiratory problems. the weekend is sure getting off to a soggy start. and traffic did slow down in some areas. let's give you a live look now at what's happening above san francisco. you can see it's very gray and misty there. out to the east bay we'll take a peak at what's happening, conditions are gray and damp.
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well let's go over to our chief meteorologist bill martin. what's the latest read on the rainstorm that's still on its way. >> exactly what we forecast yesterday. we were talking about scattered showers this morning, we saw those. the morning commute slightly wet. scattered showers out there. you can see there's nothing really well organized yet, the pumps are being primed. take a look out here at the pacific. let me show you what we have. the jet stream is here, here's the next system, there's one right here behind it in this area, we are looking for a wet weekend ahead sunday, a lot of rain in the forecast, i'm going to fell you which days will be the wettest, which cities will see the most rain and for how long. we'll see you then, thank you bill. for up to the minute information on the weather in your neighborhood you can always log on to our website ktvu.com. just hours after leaving the bay area, president obama continued to drum up support
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and money for democratic candidates. today focusing on high profile democratic candidate senator barbara boxer. >> this election is a choice between the policies that got us into this mess and the policies that are leading out of this mess. >> that's president obama speaking at a fundraiser for senator boxer. senator boxer is in a tight race for reelection to the senate against carly fiorina. >> if ever we needed leaders who are fighting for the middle class and for students and for seniors and for all our family, if ever we needed those in public office it is now. this is president obama's third trip in several months. republican candidate fiorina used newly released unemployment numbers. with california the third
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highest in the country it's more proof that senator boxer is not the right choice and that california needs change in government, says fiorina. president obama isn't the only big name that are here in california. there's something more important that could decide this upcoming election. jim vargas is here to explain. >> reporter: frank, with 11 days to go before election day, candidates are bringing out some big guns, their biggest guns to get out the vote. >> reporter: new york major michael bloomberg met meg withman. >> the biggest issues facing california, jobs, housing, the environment, meg whitman is the right person to go and take those things on. >> we have to have a different approach and a different outlook and that's what i have. >> reporter: if bloomburg is
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whitman's biggest gun, obama is the democrats biggest. >> we need all of you to fire up. we need all of you fired up, we need all of you to go. >> reporter: that means more than voting, although whitman is behind jerry brown in the polls, which campaign gets voters to the ballot box matters the most. >> everything we see is the republican voters are more enthusiastic than the democratic voters. >> reporter: the get out to vote campaigns may make the difference. >> we know the enthusiasm for obama, but can they count on the grass roots organizations to raise turn out to the level that these candidates have a chance to translate a generic
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support figure into actual votes on election day? >> reporter: so even with an eight point lead, the whitman campaign is acting like they could have a winner. jim vargas, ktvu news. proposition 19 the fight to legalize marijuana is a tight battle. the just released sur vas finds 55% of likely voters would vote against prop 19. 10% of those questioned said they didn't know how they would vote. just a few weeks ago, a poll showed 38% of voters supporting prop 19. if passed it would allow adults 21 years and older to possess marijuana and grow marijuana. -- the company says it
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hasn't made a firm commitment to moving the pipeline and won't do so until more movement is done on rerouting alternatives. many residents say they won't rebuild until that pipeline is removed. >> we can't move forward and start making plans to rebuild. >> reporter: the city says it is working with pg & e to evaluate all other options for that pipeline. well the champane remains on ice as giants fans are eager to see if the team can clench its spot in the world series. ktvu's fred inglis live in philadelphia, hi fred. >> reporter: hi, gasia, yes it is cold it's going to get down to the 30s here in south philadelphia and it is very, very windy. the phillies behind me at citizens ballpark chose not to have practice and i don't blame them.
