tv Ten O Clock News FOX February 12, 2015 10:00pm-11:01pm PST
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president obama arriving at sfo this evening. and he brought several bay area democrats with him on the flight to washington, d.c. good evening i'm julie haener. >> and i'm frank somerville. right now president obama is in san francisco spending the night at the fairmont hotel. tomorrow's agenda is a busy one. first he will go to stanford to give the keynote speech on cyber security and consumer protection. then he's hosting a round table. then he heads back to the city where he'll be the guest of honor at a democratic fundraiser tomorrow night. jana katsuyama is on nobhill in san francisco where the president will be staying for
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the next two evenings. jana-- >> reporter: there were no spontaneous stops tonight. the president came right from sfo. people lined the streets to take pictures, we didn't see any protesters but officials say the barriers will be around the hotel, will stay in place. familiar ground for president obama who has been a frequent flier and fundraiser in the bay area. the president waved at he emerged from the plane. he got into a black suv and was whisked away to san francisco. police blocked the streets around the fairmont hotel where security was tight and entrance to the hotel was limited. >> we feel like we're staying at the white house for the next few nights. >> reporter: hundreds of people attending the national
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teacher's conference said they learned of the visit two days ago. >> we got a call saying that we had a high profile person staying at the hotel. >> the hotel has been very accommodating. >> they've closed all of the entrances from the restaurants and side entrances. we have to go through the front entrance through a metal detector. >> reporter: the president will attend a summit about cyber security. about 150 people are expected to attend include tim cook. the president plans to hold a round table discussion with business leaders following the summit. a necessary step to build private partnerships. then the president will be tapping into the deep pockets of democratic supporters. they're expecting up to 60 donors and a seat at the table
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ranges from $10,000 per person for dinner and a photo to $3,600 to be listed as a cochair. police will be positioned around the fairmont hotel for the duration of the president's stay. the president is expected to use marine one to fly down to stanford tomorrow then he leaves on saturday to head down to palm springs. >> jana katsuyama, on knobhill in san francisco tonight, thank you. stay with ktvu fox 2 for continuing coverage of the president's visit tomorrow morning as we mentioned. we will be at stanford for the president's address on cyber security. while the president was getting ready to fly west, a key member of his staff won confirmation. carter replaces chuck hagel. charter had been the number two at the pentagon and has served under 11 secretaries of
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defense. the united nations won a vote. the measure targets the terrorists three main revenue streams. it calls for sanctions on anyone buying oil from isis, bans all trade from syria and urges nations to stop paying kidnap ransoms. it's a strategy to degrade and defeat isis. >> the results of these and other efforts, isis is having a hard time securing funds to carry on their operation. >> reporter: president obama asked congress to formally authorize the use of military force against isis. the that would allow the pentagon to pursue the militant extremist into any country. and allow the limited use of u.s. combat forces on the ground. new at 10:00, a south bay postal worker under investigation for throwing away the mail he was supposed to be delivering. we learned he's a new employee and he's no longer working with
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the postal service again. amber lee is live with what prompted the investigation and what that worker told investigators. >> reporter: the postal service says the worker isn't saying much about this worker but that he did work out of this postoffice out of the willow glen neighborhood. the mail carrier was on the job less than a week. and on monday he was seen throwing away packaging and letters along the business route he was assigned. >> somebody saw him do it, reported it. as soon as we found out about it we went and checked it out. >> reporter: the postal service says the carrier tossed the items into a dumpster on the route. >> you get a buggy, dolly, all of that. so how is it too much. >> reporter: greg reporter works for a private courier service. he says mail service is vital to many. >> that's mind boggling, why would you do that. >> reporter: the postal service says it has retrieved all the mail the carrier threw away but
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acknowledged they don't know if all the mail that he carried the previous day was delivered to the right place. >> when you have one anomaly, it tarnishes everything. >> i was very upset that a local carrier was dumping mail. >> reporter: mail is sacred communication and his livelihood depends on it says andy goldberg. >> i have no reason to believe there's not something missing. i am waiting for payment from somebody and i'm surprised i haven't gotten it. >> reporter: officials say the carrier has resigned and faces charges of discarding, tampering and damaging federal property. >> we take this very seriously. we've been delivering the mail since 1776 longer than this country has been around. >> reporter: officials tell me this case is still under investigation, if convicted the former carrier could face a
