tv Ten O Clock News FOX April 18, 2011 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT
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a bay area dog park is closed down tonight after a dog's sudden and mysterious death. good evening everyone i'm ken wayne. frank somerville is off tonight. >> and i'm julie haener. the dog owner says her dog was perfectly healthy and then suddenly became ill. lloyd lacuesta is live, he spoke to the dog's owner tonight. >> reporter: dog owners coming here tonight found the gates locked and a sign warning that
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poisoned bait may have been left here. >> he was gagging and his stomach was undilating. then he fell to the floor. >> reporter: jennifer tian had had collin for only six weeks. she adopted the shiba from a dog rescue agency. saturday afternoon and only her second visit to her car, she watched the dog, vomit, collapse and as she rushed him to the veterinarian he died in her car. tian says her dog was healthy but something happened at the dog park. >> reporter: i think he ate something. the vet after the whole resuscitation, she said that because of the vomiting, that it's an indication that he might have eaten something toxic. >> reporter: two months ago someone left rat poison in a sunnyvale dog park and scrolled the words all dogs must die.
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now pet owners are frightened. >> i think it's pathetic that a person would poison the dog. it's just families out here with their family members. >> i just wonder why. i don't know if someone had a grudge against the dogs or was a personal thing. >> reporter: tian is suffering the pain of losing her pet. a dog that would wait at the dog for her to come home. >> seeing he was gone on saturday, that is a sign of collin being gone. >> reporter: they expect to have the results by tomorrow night. live in san jose, lloyd lacuesta, ktvu channel 2 news. at this hour several dozens native american protesters are spending a fifth night at what they consider to be a sacred sight in vallejo in an effort to prevent a park from being built there.
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earlier today the protesters voiced concerns that they might be physically removed from glen cove on the edge of cartenas straight. this evening the native americans reached an agreement with the recreation district to allow them to stay the night. protesters say the land is sacred and they have no intention of leaving until the recreation district drops plans to build public bathrooms, use heavy equipment including a grater on the land and put in a paveed parking lot. >> this is our church. we come here to pray. and right now we need to be here at our church to defend it from being desecrated. >> reporter: the protesters say thousands of native americans are buried at this location. the department of justice has been called in to mediate the dispute. >> reporter: today is the anniversary of the great 1906 quake and in case anyone forgot, the san andres fault produced a not so gentle reminder this afternoon. an earthquake measuring 3.7
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rattled the peninsula. it was centered on the san andres 2 miles southeast of pacifica. while categorized as a minor quake it got the attention of many people. amber lee brings us coverage. >> reporter: workers told us the power went out just second after the quake hit. while damage was minimal there was no doubt people felt this quake. >> i called my son. everything dropped off. >> reporter: high tide cafe chef said he was here in the refrigerator restocking when a bottle of wine and a bottle of
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orange juice fell and cracked. >> reporter: were you scared? >> yeah, it's something you don't expect. >> i was watching television and i was starting to get up when the boom hit. it knocked me over back on the sofa. >> i was sitting in the garage playing video games. and it just hit, and the garage just went wobbling back and forth and the chair i was sitting in almost toppled over. >> reporter: several business put up signing letting customers know they were closed temporarily. at 6:52 we saw lights coming on at radio shape. an employee invited us inside. >> we were working on putting stuff back on the shelves, all of a sudden there was a quick jolt. >> reporter: at the cafe, workers turned away customers. >> we were just sitting here having lunch, next thing you know it started shaking and the lights went out. >> reporter: 10,000 customers lost power in pacifica at the