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meanwhile the giants did not leave at&t park in san francisco until about 9:00 a.m. this morning and did not arrive into philadelphia until about 6:30 p.m. eastern time. that's because they got caught up in president obama's ent era uge. they played 175 games already for crying out loud and rest may be more important right now than repetition. but nobody seems to have more fun in this postseason right now than senior vice president and general manager bryan sabian expect maybe for ceo and general managing partner bill nucum. nucum took over this team just two years ago, while his expertise is law, bill nucum is even taking off the bow tie now and becoming a baseball fan. >> he probably feels like a kid, because this has been energizing, we could have never predicted this as we started the season. we wanted to go to the play
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offs. we knew that after winning 88 games it would be a nice feather in our cap. but to get this far, maybe being on the verge of going to the world series has really energized the organization let alone the city. >> this is a team of players and coaches who like being together, they really respect each other and they rely on each other and they like doing what they are doing and they like who they are doing it with and it shows. >> reporter: throughout all of these trades and dealing made throughout this season, the giants were able to keep their payroll at just about where it started about $98 million. $98million is ninth all time in the major league baseball salary payroll if you will for this year, compare that to the team that they are now leading 3-2 in the nlcs the philadelphia phillies. $142million that's fourth in all. you can talk about the yankees where they are $7.
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$7.5 billion payroll. and tomorrow's outcome could be a 12:30 pacific start if the yankees win tonight. if the yankees lose, it'll be a 4:30 p.m. start pacific time. we'll have to wait and see and of course nothing comes easy you guys, reporting live in philadelphia, fred inglis, ktvu news. >> thank you fred. just to kind of reiterate here. what fred was just talking about concerning the start time in tomorrow's game in philadelphia. it hasn't been determined because it all depends when the yankees face off with the rangers in the american league championship series. if texas loses tonight, ktvu will carry the giants game beginning at 12:30 tomorrow afternoon. but if texas wins tonight, you can find the giants game here on ktvu tomorrow at 4:30 in the afternoon. and a reminder, after the league championship games are all finished it'll be on to the world series, you can watch every game of the world series live here on channel 2. you can also follow the battle for the
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pennant on our website ktvu.com. you will find all our coverage, including interesting photos, along with video and a lot more it's all right on the front page. after more than 30 years running, a surprising turn of events at the very last minute for the exotic erotic ball. the event was scheduled to take place tonight and saturday in richmond but was cancelled this morning. they didn't sell as many ticket as they were expecting and they hasn't paid all their bills. a decision to pull the plug was made this morning, this would have been the 31st annual exotic erotic ball. problems are facing problems for the top of the organization that runs the gay pride event. this comes after the organization announced it is $100,000 in debt and owes almost $60,000 to smaller nonprofits that were hired to work beverage booths. now the city is planning to step in to help. >>we're going to come in and help raise money but we're
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asking the city controller to also come in and do a technical review and look at some of the issues around government. >> the parade is the largest gay pride parade in the nation. and the damage done and why governor arnold schwarzenegger declared a state of emergency. and it was a deadly attack in the waters off california, a shark kills a body border, why a surfer who hauled him in sees there was no way he could save his life -- a body boarder. aig for different results. i've built businesses. i've built a business. met the payroll. met a payroll. i enter this office beholden to no one except you.
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i will owe my office to no one but you. i don't owe anyone anything. i don't owe anyone anything. it's all about leadership. this is all about leadership. jobs, jobs, jobs. jobs, jobs, jobs. we do not have a revenue problem. we do not have a revenue problem. we have a spending problem. we have a spending problem. rebuiling california. build a new california rebuild california. let's build a new california. we need to run the state as a business. running this thing a little bit more like a business. whats the worst that could happen? whats the worst thing that could happen?