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fine and or up to five years in federal prison. >> amber lee in san jose tonight, amber, thank you. now to daly city where police said tonight they have made an arrest in connection with a deadly hit-and-run. 77-year-old jose rosales was killed december 4th while in a crosswalk on west ridge avenue. detectives say they tracked down the alleged driver through a description of his pickup truck. police arrested 39-year-old petramore of pacifica. he's now in the county jail. more than two dozen ports are closed tonight. and that's slowing down shipments including one that makes granite head stones. the owner says his customers have deadlines to put those head stones in place often
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dependenting on culture. >> cultures, greek cultures, samoan cultures, all over. everybody has a particular deadline. usually when i take an order i know what those deadlines are. i do everything in my power to meet it. >> reporter: negotiations in the long shore union did resign today and workers are scheduled to return to the port tomorrow. but operations will shutdown again for three days. bay area nurses stood in solidarity in martinez saying they wanted to show support for health workers. members of the steel workers union are standing with health care workers. >> they're asking for the right to be able to shut down production when they identify safety problems. >> reporter: the nurses said
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they also want to expand the reach of their work as patient advocates. similar events were scheduled in southern california and other refineries around the nation. millions have signed up but now time is running out for open enrollment under the affordable care act. sunday at midnight is the deadline to sign up for health insurance or risk of potential penalty. debora villalon is in hayward tonight where people took advantage of the help that's being offered today. >> reporter: frank without insurance, the emergency room is where people go for care. if they get care at all. now president obama is out with a new video. nudging them toward insurance. >> the deadline for signing up for health insurance is february -- february -- >> reporter: president obama's two minute video shows him mugging for the mirror and posing with a selfie stick. playing the deadline for last. >> february 15th, february 15th. >> reporter: all aimed at getting more americans signed
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up. >> are you enrolling your son today? >> reporter: at the hayward church, union workers volunteered to help with the process. full time student juanisha says she got insurance in less time than it takes to get her nails done. >> i thought it was going to be a longer wait but it worked. >> there's not such a big application they do it for you. you just answer the questions. >> reporter: a worker helped her fill out the application. it all begins with a one page questionnaire and social security number required. >> why did you wait? >> i don't know. i didn't really think i needed it until now. >> reporter: what got you down here? >> my grandmother. >> i told him that insurance, health insurance is you know something happens, you need health insurance. you have to have it. >> reporter: this insurance agent was meeting clients tonight in a san jose noodle bar making it as easy as possible. not everyone procrastinates she
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says. >> a lot of people they come to us because, they ask stuck. they couldn't go to slow, the phone lines jammed. >> there's 87 people ahead of me on the line. so last year it was like this. >> reporter: giving up and going without can bring a penalty of 2% of income. >> i'm really excited. i'm real excited. >> reporter: this new enrolee will pay $120 for herself and reporter: this new enrolee will pay $120 for herself and her husband monthly. without it -- >> brutal. i'm an asthmatic. not having it, i had to -- >> reporter: the deadline is the 15th. california is offering an extension to the 20th but frank, that's as long as you
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have started the process by sunday. >> debora villalon live tonight, thank you debora. we posted information on signing up for covered california and a list of signing up events scheduled for this weekend. you can find all of that information under the web links section. new at 10:00, the final chess moves in the long legal battle over same-sex marriage. as the u.s. supreme court prepares to hear the issue, opponents of gay marriage remains defiant in the south. the catalyst for change came 11 years ago today. >> reporter: áeut -- it was on this day back in 2004 when newsom offered the city to issue same-sex marriage licenses. controversial then, but now in the city is status quo. alabama there's a bitter fight after the supreme court refused to put on hold a ruling that legalized same-sex marriage there. >> san francisco's county clerk
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says it will be a busy friday as couples tied the knot before valentine's day. what made national headlines back in 2004, the marriage of same-sex couples is a norm at city hall today. >> i'm just very proud of san francisco. how we were the trail blazer 11 years ago. >> reporter: naomi kelly was there when history was made. >> i remember that day, seeing many of my friends out in the line and just taking them cups of coffee because people had come from all over the united states to get married that day. >> reporter: now 37 states recognize gay marriage. alabama is one of the hold outs where the final battle may be brewing before the u.s. supreme court decides the issue. the federal court has ruled gay marriage legal in alabama, but that state's chief justice roy moore ordered county judges to defy the federal courts. >> i think gay marriage is an alteration of the meaning of marriage. >> reporter: same-sex couples were turned away in dozens of alabama counties this week.