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same time the quake stopped. electricity was restored to everyone. pg & e says it is still investigating the root cause of the power outage. reporting live in pacifica. amber lee, ktvu channel 2 news. let's take a quick look at the san andres fault. that's the big one that runs right up the state of california. that's where the earthquake was very close to today and most likely centered upon. we come in close now, this is called a shake map. a shake map is set up by the usgs. folks come in on the internet and come in what they experience. weak, light or moderate shaking. as you look at the color coding, you can see the peninsula experienced the most shaking to light. so, a weak quake nonetheless but it did wake up some folks in the peninsula. you may think you're prepared for a big one but are you. why an earthquake hit may not be enough. and the one major item you may
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be overlooking. that story coming up in about 15 minutes. president obama declared a disaster in california to help people recover from financial losses following last month's tsunami. most of the damage were to the harbor in santa cruz and crescent city. officials put the estimate at $48 million. a federal disaster declaration allows state and local officials to ask for help for repairless. president obama is scheduled to visit facebook in palo alto on wednesday. >> i just want to take a minute to invite you to a town hall meeting on the economy that -- >> reporter: today he issued an open invitation on you tube for people to join him to talk about the economy. the president will take questions starting at 1:45 wednesday afternoon. after the facebook event, the
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president will attend two meetings. financial analysts downgraded their long term outlook on the u.s. debt. s & p didn't change the nation's credit limit. but it did change the long term outlook from stable to negative and said it has little confidence that lawmakers in washington will come through with a deficit reduction plan before next year's elections. on wall street that news sent stock prices into a tail spin. the dow jones dropped to 2,000 before closing 140 points lower. the nasdaq lost 29. we're learning tonight that the high price of gasoline has more and more people running on empty. we asked the fda to crunch the numbers. we learned more than 15,000 motorists called for fuel service in january, february and march of last year. that number jumped to more than 19,000 in the first three months. that works out to a 23%
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increase in the number of drivers running out of gas in northern california. people are waiting longer to fill up, debra villalon has the story. >> reporter: some of them are not filling up. they are getting a half tank or less. look at this sale, $4 that's not even a gallon of gas. running an increased risk of running out. ask the tow truck drivers. they are going through more of these gas cans on stranded drivers. >> they didn't want to go get gas, they were hoping it was going to go down. or they get a little bit of gas because they want to save. >> i can't spend you know money on gas the way i used to. >> reporter: drivers admit they used to keep more in the tank. but now wait until they see the light. the warning light. >> i'm going to e. >> does it make you nervous? >> yeah, it makes me nervous.
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but what can you do. >> reporter: aaa has seen this before, more people running out of gas. the last time pump prices soared three years ago. then as now their advice. >> aaa always recommends never run below 1/4 tank. >> it goes below the line. >> reporter: still this driver says he has no choice but to run on fumes. even after he sputtered to a stop recently. >> i see the light went on, but i thought i could make it home. >> reporter: his purchase tonight, barely moved the needle. >> i put $20, i can't do more. >> reporter: doesn't buy much. not at four something a gallon. many drivers tell us they know it's less fuel efficient to gas up that way but they just don't
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feel they have any choice. pg & e says everyone if they had known there were welds in the pipeline that exploded in san bruno last year, it wouldn't have changed the -- a san francisco woman tells police she escaped two would be rapists who kidnapped her at gunpoint on sunday afternoon. the 23-year-old says she was on the corner of lexington yesterday when a man with a knife forced her into a green truck. she says he and another man drove her to the san mateo county line and tried to rape her. san francisco supervisor john avalos announced today he
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is entering the mayors race. avalos is considered a progressive and representing district 11. that includes the outer mission and engel side. the number of the mayoral candidates are now 30. more than ever before, the record number of freshman heading to uc schools next year and where they are coming from. over cast skies this evening in this view from our emeryville camera. when will those clouds clear? chief meteorologist bill martin has tomorrow's forecast in eight minutes. it's well known that -- we'll tell you why a neurosurgeon says it might not be as bad adds it seems. -- as bad as it seems.