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million. also tonight we're learning more about the suspect including how he was recently described as a danger to himself and put on a 42 hour watch. we have more on the man and how his mental state at the hour may have played a role. >> reporter: on september 27th this suspect checked into woodland's emergency room. records say a nurse wrote, quote you are anxious and depressed and feel at times suicidal. pigee was put on a 72 hour hold and prescribed three drugs. just two days after that 72 hour hold would have expired, this suspect was back here at mercy san juan hospital. there he was further prescribed adavent. those drugs coupled with his behavior should have been an indication. >> for him to do something
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desperate like this is an indication of serious mental illness. >> reporter: mark gold then added, giving someone with a health disorder, could have made him worse. >> those medications could have made him worse, if he was either bipolar or schizophrenic, those medications could have made him worse. >> reporter: at her home, the suspect's mother says that that moves how her son was asking for help. governor arnold schwarzenegger called for a state emergency. meantime the undamaged sections
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of those mall could reopen in weeks. the mall draws shoppers from all over northern california and generates about $3.2 million in annual sales taxes for roseville. three beaches are closed tonight along the central california coast after a deadly shark attack. santa barbara sheriff says that a man was attacked this morning at surf beach which is on the property of the air base. a friend on a surfboard got the victim to shore but the man ended up bleeding to death. the beach and two others will remain closed through the weekend. here in the bay area we talked about exactly this scenario yesterday. bill, rain today a little bit more tomorrow and ramping up later. >> this is the time of year, many folks make weekend plans, i'm getting a lot of calls into the weather center, you guys are going to be wet on sunday. widely scattered showers, not a
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big deal. up toward winters and vacaville you have light showers. this is just prime in the pump. the real rain gets in here on sundays. here's how it breaks out. let's go to philadelphia real quick, we have a big baseball game. we're not sure what time the game starts, but 60s, and partly cloudy. that's your saturday's game. i would give you sunday's forecast for the game but i don't think we'll need it, i think we'll finish it on saturday. this is the real deal. it's going to be wet. we could see one to 2-inches of rain in the bay area proper. you get up north in genre and heelsburg, maybe three or four inches of rain. far northern area. overnight scattered showers, temperatures in the 50s, it'll be wet on the roadways tomorrow. big cal game tomorrow, there's a lot of stuff going on in town. there's going to be slick roadways, you're going to need your umbrellas. sunday is the wettest day on
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the weekend. if you have outdoor activities, it's going to be wet. if you sat me downright now, what time of the year is it? saturday. you have tropical moisture tied up in here. so big weekend changes headed our way. the copious amounts of rainfall are coming from tropical moisture that's been trained in this series of weather systems moving into the area. i'm going to break it all down, it's a wet one, i'll have specifics for your city back here in just a minute. we'll see you then, thank you bill. we have developing news when we come back involving just released u.s. military documents on those three cal grads who were arrested while hiking near the border between iraq and iran. also -- >> he didn't do anything to deserve being bullied. >> reporter: president obama taking on bullying. he says that it is the way americans treat bullying that makes the problem worse. how san francisco is
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bracing for a new onset of fans that can't even watch the game in the ballpark. new at 6:00, over the past decade, a arrest for pot positions have tripled in california. we're learning why the people who smoke the most marijuana are not the ones getting busted. also -- >> reporter: a lot of south bay homeowners are angry at banks saying banks are spending their money to take away their homes. thousands bought tickets, now a huge annual event has been cancelled just a day before it was set to begin. what we discovered about the reason for the cancellation, tonight at 6:00.
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that supports the uc berkeley statements. it's among 400,000 secret documents released today by wikisite. williams made that acquisition last night on fox news on the same show where he got into hot water earlier this week about a comment on muslims and air travel. meantime pr ceo vivian shillard defended the decision to fire williams. >> you want to be a political activist, you may not also be a reporter or news analyst for mpr. this is very well understood by the lion share of our star and by analysts all over the country and all over the world. >> there's now conservatives who want funding to mpr cut. federal funding makes 2% of its budget. president obama is reaching out directly to young people
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affected by bullying. the president -- >> and we've got to dispel this myth that bullying is just a normal rite of passage, that it's just a part of growing up, it's not. >> reporter: he released a video that attempts to speak to those directly affected. the president says he is both shocked and saddened as a result of the recent suicide of young people that were made fun of for being gay. the president's student comes just one month after a rutgers student committed suicide when a video of he and another man was put online. >> there's people out there who love you and care about you
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just the way you are. you haven't done anything wrong. >> reporter: the president posted this video on you tube and the white house website. the video is also posted on the website for it gets better project. that's an organization that was set up in september as a suicide prevention and anti bullying site. causes, the company that helps facebook users donate to charitable organizations is moving to move across the bay to san francisco, open its own website and introduce an instore charity website. they hope it will allow more people to access charitable organizations it has. the buck institute for aids research has been awarded a grant for research. the grant is from the research
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for degenerative. the grant was one of 19 totaling $67 million awarded yesterday by the state's stem cell agency which was created after the passage of proposition 71 six years ago. new pictures just into the newsroom on a situation at a local refinery that has forced authorities to urge people around the area to stay inside their homes. >> reporter: there are lies, there are then lies and the state's statistics. i'm consumer editor tom vacar, the truth still ahead. san francisco is licking their wounds after last night's tough giants game but also getting ready for a match up this weekend.