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some that shut down marriage offices. today a federal judge reaffirmed same-sex couples right to marry in alabama. but chief justice moore vowed he would defie de -- defy everyone even the supreme court. >> that would be contempt of court. >> reporter: there are indications that the supreme court will legalize same-sex marriage this summer. and the high court of alabama is one of those indicators. >> a three page decent which he said that he feels that not granting the stay is indicating how the supreme court is going to decide the question. >> the supreme court will hear argumenting in april with the decision expected late june. >> ken pritchett live in san francisco. ken, thank you. b.a.r.t. directors decided today that protesters should not be forced to pay restitution for a black friday protest that stopped trains for hours.
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14 protesters shutdown the west oakland station the day after thanksgiving. they shut down service for more than three hours. today in a 5-4 vote the b.a.r.t. court asked the district attorney to pursue misdemeanor counts of trespassing on railroad projects. but they also asked the d.a. not to pursue. $70,000 in restitution which works out to about 5,000 for each protester. the demonstration against police brutality came in the wake of grand jury decisions in ferguson and new york. from police shootings to police protests it appears that the riff between officers and certain segments of the community isn't going away any time soon. both sides agree there is a divide. >> we partnered with youth uprising in east oakland to bring together two men with two very different perspectives. claudine wong with how that conversation went. >> reporter: the meeting happened in a small cafe in
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east oakland. >> i'm kent earsy nice to meet you. >> reporter: captain earsy who grew up never thinking he would be a cop. >> i was one of those people who hated the police. >> reporter: as thompson, who as a teen he said growing up in oakland he didn't think he would grow up to see his 20s. >> there's so much confusion inside of us we don't know how to vent. >> reporter: there's no question there's a divide between the police and those people who they are expected to defend. >> the events in the past have created such a strain. >> it was one time that i met a cop and we formed a relationship. >> reporter: on this cool january morning, these two men agreed to sit down to just talk about that divide and what needs to happen to bridge it. >> i don't think anybody is defined by what they do.
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i think they are defined by how they do what they do. >> dealing with this manufactured rage. these youth running around they're very angry. they don't want to listen and i don't know how to diffuse it. >> unless people point their finger, you don't know how to approach it. >> [ bleep ] the police. >> [ bleep ] the police. oh you feel that way too. they're trained to intimidate, intimidate the intimidation. >> i don't care where the officer is as long as where they are they're giving 110% to the city. officers are just like anybody else. we come to work with problems, with our finances, we come to work with problems with our baby mamas, we come to work with problems with our wives whatever the thing is.
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>> cops got baby mamas too. >> cops got baby mamas too. >> reporter: this conversation that started with such formality led to laughter. smiles between two strangers who came with expectations. >> i would be lying if i had to say i wasn't -- like when you came in, what are you going to set me up for. >> reporter: two men that came together to talk. >> i came without perception. it doesn't matter what's his profession. >> it's very important that we have this kind of conversation, this dialogue. >> reporter: it won't bridge the divide. >> it's still separated, like right now, this is stones to build a bridge. >> reporter: but it was a
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start, claudine wong, ktvu news. report warmth today. the old record was 70. tied a record it was warm out there. warmest day we've seen in a while. it's going to be as warm if not a little bit warmer in some places tomorrow. it might be a little cooler in some places as well. but a similar day tomorrow. clouds out there right now are from a fair weather system. the pacific is active. it's a good looking pacific. we have ocean swells. there's some advisories because all this activity out in the pacific is generating some large surf -- not giants, not mavericks big but a pretty good size. clouds out there. we will see fog out there tomorrow morning where we have a dense advisory again. sacramento south, we will see patchy fog up in these north
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bay areas but that's it, patchy. and when it's in the morning the sun comes out it should come out very quickly. as we head into your saturday, it's sunny and warm. dry pattern continues. there seems to be something out there coming around the corner not this five day period but perhaps beyond that. 41 in napa. fog out there in the big valley. forecast highs tomorrow, lots of 70s. yellows are 70s so take a look at how many on your friday. basically the entire bay area upper 60s to mid-70s. when i come back we'll go looking for the rest of the weekend. it's going to be warm as well. maybe some more records. then we go looking for the rain. i'll see you back here after a couple of breaks. the national weather service is warning people about potentially dangerous conditions at the beach tomorrow. emergency workers came to the aid of two surfers who got caught in rip tides off dylan
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beach. a helicopter rescued a man. the other made it to the shore on his surfboard. the affected area is from sonoma to big suhr. people going to the beach are asked to keep an eye on the ocean and be careful when you're near the water. could you live without your cell phone for three days. why some bay area students are kissing their devices goodbye and taking a text break. >> i think anyone who has a device spends too much time on it. >> we're going to show you how to score a romantic meal and flowers. >> new developments after this young man was shot and killed by police officers. the 911 call he made right before he was killed.