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the university of california says it is admitting a record setting number of students this fall. >> reporter: the uc system is facing a half billion dollars shortfall of state support next year. which is why tuition is going up and more students are out of state. >> the reality is that uc does not have the capacity problem as much as it has a funding problem. >> reporter: uc is admitting more out of state students
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because they pay more tuition. and that helps educate more students that other wise they could not afford to have on campus. students say there are long ways to get into classes. >> last system i needed a chem class. and i didn't get it at first and i was wait listed. >> when i came in 1975 i had the support for typically three graduate students. >> and today? >> and today zero. >> reporter: the admissions director says it could get worse. >> support for california residents remain so much farther from the demand that we're going to get from california applicants. we're really worried about that too. >> reporter: absent more money from the state, uc regents are
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considered difficult solutions. increasing tuition or letting more out of staters in. tonight santa cruz police are trying to piece together how a fremont man fell to his death from the rocks on west cliff driver earlier tonight. the incident happened near the intersection of west cliff drive and stockton avenue around 5:45 this evening. the victim has only been described as a 22-year-old man. he was pronounced dead at the scene. at this hour police are interviewing two friends on what led to the man's fall. they say alcohol may have been involved. the alameda county coroner released the name of the man killed this morning on a solo car accident. the victim has been identified as napoleon quintero. witnesses have said quintero was on the freeway when the car
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rolled. it's not clear what prompted quintero to swerve. california safety experts say they hope a drop in motorcycle fatalities indicates a change. motorcycle deaths peaked in 2008 at more than 5,300. experts aren't sure why that number has since fallen to about 3,400. ag ferrari foods has announced it closed three more of its markets after bankruptcy. they shut down stores in
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belmont, palo alto and sunnyvale. two harvard university classmates of zucke rberg were awarded cash. they claim facebook over valued that stock so they received 1.2 million shares instead of 5 million shares. a three judge panel ruled against them last week. the brothers want the entire nine judge panel mow to hear their case. giant fan bryan stow is back on a medical induced coma tonight after he suffered seizures this past weekend. stow's sister posted an update. saying that doctors removed stow's neck brace but he remains in a medically induced coma. >> reporter: at american
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response, treating head injuries is an every day occurrence. paramedics tell us that brain injuries are not uncommon. they could happen from something as simple as falling from the back of this ambulance and hitting your head on the concrete. it's how the brain reacts to that trauma that can be hard to predict. the brain swelling was so severe, doctors had to remove part of his skull to relieve swelling. >> you try to reduce the swelling and see how they react. >> it can be a good thing. means that those brain cells are still alive. but they are not functioning the way they are supposed to. >> it's not a great thing. let's be honest. >> reporter: rich crimbel also overseas medical response for amr. >> i think we're all staying positive. in saying that bryan has a very long road ahead of him.
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you know is it going to be the bryan that we knew yesterday that comes out of this, we don't know. >> reporter: dr. dikenson tells us it is impossible to know how a patient will respond to treatment. he says you just have to wait until the patient wakes up and everyone then that's just the beginning of the process. patti lee, ktvu news. and daytime highs today were on the mild side 68 in napa. one of the warm spots, everybody else 63 or around 65. highs tomorrow for tuesday they're coming up. we're going to see lots of upper 60s, low 70s tomorrow. nice day tomorrow, the extended forecast will bring showers back into the bay area on wednesday night. so here's tomorrow's model. at 7:00 a.m. just some cloud cover, fog along the coast. and then around noon and afterwards more clouds move in. out here, 24 hours away is that
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chance of rain. i'll extend the model to that period, we'll see you back here. in the southern u.s., the skies cleared and homeowners got a chance to look at the damage. mostly in north carolina. the storms are also to blame for claiming at least 44 lives from north carolina to oklahoma. the conditions that created the deadly weather are rarely seen in north carolina. that region is more prone to hurricanes. and in texas the devastation is from wildfires that are sweeping across that state. tonight 22 fires are burning out of control. fire crews are battling strong winds, high temperatures and low humidity. more than 1,000 square miles of burn. that's about the size of rhode island. officials say the fires have killed one firefighter and destroyed at least 50 homes. the governor appealed to president obama today to declare texas a disaster area. a reminder from mother
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u stnaa cte,hise a de. ougog t bk. wi cke sp rwd yr arho, the anniversary of the great quake followed by a 2.7 quake are reminders another big one could strike at any time. but experts say most bay area residents are unprepared. ktvu's rita williams tells us the one thing most of us have ignored. >> reporter: at 5:12 this morning sirens started to sound at the same time that the loma
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prieta quake started to shake. california cans say they are prepared for the big one. but earthquake kits like these are not enough. if you haven't retrofitted your house, you have not done enough. >> this wall right here is what got reenforced. >> always way around? >> -- all the way around? >> all the way around, yeah. >> reporter: hutchins preaches how five to $15,000 of prevention could save hundreds of thousands of dollars of damage. >> and there was a garage under here. it looks like a nice house until you realize that the steps don't match the bottom of
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the door way. everybody has estimated 350,000 people are going to be without homes after a major earthquake. >> reporter: it's time she says that people stop denying that history will repeat itself. >> and there's a test to tell just how safe your home will be in case of an earth earthquake. go to ktvu.com and go to the 1968 quake. a boat arrived in bengazi late today. on board were rebelled and civilians. thousands more are waiting to be evacuated. the british government now says it will provide support for the
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evacuation of 5,000 migrant workers trapped by the fighting there. on the eastern front line of adabia rebels are getting some new weapons but they didn't say where they got them. they said the rockets will help them finish off gadhafi. the rebel forces have been much better equipped and trained. there's reports that the fighters have stopped wearing their uniforms in order to make it more difficult to identify them. for jews is different than other nights as it's the first night of pass over. worshipers burned bread. jews celebrate pass over to
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the clock is ticking, you now have just 90 minutes to turn in your federal and state tax returns. jana katsuyama is live at oakland's main postoffice which is open late for those last minute filers, jana. >> reporter: there's been a steady stream of cars. you can see here they have the lights to direct people in. right now there's just been a couple of cars that have been pulling up, and there's protesters out here protesting tax day and corporate taxes. this is one of the few areas that you can still drop off your tax returns. this place and the airport location. san francisco international airport, it has been for people around the bay area a very hectic day.
