Transcripts For KGO ABC7 News 900AM 20141005

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>> good morning, everyone, i'm carolyn tyler. thanks for joining us on this sunday, october 25th. let's start a quick first look at the weather with our meteorologist lisa argen. >> good morning, carolyn. live doppler 7hd shows the fog from the cape all the day down to davenport. we are looking at gray conditions at the golden gate, which is some good news because we are slowly seeing the fog creep back into the picture today. it will influence our temperatures downtown, a little bit in san jose. right now it's 66 degrees. the numbers continue to climb to the early morning hours here. 55 degrees and mild visibility, 62 in san francisco. here's the plan for the rest of the day. winds have been light at about 5 miles an hour out of the west. take a look what happens throughout the afternoon. the fog is still off the coast but the winds 10 to 15 miles an hour and we will see sunny skies here. but the cooler coastal temperatures, about 74 degrees association beach. 79 up in point reyes and stinson. and we will see about 79 in san francisco. details on the cooling coming up. carolyn. >> lisa, thank you. the giants are back in town trying to get some rest from yesterday's marathon win over the washington nationals. and prepare for game three of the division series tomorrow. the team bus pulled into at&t park around 6:00 this morning, mike krukow was one of first to get to his car, madison bum guarder will pitch in what could be the deciding game tomorrow. he was more intent get to go bredesen than talking with the media. >> i'll be here tomorrow. >> i'll take my bicycle the press conference tomorrow. >> yep, game time for tomorrow's game three match-up at at&t has yet to be determined. royals fans endured an epic match-up last night. an epic setting one too. the diehards watched game two at mccovey restaurant in walnut creek. the game went long, 18 innings.% the longest in postseason history. time for the second-most innings ever. giants fans were on the edges of their seats for hours. able to celebrate finally when the team got the win. [cheers and applause] >> that was huge! [cheers and applause] >> it was relief. i swear to god, it was relief. you kind of hang on the moment. >> that's the spirit of our team. they give you a heart attack in the first, like half of the game, and then they come back and just bring it home. >> they did, indeed. they need just one more win to move on. we will have highlights of last night's game coming up in our next half-hour. the other big story we are following this morning,s heat. today will be a little cooler. as we said, it will still be searching all over the bay area and health officials are urging all of us to take it easy, maybe heading for somewhere a bit cooler. one of those places could be the beach. yesterday the sand was jammed with people trying to beat the heat. inland cooler meant ice cream at abc7 news reporter tiffany wilson explains. >> nothing better than this. >> jim is visiting friends in the bay area. >> i thought it would be cold up here, you know, bay area, it's colder than south cal. >> not so. i think i've been here ten years and it's one of the hottest conditions i've seen it. >> and the clayton family suffered the same discomfort. >> it's really hot. surround by oktoberfest, many refreshed one pint at a time. >> any advice to stay cool? >> hydrate. maybe with beer! >> others take care of their arms, back and heat. the first aid tent handed out free sunscreen. and you know the saying, if you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen. case in point. >> i had one employee who couldn't handle the heat, had to go home. >> at 94 years old, her age rivals the temperature reading. time-tested advice helped her remain unphased. >> my helper found a shady spot for me. that's where i go. >> but some had no way to escape the sun. >> we have a lot of clothing to keep our heat in while we are working hard, so we have to say extra vigilant about being hydrated. >> the crew knows they got lucky. this fire was bordered by water and gravel roads. >> it could have burned to the freeway, easily. in the east buy, tiffany wilson, abc7 news. >> you can track the high temperatures anytime with the abc news weather app. you can get it free from apple's app store or on google play. developing news from downtown oakland where a fight and shooting early this morning have left three people shot, one fatally. oakland police tell abc7 news their officer saw a large group fighting at the intersection of 14th and franklin street just after 1:30 this morning. the officers heard gunshots one died on the way to the hospital. one of the injured shipped at a local emergency room. all three victims were adult males. northern has been arrested. >> a san leandro police officer shot at a driver he was trying to pull over this morning. it happened at 4:30 at a cul-de-sac on woodland and hoss avenues. the suspect led the officer on a short chase and rammed the front of the patrol car. the suspect got away. it's unclear when anyone in the vehicle was struck by the officer's gunfire and they are still looking for the driver. police in san jose are looking for two thieves who left a man tied up for 16 hours. they broke into his home at midnight saturday and tied him up. they made off with several items from the home. finally, around 4:15 yesterday afternoon, about 16 hours later, a friend went to check on the man and found him bound up. the victim is in his 60s. he was taken to the hospital to be checked