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new developments tonight in a deadly police shooting in san jose. we have learned the young man who died called 911 himself bringing in the officers who killed him. he has now been identified as phillip watkins. officers say they had no choice but to open fire. >> a good kid, a great kid. he didn't deserve to go down like that. he needed help. and we begged him to get that help. >> reporter: buchanan says her daughter was set to be married to phillip watkins. >> they shot him. i begged the police officers not to shoot him. >> reporter: san jose police received a 911 call from a home
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on sherman street in downtown. the caller said that a man with a knife was breaking into his house. it was too late by the time police determined that sherman was the man who called 911. when he failed to drop the knife. >> shots fired, shots fired. >> reporter: they opened fire, he died at the hospital. both officers each with eight years experience on the force responded in self-defense. it's unclear if they knew about the call to the suicide help line. witnesses told them after the fact, watkins was battling depression. >> i was kind of shocked. didn't seem like this would be in his character. >> reporter: his head coach says the 24-year-old was a running back. a stand out who graduated from san jose high school. >> i feel real sad. because there's young men that, i thought he had a lot going for him when he played here and
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to see this happen to him, it's a shock. >> reporter: both officers have been placed on paid administrative leave. it's unclear if these officers received special training to deal with suspects suffering from mental illness. azenith smith. lab tests have determined that some kind of synthetic oil is what killed hundreds of sea birds on the bay. officials still don't know where that goo came from. it first showed up on the san leandro shoreline. fish and wildlife says it contains a mixture of nonpetroleum based fats and oils and when it got on the bird it made it impossible for them to stay warm or float or fly. >> he came in completely covered he couldn't flap his wings. everything was stuck to him. >> reporter: more birds were healthy enough to be released today near the golden gate. about 90 of them are still at a rehab center. 72 hours without a phone or
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the back seat of my subaru is where she grew up. what? (announcer) the 2015 subaru forester (girl) what? (announcer) built to be there for your family. love. it's what makes a subaru a subaru. the tables are set, valentine's day falls on a saturday and restaurants tell us they're going to be busier than ever. if you're the kind that procrastinates getting a reservation could be tough. >> cara liu is live in burlingame after checking in with restaurants and florists around the bay area.
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>> reporter: they've been absolutely bombarded with flower requests. the owner says it is their business to help valentine day procrastinators. >> reporter: the views at scapes on the bay make it fantastic. >> we have the dragon roll then we also have the ahi poki. >> reporter: but the restaurant has been fully booked for valentine's dinner for three weeks. >> we're fully booked on valentine's day. >> reporter: sunday reservations are being offered as an alternative. meanwhile the staff is getting ready for patrons. >> at the same time it's going to be organized chaos. if they have a wait and we can't accommodate the people if they sit longer, then we just offer champane to people that are on the wait so they don't have to worry about it. >> reporter: a delivery business that specializes on local food and milk, heart
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shaped brownnies and other deserts are coming out of the oven. >> we have chocolate brownnies that will soon be covered with ganash. >> these are the greens. the idea is that it's stay in and cook at home with your loved one. so we have dinner kits, recipe kit where is you get everything you need. >> reporter: the company is taking orders until midnight for friday or saturday delivery. back here at the flower shop, workers are expecting 250 orders tomorrow, and upwards of 300 walk-in customers, so the truly last minute people on valentine's day. >> cara, thanks so much. valentine's day is big business. the national retail federation says this year americans will spend a record $18.9 million on