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>> how are you doing. thank you. happy tax day. >> reporter: happy perhaps for those who finished their taxes. drivers pulled up for curb side service as workers collected last minute tax returns and sorted them on the spot. inside a line snakes around. even though april fell on april 18th. some people still pushed the envelope. >> there's definitely still people procrastinating. we expected this and we prepared for it. >> it always takes a little longer than i think. >> reporter: last minute filers say the economy has made tax day a bigger headache. >> you're looking at less exemptions. >> reporter: workers are working till midnight to hand handle this year's rush. an annual affair that brings a
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sigh of relief once it's done. >> i waited till the last minute like usual. but now that it's over, i have another year that i don't have to think about it until next april. >> reporter: and just remember, if you have a heavy tax return, the postage for an extra ounce just went up to 20-cents. so one thing to remember if you are filing your returnless. also there is time to file an extension if you can't get it done tonight. reporting live, jana katsuyama. and president and mrs. obama reported an income of $1.7 million. most of it from books he's written. the first family paid $453,000 in federal taxes. that's about .75 of their system. the obamas made a lot less in 2010 than the $5.5 million they earned the previous year. on this tax day, a group of
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protesters in oakland demanded bank of america pay its fair share of taxes. >> and at the bank of america bank, the group gathered to make their point. protesters also used the occasion to declare b of a's foreclosure process which some say they've experienced firsthand. and protesters targeted wells fargo with a similar message. they say congress has to change the tax codes given the large corporations. danville police are asking for the public's help to arrest a pair of armed robbers. police say two males armed with knives took a woman's cell
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phone and demanded her money. the woman refused and ran to safety in a near by store. the robbers ran off too. they are described as white mail juveniles. anyone with any information about the case is asked to call danville police. an investors group is dropping its effort to turn part of san francisco's fairmont hotel into condominiums. a worker told ktvu news that the owners presented the plans to workers recently and almost every worker objected to the plan. the union is concerned about a loss of work both during construction and in the long term when hotel rooms are replaced by condos. now the building owners are telling workers that they are no longer pursuing the condo plan and signed a new labor agreement. san francisco's nummi drivers are taking a strike authorization vote this afternoon even though the nta says its contract prohibits strikes. david stevenson has this report. >> reporter: two months into talks over new multi year,
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multi million dollars contracts. unionized nummi drivers the áf met on whether to strike. the vote is necessary in case talks break down. that include hiring part time drivers and cuts overtime. >> the average nummi operator makes $121,000 a year in salary and benefitless. nummi operators were the only employees until the city to receive a 5% raise. >> reporter: the current contract bans strikes and worker lock outs. >> what i wanted to do is have the management and the mta go get their class b license, get on a bus, and drive it for one day and then come to me and say, you don't need a raise. the head of the nummi operators union was unavailable this afternoon. but a driver we stoke to said he would be willing to accept a wage freeze. >> i've taken up thousands of thousands of people a day.