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came into the channel 2 newsroom. excessive flairing at the conoco phillips refinery can seen in rodeo. the plume has been growing since early this morning. we just spoke to county officials who say a health warning continues to be in effect right now for residents in the area. there was an equipment failure that triggered the loss of hydrogen forcing the plant to burn off excessive fuel. the process sends particulates into the air which could be a problem with those who have respiratory problems. health fishes have not issued a shelter in place just a health warning. they will issue a shelter in place if things get worse. today we learned california unemployment rate didn't budge from last month. the state jobless rate remained steady at 12.4% for september after creeping up slightly
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between july and august. a 12% figure is sharply higher than one year earlier but it looks like that's not the bottom. ktvu consumer editor tom vacar joins us now from alameda to explain, tom. >> reporter: right at the moment, the concern is with taxpayer supported jobs being lost in big volume. that's now how this all started, it really started a few years ago with companies that put armies and armies of employees out of work. labor lawyer mike burnick is a former director of the edd. >> we're falling further and further behind the nation, it's not like the nation is doing well. >> reporter: california is lowest in the entire state. san mateo, napa and san francisco are also in single digits. moving into double digits,
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sonoma joblessness is 12.2% followed by santa clara, contra costa and alameda. solano did the worse but that's still better than the state's 58 counties and the state as a whole. >> reporter: but the net loss is 57,000 and that's far higher than any other state. the truth of the matter is the unemployment statistic is far worse than the state is reporting. >> reporter: the unemployment rate is reported by who are looking for work. if you're not categorized as looking for work we can lose jobs but the rate can stay the same or go down. >> reporter: it's more like 15 to 20% or more true unemployment. even among the employed, the negative psychology is undeniably. >> i'm thinking to myself, it could be me. i could be in that same person's shoes. what am i going to do? >> my husband has been trying to find full time employment for the past four years now. he's been on and off with
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different municipalities and a lot of cities are cutting down. >> reporter: mocota says though he has a job now the next one will be one that he creates as an entrepreneur. >> you can't depend on anyone but yourself and your family, so you have to go out there and make something happen. >> reporter: the revenues are not even considered at all by these imperfect statistics. john vacar. for the first time in two years, silican valley employees added jobs last month. new figures from the state employment development show counties added 2,700 jobs. it's the first month of job growth for the county in 23 months. labor officials say that most of the new positions are seasonal and teaching jobs. a new report out today shows how time is running out for jobless workers and their
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families. according to the national employment law project, jobless benefits for hundreds of thousands of people will run out unless congress renews unemployment benefits right after the november elections. if that doesn't happen more than a million people will be cut off from getting federal assistance right around the holidays. >> this is something that right now hard working struggling families need and our local economies need. and it's irresponsible and short sided to take it down before the economy is ready to handle it. if an extension is passed, it will be the seventh one since the recession began. wall street ended this week today with mixed results. the dow last some ground while the nasdaq advanced despite positive earning reports from dow players. the dow dipped 14 points, the nasdaq grew almost 20.