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their loved ones. that works out to be an average of $142 a person. most of the money is spent on candy, cards and flowers. and obviously when you think of valentine's day you naturally think of roses while some are grown locally, most roses are now being grown outside of the united states. >> 20, 30 years ago they used to be over 100 rose growers in california. now there's probably five to 10 serious rose growers left that do a large amount. >> reporter: according to the u.s. department of agriculture, florists import 80% of the flowers they use in bouquets. if you want to support local farmers, you should ask where the flowers you're buying were grown. b.a.r.t. gave final approval to a ban on electronic cigarettes. b.a.r.t. says they've been getting a lot of complaints about secondhand smoke and vapor from those e
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cigarettes. the ban will not be forced immediately but will once the signs go up. a woman who is days away from getting married killed by a hit-and-run driver. tonight the person responsible is still at large. the young woman's mother completely broke down today talking about what happened -- cristina rendon has the story. >> reporter: we thank you for the plan that you have in place that's going to make an impact in this community. >> reporter: this mother is praying to god to get her through yet another tragedy in life. >> she was my baby. my only girl. >> reporter: bonner's 25-year- old daughter bratannia was hit and killed by a driver. this is the second child bonner has lost to violence. she says one of her sons was murdered in 2010. >> we just buried her brother five years ago now we're burying her. >> reporter: the california highway patrol in contra costa
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says britannia was in a cross road when the car hit her around 10:30 on saturday night. the driver took off leaving no physical evidence behind. >> we're trying to look at everything we possibly can within that area trying to scour the community to see if anybody saw anything during that time period. >> reporter: near by surveillance cameras did not capture the accident. that's why britannia's families says it's crucial that witnesses come forward. >> there's no way that nobody saw what happened here. that's why we're pleading to be the village that we want to have compassion for the people. >> come to the police and talk to them. a mother is not supposed to bury their children and we have to stop all of this killing and cold-bloodedness. we have to have a heart for the people. >> reporter: the intersection is now marked with a memorial killed with messages from family, friends and the woman she was going to marry valentine's weekend. bonner's passionate plea extends to the driver responsible but says she's leaving the outcome in the
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lord's hands. >> even you who did this to my daughter i need you, i need god to come forth in the name of jesus. come forth and take the responsibility for this because you took my baby from me. you took my baby. you took my baby. >> reporter: if you do have any piece of information yourself asked to call the contra costa chp office, cristina rendon. a new national monument here in the bay area. the move today advancing that idea. >> i'm laying out when temperatures will peak over your weekend and the next chance for rain in the extended forecast. up first, the search for a man who knocked a police officer off of a train platform.
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san francisco police have released surveillance pictures of a man they say assaulted an officer. it happened on january 23rd around 5:40 in the evening near the corner of fourth and king street. investigators say the man ran from officers knocking one of them off a raised muni platform. the officer was injure and that man escaped. police would like to hear from anyone who recognized the man on this photo. the attorney for suge knight says that his client was being ambushed when he ran over a man and killed him. the 49-year-old is facing murder, attempted murder and hit-and-run charges. prosecutors say his bail should be increased to a million dollars. the former army private in the wiki leaks scandal will be allowed to undergo hormone therapy in prison to become a woman. 27-year-old chelsea manning
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formally known as bradley manning was convicted. the day after he was convicted, manning announced he wanted to live as a woman. he's now serving a 35 year sentence at fort levinworth. manning had filed a lawsuit back in september for access to services to change his gender. legislation introduced today in washington will turn -- 6,000 acres near davenport known as the port dairy. as the new redwoods. to protect it from development. it was officially donated to the bureau of land management last year. tonight a single mother is thanking ktvu viewers for their incredible generosity after her family was featured in a ktvu report for their living