out. police say he has not been able to give them a good description of the thieves. >> a fast moving virus has claimed the life of a child in new jersey and now a second student at the same school has become ill. here in california 14 children have been infected by enterovirus d-68 so far. in the bay area there are how five cases. we have the latest. >> eli waller, a four-year-old a preschooler from hamilton, new jersey, the virus' latest victim. he tested positive, confirming the cause of death. >> i'm sure you must all know and kind of upset that there is unbearable pain and grief that they are suffering. >> the cdc said at least four others infected with the virus here in the united states have died like eli, all in september. but agencies in these cases maintain it's unclear if the virus was to blame. health officials first noticed a spike in respiratory illness in children in early august with symptoms so harsh it was sending children to emergency rooms in droves. enterovirus 68, the culprit. the fast-moving virus has sickened 500 people in 43 states and washington d.c. and almost all of them are young. and adding to those worries, dozens of young patients suffering from muscle weakness and paralysis in the neck, back or limbs. doctors scrambling to determine whether the virus is caused or a germ they coincidentally picked up. >> it's too early to say if the kids will be okay in the long run, meaning whether they will get all their strength back. >> doctors offering reassurance. for most people the virus is no worse than the common cold. abc news, new york. >> let's arrange is here now to tell us how hot it's going get today. >> almost as hot but we definitely have some cooling in store. can you see the fog from mt. tam? there's a little in the distance. higher elevations like mt. tam, still an offshore flow, but off the coast, marin county, san francisco, you will be cooler, as much as 5 to 8 degrees cooler today. the rest i will have to explain. that's coming up. >> and floodwaters ravage parts of south asia. we will introduce you to the bay area family trying to provide relief. >> and paying homage to the late music great johnny cash. it was all inspired by one. it was all inspired by one. his hits.nds] the wait is over for even faster internet. xfinity is now doubling the internet speed... ...on two of our most popular plans. xfinity continues to innovate, bringing you the fastest, most reliable internet...period. xfinity internet from comcast, now double the speed. trying to mislead you about the effects of proposition 46. well here's the truth: 46 will save lives. it will save money too. i'm bob pack, and i'm fighting for prop 46 because i lost my two children to preventable medical errors and i don't want anyone else to lose theirs. the three provisions in 46 will reduce medical errors and protect patients. save money and save lives. yes on 46. >> this is abc7 news. a million people are impacted and hundreds have died and this morning villages are still under water. catastrophic floods hit kashmir last month and no you a south bay family with 40 or 50 relatives struggling with the monsoon is trying to help by flying to the country. lisa amin gulezian has more. >> they have special pumps to pump the water. >> much of his hometown is covered in mud and floodwater. >> in my own home still under water 8 to 10 feet and the mud is between four and five feet. >> monsoon rains and flash flood devastated the cities last month. it was the worst natural disaster in a century. people waited days to be rescued. >> similar to katrina, people were tweeting on their cell phones they were stuck on the third and fourth floors of their homes. >> his uncle was trapped on his roof for four days before help arrive. painful stories of family and friends suffering has been hard to bear from so far away. >> they found three bodies, a husband and a wife and their 20-year-old daughter, all of them dead. >> but now they are doing something about it. >> you can see all the old shops, everything is in there. >> these people leave monday for kashmir. they are filling their suitcase with donated warm clothes and medicine. they also plan to buy more supplies once they land to give away. >> i don't know physically how much i can work, but i want to help people to gain emotionally. >> she's a mental health social worker in san jose. even she knows what she finds in kashmir could be devastating because people are desperate and with the freezing winter months coming the fear is the death toll will only rise. abc7 news. this morning the family of an ebola patient in texas tells abc news thomas eric duncan has kidney failure and must use a ventilator to breathe. health initials now also say duncan may have come in contact with as many as 115 people while sick and contagious. >> the rye russ is moving so fast but our response is moving fast as well. the defense department is on the ground and working with the cdc staff there and usda and others. the challenge is putting up a treatment unit is not easy. it's not about construction, it's about training, supervision, and all of that is moving, but we wish it would move faster but it's moving a lot faster than it was just a week or two ago. >> meanwhile the doctor who was treated for ebola and released is back in the hospital in isolation. doctor richard sacra has a respiratory infection. they don't think his ebola has returned. san francisco might become the first in the nation to take another step for workers rights. first they gave employees the right to ask for family-friendly schedules. now it will consider requiring some companies to post employee work schedules two weeks in advance. >> it's not enough to have the minimum wage. we really see this as the next fight. >> workers rights advocates are praising the latest move by san francisco supervisors to try to help people like francis cruz, a retail worker who finds out at the last minute what his schedule will be. >> i'm like being held hostage basically. >> his situation is not unique. 