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visit ktvu.com and click the business tab for more financial news. it's been a long time since a prosports team from the bay area has won a world championship and it's been longer since the san francisco giants have won a world series. in fact, they haven't won one since they were back in new york. all which may help explain why giant fever is really sweeping across the bay area. john sasaki is live in the city tonight now with more on this, hey john. >> reporter: i have to tell you real quick. we have at neil's irish park right across the ballpark where this giants park has been a boom from business. the operators are moving in furniture, tables, benches, getting ready for a full house for tomorrow's game. the bar is quiet now but yesterday bar tending mary conley says there was some 1,000 fans in and out. how much beer does that amount of crowd drink? 20 kegs and 50 cases in one
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day. >> we used to have two kegs at one time, now we have six. two cocktail waitresses, nine in security. >> reporter: the store has also been seeing a huge jump in business. tonight there were crowd looking for team gear. perhaps some retail therapy after last night's loss. >> my husband was very angry. screaming and yelling at the tv, i said honey they can't hear you, but hopefully next game they do good. >> reporter: one man who's a transplant from detroit has some advice for giants fan. >> stick with them. stick with them, stay supportive because they need that going on the road. >> reporter: that's the same sense people had on the street where we saw many people still wearing their orange and black. >> it'll be better because we lost and we came back from that. >> reporter: this man is handing out fliers for jews for
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jesus. >> as they are being tortured i guess the entire season, so jesus was also tortured, but he ultimately had victory just like i think the giants are going to be victorious. >> reporter: odoules is a bar where even foreigners are giants fans. >> i think they just need to keep doing what they were doing in the first games and i think they'll win out in the end. >> reporter: they are hoping this play off run continues. live in san francisco, john sasaki. giants fans in san francisco and all over the bay continue to share their excitement. let's take a look at pictures that prove everyone the youngest and cutest fans can get in on all the giants fun. christian sent us this picture
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of her son. here is young gabriel, he's enjoying the run. >> those pictures are priceless. it is a quick fix, what the city of san jose can do with it employees to save a h half million dollars. the latest legal maneuver of o.j. simpson and it did not go his way. google unveils a new plan today, what the company is doing in an effort to make sure it's workers don't invade your privacy.
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o.j. simpson lost an appeal in a nevada courtroom today to overturn his armed robbery and kidnapping conviction. the judge rejected the appeal saying simpsons lawyers did not provide any evidence of discrimination. simpson is serving nine to 39 years in prison following a confrontation in a las vegas hotel room. the lab was awarded leadership gold certification. it's for the outstanding energy retaining features. >> this is one more way of our county being a leader in so many ways not only in technology as we look to
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convict the guilty of crimes but also to free the innocent from prosecution where in a state of the art building. >> construction of the county's new $47 million crime lab began in 2006 and was completed last year. today google has introduced new tougher privacy measures aimed at its employees. google is planning to monitor their employees more closely to make sure they don't break privacy the privacy of users. san jose could lose $5.5 million by limiting the number of officials who use city vehicles to commute to work.
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commuting in city cars cost san jose $5 million a year. police and fire officials may respond more quickly to an emergency if they have easy access to their city vehicles. the city auditor is recommending more than 90 city vehicles that are currently taken home to remain in the parking lot when not on city business. we continue to follow a story about a surfer attacked off the coast of california. new pictures just in to our newsroom of that shark attack along the coast. we will show them to you next. we have beautiful, really show a lot of their feet. have you ever wished your could train your doctor to be more kind and gentle. in a ktvu special report, how a project is helping doctors here in the bay area improve patient care. and showing rain right now, we're going to use live rain tracker to show you when the rain will be heaviest this weekend.
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over the past decade, arrest for pot possession has tripled. but we are learning why those who smoke the most marijuana are not the ones getting arrested. former homeowners are angry at banking saying banks are spending their money to take aware their home. thousands bought tickets, now a huge annual event is cancelled just days from the event. what we learned about the surprise cancellation, tonight at 6:00.