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conditions at a dilapidated hotel. at last check people had donated $10,000 to help them move out of the hotel. they moved into a room with no private bathrooms after denise says that tkphráesic abuse forced her to look for a new place to live. her daughter dana is getting straight a's in school despite what many call horrible conditions. >> sometimes when i want privacy i go in the closet. i know it's ridiculous but that's the only place i can go. >> reporter: after our story aired, we were flooded with requests from viewers who wanted to help. so nicole set up a fund raising page on the website go fund me.com. in just 24 hours they raised $10,000. the family hopes to begin looking for a new place to live
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soon. i talked to nicole on the phone and said, mom look how much money people have donated to us already. >> wonderful story. and spring like weather in winter. chief meteorologist bill martin will take us through the complete bay area forecast. >> but up first, how long could you go without your smart phone or tablet? the pledge hundreds of students are taking. bulldog: mattress discounters presidents day sale ends presidents day? get up to four years interest-free financing on the entire tempur-pedic cloud collection! and, get a queen size serta mattress and box spring set for just $397. ♪ mattress discounters ♪
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texts, tweets, snap chats, google searches they've all become part of our daily routines on our cell phone, tablets and laptops. the question is could you push pause on all that technology and give it up for 72 hours? hundreds of students at a school in san francisco decided to find out and ktvu's rob roth spent the day at the school where they're taking what you might call a tech time out. >> reporter: for so many people electronic devices have been constant companions. >> great job. >> reporter: but here in san francisco's convent and stewart hall school students are taking a tech time out. >> i'm very addicted to my phone and i love texting. >> reporter: so he and hundreds of others from fifth graders to high school seniors have accepted a challenge. they're voluntarily sealing away their cell phones and i
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pads. >> goodbye phone. goodbye my first child. >> reporter: and anything else with a screen for the next 72 hours. >> this is an opportunity for us to think about the use of those devises and those apps before we have to do it. to create a kind of mindfulness and that's what this is all about. >> reporter: that means no texting, no tweeting no instagrams for three days, can they survive. >> i think it's going to be hard but i can do it. >> reporter: the challenge is a little distasteful but they feel it's for their own good. >> maybe in the future when i'm looking for something to do it won't be just go on my phone or watch tv, it'll be go outside and play basketball. >> reporter: these girls were playing cards during a free period. interacting with each other instead of staring at a screen. the tech time out is voluntary. out of 800 possible students 500 have accepted a challenge. that means many students declined the officer including this eighth grader. >> kind of feel like i'm being grounded and i don't really
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have to. >> reporter: school leaders say success may be hard to measure right away. >> success would be that the children come out of this with a level of discernment. that they look back and say, i don't always have to have my phone with me. >> reporter: when the 72 hours ends then what? >> i will fall back into my original routine. >> really? >> yeah i think so. >> reporter: electronic devices may be here for good but sometimes you have to hit the pause button. in san francisco, rob roth, ktvu fox tv news. stocks moved up after news of a peace agreement. dow was up 110 points. the price of oil settled almost 5% at $55 a barrel. they've set the speculation as to how low prices will go. with some analysts saying a
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price of oil at $51 a barrel is a real possibility. southwest airlines announced they're adding nonstop flights between san jose and dallas. the links will add five new destinations with dallas. dallas to charleston, florida, portland, sacramento, san jose and seattle tacoma. we're checking in on the weather. we have plenty of nice weather to talk about. look at these high temperatures from today. the temperatures are just up there. 71 in santa rosa. 79 the record in oakland downtown. see these inland temperatures in the summer months, antioch, fairfield those will be the hot spots. in a pattern like these the hot spots seem to be around the warmer areas and at the lower elevations where the air is sinking and warming further.