59% of american workers are paid hourly. often meaning they have no control over their schedules or their lives. >> people should know when they take a job what can i expect in terms of minimum hours, what should i know i can rely on? >> labor practices have changed with many companies using sophisticated software to plug in employees at the last minute. >> supervisor david chu introduced legislation targeting chain stores. known in san francisco as formula retail. if places like starbucks or target or walgreens have at least 20 employees, there would be new requirements. >> first, when an employee is hired, an employer will be required to provide a good faith estimate of the minimum number of hours that employer would be expected to work. secondly, formula retail employers would be required to post a schedule 14 days in advance. >> workers would receive extra pay if those mandates are violated. the chamber of commerce has concerns. >> because anytime you legislate on the way people operate their businesses, it's a problem trying to draft one piece of legislation that fits numerous different business models, both size, as well as type. >> you can expect a lot of debate on that one. right now there's more than 1200 departments with 35,000 workers that could be affected. some walk the line, others ride it. the city of folsom has completed the first part of the trail. it connects 40 miles of the urban trail system from old downtown to folsom lake. it honors johnny cash. >> there's a beautiful connection between this and the prison, you know. just, i mean, to involve nature and healing and exercise. >> the overcrossing is designed to echo folsom state prison east guard towers. the city is planning a $3 million fundraising drive to pay for a park next to the bridge with a 40-foot steel statue of cash. you saw rose an cash there. she's one of the headliners at the bluegrass festival today. >> a little cooler, though. some clouds entering golden gate park today. here's why u see the low clouds and fog right up to the coast, all the way down to just about santa cruz. visibility has been reduce today half-mile at half moon bay and temperatures are just in the 50s there. take a look at this. you can see the fog just all over alcatraz right now. and just a couple hundred feet. there's not much of it, but the gradients have witched and we are looking at more of an onshore push today. a wider range of high temperatures. still hot inland. 69 right now in fairfield. livermore in the 60s, as well as concord. napa 63. we are down once again into the 40s for the overnight hours. overall we are looking at a lot of cooling here. half moon bay, 13 degrees cooler. so for you today, temperatures will be in the 70s and you will have some sunshine, but you are also going to have a little fog too. so we will call it partly sunny. sutro tower, a nice start to the day. temperatures dropping into the 70s today for the city. so still warm to hot in the upper elevations. relative humidity very, very dry and the temperatures still start out warm. at the surface we are getting the on shore push. the relative humidity increases and the afternoon highs will be cooler at the coast. the trend takes us through thursday. here's a look at the wind. less than 5 miles an hour. by the afternoon you see some of the fog and by point reyes maybe about 15 mile-an-hour sea breeze. it will still be light. high pressure overall still our dominant weather feature. but it is beginning to slide a little further to the east and that's bringing the changes. it will still keep us warm for the next several days but temperatures are eventually going to come back down to near average readings. but we are looking dry. in fact, the relative humidity coming up and a return to the marine layer, that's about all we can hope for because we aren't looking at any rain in the future. today 93 in los gatos. santa cruz, you were 100 yesterday. coming down into the 80s today and even san jose just about 2 degrees cooler at 90. on the peninsula upper 80s for redwood city. that's better than your 95 yesterday. low 80s milbrae and 70s at the coast and about 74 at ocean beach, 75 daly city. a little puff of fog here and south city by the errant still into the 80s. 93 in sonoma. cooler numbers from bodega bay. 74 for you. berkeley, a nice afternoon but not as hot. 90 castro valley and inland it will take several days to get out of the 90s here. 94 for antioch. we are looking at a nice afternoon, but it's going to be warm down in santa clara with temperatures mid-80s by 1:5. upper 80s by 5:00 p.m. still hot tomorrow but we get further cooling around the bay and coast and that forecast holds for tuesday and wednesday. even into thursday where temperatures are just about average, but won you know we are coming back out 4 degrees each day looks like friday and saturday. but hopefully not 90s up ander 90s. >> you think it would be a bit uncomfortable for the 49ers with all that padding and equipment. >> absolutely. >> thank you, lisa. up next, the stars of "frozen" are warming things up on the sunday night abc show" once upon a time." we will give you a preview