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we work hard out here. >> reporter: nummi passengers say a strike should be avoided at all costs. >> y'all need to sit down and come up with an agreement. >> reporter: in san francisco, david stevenson, ktvu channel 2 news. an update tonight on a fatal bus accident in palo alto that claimed the life of a 52- year-old woman last december. the santa clara district attorney's office says it is charging a sames tran bus driver with vehicle manslaughter. on december 30th, driver morena, guadalupe ortega hit crishnan. ortega said because of the sun and shadows she did not see the woman. the santa clara county
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coroner identified the woman killed friday by a commuter train in palo alto. 65-year-old judith golblat was driving the rental car that was hit by the caltrain at charleston road around 5:00 p.m. her husband managed to escape. the couple was visiting family in palo alto. california's attorney general says she is suing one of the largest funeral trusts. the trusts die verdicted $15 million to its managers and funeral directors. the attorney general is seeking to have the $14 million paid back to customers and have a new trustee installed. 27,000 californians purchased prepaid funerals from that trust. a key piece of evidence played in court today during the chauncey bailey murder trial. why the jury wasn't present to
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lawyers and the judge in the chauncey bailey trial viewed secretly recorded video. the jury wasn't present. prosecutors and defense attorneys are arguing about how much of the video should be shown. the jury could see up to 90 minutes of that tape on wednesday. six police officers were killed today. their vehicles apparently hit a bomb that was planted in the
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road. there have also been three attacks from the taliban in the past three days. that may signal the -- that historically has begun after a frigid winter. in iraq, two car bombs exploded outside baghdad's heavily fortified green zone this morning. the bombers appeared to be targeting the motorcades of three officials. robots were used today at three of the reactors at the fukushima damaged power plant. a spike in radiation at unit two may not be coming from damaged fuel rods as first suspected. it may be coming from a water tank. the san francisco coroner confirmed today that a body found this weekend was that of
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a missing fishing boat captain. the 47-foot troller sank off the beach wednesday night. one man was rescued but a fisherman from san anselmo was missing. rescuers in the north bay air lifted a 14-year-old girl to santa rosa hospital over the weekend after she was bitten by a snake. it happened yesterday at anna dell state park east of santa rosa. a member of the helicopter rescue group said the teen was trying to take a picture of a small black and brown snake when it bit her. rescue workers said the girl's hand was black and blue and swollen. there's no word on what kind of snake it was. they are meant to keep drivers safe and catch people breaking the law. the controversy in the north bay over red light cameras. and hang on to those umbrellas. you may need them again this week. chief meteorologist bill martin will have the complete forecast in just a few minutes.
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an update tonight on a story we brought you last week. the university of san francisco announced today it has found a way for upward bound to remain on campus. a week ago today the san francisco naacp led dozens of students and activists in a march to protest relocating the protest off campus. the program works to get students from low income families to high school and into college. a class action lawsuit that raised questions about the quality of the beef used by taco bell has been dropped. an alabama law firm alleged that taco bell's seasoned beef was actually a mixture of binders and extenders that didn't meet the federal requirement to be called beef. taco bell aired commercials saying the allegations were wrong. now the law firm says that taco
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bell has changed it marketing but taco bell says they have not changed anything. paul small was arrested on friday. the victim attended the program for adolescents and is run by the solano county mental health. drivers heading south on highway 29 who take a right on 121 must stop at a red light before completing a turn. but more than 30 to 100 drivers were issued citations for running the red. >> i'm kind of ticked off.
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i know it's a $500 fine. >> reporter: $475 to be exact. >> as i made the turn it changed to yellow. and i approached right over here, it took my picture. >> reporter: so many people have complained that the grand jury investigated and they have found problems. one thing that the yellow light did not remain yellow long enough. >> we recommend that during the time period that it was 3.2 the city should return the money. >> reporter: the city can run only $155 because if rest of the fine goes to the county and the state. the grand jury recommends refunds for about 1,000 people. napa police wouldn't comment on their recommendations but say the red light cameras have made the streets safer. >> there has been a significant reduction of those violations, through that reduction in the number of violations one can assume that well, if there's less violations there's less opportunity for collision. >> reporter: the city has until
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june to respond to the grand jury. john sasaki, ktvu news. and there's still some light sprinkles in the area. we've had light sprinkles all day. it hasn't amounted to much but it is a little wet on the roads. you can see we've got just some area, most of this is drizzle. barely hitting the ground if anything, hitting the ground at all. in some clouds cover. most of it starting to clear out now but if you get a little drizzle in the next few hours i would not be surprised. here's how it goes. mild, 40s, mid-40s and even some low 50s in the santa clara valley. tomorrow tuesday, pretty nice day. a lot nicer than today. we should see more sunshine. daytime highs are coming up five to 10 degrees. for tomorrow, daytime highs instead of in the low 60s could be in the low 70s. then things change around on wednesday night into thursday.