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are among the world's most respected and in demand. now some of them along with medical students are learning a new technique to better communicate with their patients and they are headed to the horse stables to do it. rita williams explains in tonight's special report. >> reporter: they aren't here just horsing around. doctors and stanford medical students are learning from these horses how to be more patient with their patients. >> first of all they are
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beautifully, secondly they really show a lot of their feeling in a very transparent, very open way. and we can learn a lot from horses. >> reporter: we've all known brilliant doctors with no bedside manner while polite patients may not tell those doctors how they are coming across, supersensitive horses will. a neurorow surgeon at the university of arizona a lifelong horseman first had the idea of so called equine facilitated learning a decade ago now sanford is one of many medical schools using horses to teach doctors. here at stanford's web ranch, dr. beverly cane is putting her staff through the paces, horse and humans learning from each other. >> am i being heard, herd. >> reporter: beverly cane teaches students to watch their horses personalities emerge. >> he's curious, but he's a lot more polite, he's a little more submissive an he would be easier to work on the ground i
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think. >> reporter: the doctors are learning skills to them assess their two legged patients understand their fears, read their body language. >> the average medical appointment is 7.5 minutes now. there's studies that show the first 30 second in the examination room accomplish that person's impressions of how much confidence they have in you. you may not touch the horse, and you may not bribe or pretend to bribe the horse. >> reporter: students try to coax the horses to move. cane says doctors with poor communication skills have higher malpractice claims and higher patient dissatisfaction. >> reporter: do you think it's made you a better doctor. >> i think it has. >> raise your hand if you think you are successful. >> reporter: just as the horses
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learn not to bite the hand that treats it, these students say they are learning to be more understanding, patient and compassionate with their patients. >> and these steeds will help keep these doctors in good stead. rita williams, ktvu channel 2 news. coming up next at 6:00, we head back to philadelphia to hear from the giants as they prepare for game six of the nlcs. now we head to the newsroom, julie haener has a look at the stories we have coming up. anger and a lot of questions as vendors and ticketholders were turned away from a well known event. tonight what we are learned about why it was cancelled at the last minute. an unusual scene at a bay area bank, what this group was chanting and demanding inside the lobby. plus the crime, more african americans are arrested and the bay area city where
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it's happening the most. we're learning more now about lucas ransom was body surfing this morning when a shark grabbed his leg. ransom yelled as he was going under, he was able to pull him out but ransom bled to death. a foot long chunk was taken out of ransom's boogy board. officials have closed the beach as a precaution. on to the weather now, but as we go to our chief meteorologist, you've been searching for years, your thoughts on this? >> there's been sharking out there, this is the time of year, unfortunately this man was in a spot that was hard to get to him. that's why he bled to death. that's why he bled to death.
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this is the time of year, in the months of august, october and november. a sad story definitely. for us we have rain in the bay area forecast. the rain is widely scattered now as we head out toward winters and vacaville, light scattered showers. you get a feel. look what goes on here. you see the showers, these are widely scattered. this is unorganized stuff. but as we get into the next 12 hours, things are going to organize. satellite loop shows all of the activity. it's teeing up out there, we're just seeing the weak stuff without the strong dynamics up front. what we're looking for is a bit more rain on saturday. kind of like today but a little bit more, heavy rain on sunday up to an inch, to two inches to three inches in parts of the north bay. the forecast for sunday, then some wind will come up as well. that's the big event, your sunday from saturday night to through about sunday 1:00,
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let's go look at it. saturday morning, there's the scatter showers. okay, you're going to the cal game or you're going outdoor activities, things are going to be wet. ramping up, not a heavy rain. heavier rain around saturday evening and now here it starts to get going. saturday night into sunday morning the dynamics increase. i mean as the low pressure gets closer, the air starts to rise. the moisture gets here and it starts to rain in santa rosa. it's saturday, or sunday morning, and then there's your sunday, lunchtime, that's rain. maybe 5-inches of rain, mostly a rain event. rain heads into sunday, that is a wet period sunday afternoon and then it's gone. this is early season store and deal. eal on sunday is the real we'll see advisories go up in the mountains as well. your forecast high tomorrow, you see the temperatures, a lot of this moisture is coming from
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an old tropical system. that's why the rainfall totals have the potential. especially in the north bay to be so high. warm air, and a lot of waters. rain on sunday, it's going to feel like january. >> always gets my attention when you say this is the real deal coming up on sunday. thank, bill. a change in one bay area neighborhood and people wholive here are seeing these doors open for the first time in a year. what that means, in a moment.
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an east san jose goodwill store reopened this week after it was gutted by fire. >> one, two, three. the 15,000 square foot store is in the 3,000 block of alan rock avenue. good will says the newly reopened store has wider aisles. the building was destroyed by fire september of last year just three months after being r emodeled. >> we're thrilled to be back here, and have the opportunity to provide services and the opportunity to purchase used goods at great value. the store will have books and furniture along with clothing for men, women and
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the first time ever in the event's 31 year history. this year's exotic erotic ball is a no go for the first time. fed up homeowners facing foreclosure took their message to the banks today, the promise they say the banks made but never followed through. good evening everyone i'm frank somerville. >> and i'm julie haener. we begin with developing news right now, right now a health warner is in effect for residents in rodeo due to conoco phillips refinery. an equipment failure at a hydrogen provider prompted the shut down this morning. a shelter
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