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a reverse pattern for us. we will see that again tomorrow. temperatures will be quite similar. the jet stream still has a track going this way right over the top. as active as this pacific is. that's an active pacific but everything is missing us. these clouds you see out here tonight. those obviously at the sunset you noted them. kind of got partly cloudy in the north bay. that's just fair weather stuff. it's not going to impact us in any way other than to filter out the sunshine. i think there will be a few of those tomorrow. highs in the 50s. a little bit of patchy valley fog tomorrow morning. the winds are light. with light winds a little bit of a wet ground. you have high dewpoints you're going to see fog. light winds calm, mountain view calm in hayward, calm in livermore. look for valley fog. there'll be a dense fog advisory tomorrow morning. there's one in effect right now. patchy fog in the north bay. oakland tomorrow 73. 69 for a lunchtime temperature. so a nice looking day in oakland. a lot like today. your san jose day a lot like
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today as well. temperatures tomorrow it's almost a repeat of what we had today. we might see another record tomorrow as well. mostly sunny for your friday. mild to warm and it stays this way right through your weekend. unusual weather for this time of year. there are the clouds that we're talking about. next chance for anything. next chance for this ridge to go away and drop the jet stream down is some where around january 21st, to 25th something like that. just look at the latest models it brought it in at the 27th. it's a flip-flop back and forth. dry pattern continues. this is the next week. you see all of those going that way. dry pattern continues right through next week. forecast highs tomorrow a lot like today. maybe a couple of records. 72 in livermore. some spots will be warmer. santa clara valley and down toward the gilroy area. we saw some upper 70s tomorrow. tomorrow we might see a couple of 80s south of here. the five day forecast with the
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bay area weekend in view. there it is. you have plenty of sunshine to talk about. good thing we got rain next weekend because we're not seeing it now. >> looks like april. >> it does look like april. >> it feels like it. >> yeah. i had the ac on my way to work. >> yeah i know who would you trust to postyour facebook status after you die. starting today you can name a facebook estate executor. that person can now respond to new friend requests. update your photo and even postfuneral information. when facebook was notified a person had died, people could only view a person's facebook page, no changes could be made. you never know what you are going to see at at&t. >> 71 degrees today. before we start talking about sports. the story from one of the
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corporate clam bake we'll call it down in pebble. one guy who has made a career out of being a bafoon on the movies and one that made it by working hard on the gallery. and how can you not root for this guy. john daly best opening round for him in 10 years. 7-under. birdie at 18. his wife his caddy appreciates his work. he's one back of the leader and they are coleaders. justin hicks and this man j.b. holmes. and seal of approval. the sammy sosa salute for mr. murray to close out a great day there. you figured stanford always high aspirations could make a better game of it. utah but they were way out of their depth in salt lake city tonight. utah explodes right out of the
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gate. jordan gloverich. the floater will go. he had a dozen cardinal with 12 turnovers tonight. that didn't help him. and deon wright will take advantage right here with a nice steal. for utah he knows what to do with it. let them with 15 points. cardinals will never end it. stanford just 7-5 from the pac12 for johnny dawkins. it appears the bears have put bad basketball in the rear. cal allumn now a denver running back there to see it. down the stretch in colorado, tyrone wallis will wind up stealing it. watch him jump for the jump hook, got it to fall. they go up four. 27 seconds left. he had 16 by the way. they draw even in the pac12 at 6-6. now as we creep closer to tournament time. a disturbing trend for the
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about st. mary's basketball. expectation is high but they practically get run off the court. the lady announcer just about keels over. game not much. chase fisher, lay in for byu. they take it easy 82-60. 216 times now. santa clara and usf have played each other. this one tight right down to it. brandon clark shooters bounce for santa clara. he gets it to go. he had 21:56 seconds left that tied it to go to usc. 11-4. devin watson the hook back to durston. and the dawns prevail. 61-62. college hoops women's variety. bears are winners over ucla70- 64. we're getting closer to spring training, so to get you in the baseball mood my favorite play of the night it happened in colorado rockies
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fantasy camp. 80-year-old lou dunlap gets brushed back by one of his fellow campers. he didn't like it. he starts to charge the mound. the umpire watch him. he doesn't like where that pitch was on ball four so he starts stepping out toward the mound and the umpire says, don't do it. you know, wise as an owl but ferocious. >> lou -- >> i don't know if that qualifies for charging the mound. >> in his way. 88years old. can you imagine. a fast ball under the chin. >> go lou. go lou. >> feisty. >> got it. >> thank you for joining us tonight. have a great night. we'll see you again tomorrow. >> good night. >> bye bye. female announcer: through presidents' day, get 36 months interest-free financing, and save up to $300 on beautyrest and posturepedic. even get three years interest-free financing on tempur-pedic. plus, free delivery, set up and removal of your old set. and sleep train's 100-day money back
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be late! - alex, what are you doing? - i need to document haley's first day on the chain gang. it's not a chain gang. it's community service. and leave her alone. she feels bad enough as it is. okay, i'm torn. on one hand, i'm like, "ugh, i have to pick up garbage all day." and on the other hand, i'm like - "look at me in orange." - (camera shutter clicks) aw, that's cute. send that to me. haley had a little run-in with the law in college. she was arrested for assaulting a police officer. accidentally. i fell on him. while evading arrest for underage drinking. that was on purpose. they were very lenient with her. she only has to do community service. because i do not have any priors. taking a little too much pride in that, sweetheart. things can get pretty rough out there. i couldn't get my hands on any cigarettes. but i did make you a shiv out of an old knife.
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