princess anna has landed on the small screen on the small screen of storybook. george introduces us to the "frozen" stars and the abc show" once upon a time." >> everything is new. it's super exciting. it's nerve-racking. >> this actress stepped directly out of college at the university of north carolina and into the world of story brook to play anna for the new season of "once upon a time." >> else elsa, elsa! >> please, i want to be alone. >> you are my sister. you are never going to be alone. >> there's one thing she can promise her "frozen" fans. >> joy. i think if they love the movie "frozen" and they love these characters, then it brings me so much joy. so i hope that the fans have as much joy watching it as i do playing it. >> i can't just leave. i'm still queen, i can't abandoned the kingdom. >> the australian actress plays her big sister, elsa. her casting came down to the wire. she additioned via videotape from a tropical island while on her honeymoon. >> it all happened so fast. i got cast the week before we were shooting the first episode. luckily i didn't have enough time to really let it all sink in and i don't think it has all sunk in really. i got the addition and i knew i had to do it so i kindly asked my new husband if he would read for anna and he did. he did an accent and everything. he did a really good job. yeah, we taped it and sent it off. watched frozen together on our honeymoon. i found out on the last day of the honeymoon i got it. it was a nice wedding present. >> "once upon a time" airs sunday night at 8:00 here on abc7. in los angeles, abc7 news. >> much more ahead in the next half-hour, including the desperate message from the family of the american held captive by isis. the passionate plea they are giving the extremist group. and a mother's medical miracle, why the landmark procedure she underwent may never come to the u.s. (theme soners)♪ stan! ! ! hey guys! stan the man! hey, how's it goin stan? can i get $55 on pump three? you got it, stan! gas stations. just that.nobody knows a where nobody knows your name. the chevrolet cruze eco. with an epa estimated 42 miles per gallon highway. it's the new efficient. >> live from the kgo tv broadcast center, this is abc7 news. welcome back. we are starting this half-hour with a look at the weather with meteorologist lisa argen. >> heavier showers, carolyn. if you thought it was a good idea to go to alcatraz, hopefully they are fully engulfed in some layers because the fog is right over alcatraz. it sits very, very low. temperatures right on the water in the 50s. but we have 50s and near 70 already now in fairfield. 64 concord. napa at 63. good morning to you. visibility just a half-mile at half moon bay. here's the fog. all the way down the coast. it will sit here today. we will have sunshine and 70s instead of those 80s at the shoreline. another look at the golden gate bridge where numbers today will be in the upper 70s downtown san francisco. low to mid-80s over in oakland and some 90s inland and each and every day we will bring the temperatures down. i'll tell you about how much and when coming up. carolyn. >> lisa, thank you. there is a desperate plea this morning from the parents of an american held hostage by isis. they are pleading for his release. after beheading a british hostage, they say he will be the next execution. we have the latest from washington. >> this morning a solemn appeal from the parents of an american held captive by islamic extremists. >> and our hearts ache for you to be granted your freedom so we can hug you again. >> their son is peter cassig, a 26-year-old from indiana who was providing humanitarian relief in syria when he was captured one year ago. he's shown here kneeling in the desert. his kidnappers say he's the next in line to be executed in retaliation for u.s. air strikes on syria and iraq. >> we and them to change their actions but like our son we have no more control over the u.s. government than you have over the breaking of dawn. >> in their weekend video, the parents hold a picture of their son and plea for his life. >> at an early age our son was inspired by his grandfather to do humanitarian work. when he saw the suffers of the syrian people he went to turkey to start an organization to provide aid and assistance. >> his parents say he is not political. he embraced islam and found a calling helping syrians caught in a brutal civil war. >> we are so very proud of you and the work you have done, to bring humanitarian aid to the syrian people. >> their appeal comes one day after the behead of course a british aid worker, mr. henning. he's the fourth to be executed in six weeks. >> we implore those holding you to show mercy and use their power to let you guy. >> he's one. two americans believed to be held by isis fighters. the white house saw this emotional appeal, too, but they say the military campaign in iraq is only beginning. abc news, the white house. >> in southern california one person is dead and four injured after a car smashed through a doughnut shop. it happened last night in the the los angeles suburb. one person was pronounced dead at the scene. the driver was taken to the hospital and will be evaluated to see if alcohol was a factor. police aren't sure how that accident happened or how many of the injured were inside the shop. also in southern california, it took firefighters most of the night to get control of a warehouse fire in santa fe springs. witnesses say they heard explosions late yesterday afternoon at a gun drilling business. then they saw flames leap from the roof. fire officials say