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i mentioned this earlier, this system slides in, it's very weak like the last few have been weak. like today's was weak. but it's going to get in here. looks like a wednesday night into thursday morning deal. so you want to plan accordingly. it's not going to be a deal breaker on outdoor activities but it will hamper some of your movements on the freeways and if you have outdoor activity painting or outdoor work. the forecast, and the computer model. i'm going to go through a bunch of time here. tuesday morning nice. clouds increasing wednesday. wednesday morning. we get into wednesday night mostly cloudy. then you start to see this. 6:00 wednesday night. it's rolled into wednesday. now you have showers showing up. this is widely scattered. maybe snow flurries up in the mountains. so overnight into thursday morning. mountain snow and rain. rain showers on the peninsula. rain showers out toward bremerton and then it's out of
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here. this is a nuisance shower that's going to linger with us for the next new days. forecast drying out in the afternoon. 75 in napa. 72 in antioch. these are forecast highs for your tuesday. certainly going to be warmer than they were today. and they'll be warmer than they will be on wednesday. because that's temperatures with clouds. temperatures are going to come back down to the 60s. the five day forecast includes your friday and saturday with your weekend always in view. and you will see that it's a nice weekend. nice warmer weather. but some nuisance showers again wednesday night into thursday. the upshot to all of this is the tree pollens which are big time out there. they get washed out of the air. so if you're an allergy sufferer you're going to enjoy this little weather event. >> a lot of people sneezing. >> a lot of people sneezing.
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lucy a long time resident of the harbor is dead. lucy lost her long time perching place when the tsunami hit in march. her body was found today and residents say it appears she was killed by an animal. the mavericks big wave contest is looking for a new sponsor. a high tech company says discussions for the 2011-2012 contest did not progress as they had hoped. that they plan to redirect the promotional efforts to other projects. the freak was on his game tonight. see just how close the giant base came to making history.
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the names of the jurors in the barry bonds perjury trial are now public. a federal court released their names today. after the trial ended last wednesday, several jurors spoke but only used their first name. only jury foreman fred jacob was fully identified. mark ibanez here, and tell us the giants put on quite a show. >> they are off to the hottest start in all of baseball but it
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was the giants who rocked tonight. colorado really didn't know what hit them in the first- inning of the first game of a three game series. it's probably about as important as it gets for april. early on, pat burrell he's had four solo homers. add to it nate shurholtz of danville with just a shot into the deck. that ball was hit 460 some feet. freddy sanchez who had a good gale leave it is -- good game leaves the yard with this one. and all making it good for tim lincecum. went into the seventh with a no hitter. finishing the áf only giving up three hits. and he struck out 10 of the giants crew to an 8-10 victory in the series opener up in colorado. tell you what nobody is going
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to remember what miami's heat did in the regular season. they are a team to be graded on one thing only, ring or no ring. so far the quest is looking pretty good. look at dwayne wade. they only needed him to rack up 14 because everybody was on their game. the heat 94-73 winners. to take a 2-0 lead in their series, also upping their lead to 2-0. the bulls 18 from kevin rose. nobody in the history of the marathon, the marathon any where has run a faster time than today's winner the boston. get on a thread mill, put up at 13-miles-per-hour, do it for a while gives you a perspective of what the áf nata does for 22.6 miles remember. he will not be credited with the all time record because of
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the prevailing tail wind today and many downhill areas of the course. as for the women, another ken yap carolina calill holding off des era e davilla. both winners earning $155,000. motide to take home another 75 grand in bonuses. a little check this out. brewers polonco the shot that bounced off batancourt. some rotten news for the a's as dallas braden put on the disabled list. that's the sporting life for a monday life. that was a scary play. >> i know the pitcher looked like he jumped up and was okayful. >> all is well that ends well. >> thank you, mark.
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