the warehouse was full of flammable liquid. it's near disneyland and the smoke from the fire could be seen as far away as hollywood. a mother in sweden has become a medical first. she gave birth after undergoing a womb transplant. the 36-year-old mother received a uterus from a close family friend last year. her surgeon just announced she gave birth to a healthy baby in september. the baby was premature but is now home and doing well. swedish doctors say the experimental procedure could create new options for women who lost their uterus to cancer or were born without one. a biomedical expert at stanford points out, however, that there are still serious risks. >> you have to expose the donor to risk. you have to have a live person have her uterus removed, with i -- which is a significant risk, of no benefit to her and it's unproven. there are risks to the recipient and there are unknown risks to any children that would be born. >> he believes other options such as surrogacy are better, and he said it's unlikely scientists will research the procedure here in the u.s. scientists at three bay area universities have earned the nation's highest honor for achievement and leadership in advancing science and technology. president obama has announced the recipients of the national medal of science. awardees include two scientists from berkeley, two from stanford and one from uc san francisco. milpitas based sandisk founder and another founder received the national medal of technology and invasion. -- and innovation. because of demand for better-educated students the state's community colleges soon will be testing a pilot program for bachelor degrees. students won't have to transfer to csu or uc, and they will get a break on tuition. but as abc7 news reporter david louie points out, only specific degree programs will be included. >> the targeted programs include dental hygiene and advanced healthcare such as respiratory therapy. a college in cupertino is hoping to expand their ought motive technology program to include automotive management. under the plan, the state's 112 community colleges will compete for only 15 pilot programs. those chosen will be in areas not duplicated at csu or uc. the benefits are two-fold. students will get a break on tuition. a bachelors degree is expected to cost just over $10,000. that amount doesn't even pay for one year at u.c., and graduates can expect higher pay, especially compared to those with bachelor degrees in liberal arts. >> a community college degree in the highly advanced field may provide you with an entry-level salary of $70,000 or $80,000. a baccalaureates or master's in a liberal arts field may not get you more than $50,000 or $60,000. >> she points out that many employers require a four-year degree. >> if they were going into certain companies or certain dental practices, they would need the bachelors degree. so this will be a great benefit. >> the six-year-long pilot program is scheduled to begin no later than january, 2017. some faculty members believe as many as 70% of their associate degrees program will want to stay on for their bachelors. nicole arnold is one of them. >> having a bachelors, one, a job interview versus an associates, they will pick someone with a bachelors. and also you can do education and makes you look better and show that you care about the career. >> just as schools are competitive, so will be the competition to get one of those 15 slots allotted to the state's community colleges. in los altos hills, abc7 news. >> still to come, can we blame climate change for our nation's extreme weather, even our drought. what stanford researchers have discovered. and here's a live look, and we love this, from our tam cam, with the sun starting to hit the city and the fog still there. social media in san francisco calls it carl the fog. i don't know why he has that moniker, but an interesting tidbit. the weather interesting, too. lisa argen will be along shortly with the full accuweather forecast hey john check it out. whoa! yeah i was testing to see if we really can turn any device in your house into a tv and the tablet worked just fine but i wanted to see if the phone will work as well. so i shrunk sharon. every channel's live just like on tv but it's my phone. it's genius. shh! i'm watching tv. tiny sharon is mean. i'm right here. watch any channel live on any device around your home. the x1 entertainment operating system only from xfinity. >>ed hardly strictly bluegrass festival continues today. ♪ the festival at golden gate park has soared in popularity since it first began back in 2001 when just nine bands performed on two stages. this year, guess how many bands? more than 100. and organizers expect attendance to top 750,000. what climatologists have figuring out, the climate has an effect on our drought. >> a set of numbers brought one researcher to a remarkable conclusion. >> you are looking at the research person who first discovered the ridiculously resilient ridge. of heard of it? let daniel explain. >> well, one could call it the region of unusually persistently high geo-potential heights over the northeastern pacific ocean, but i think ridiculously resilient ridge is shorter. easier to swallow. >> here it is on his computer screen. that the moving red blob of high atmospheric pressure in the north that has persisted for two winters now, metaphorically speaking, is the rock in the stream. that big read blob is, over the course of the examination, sitting where the jet stream and storm track would be. >> it's the physical cause of california's drought. today daniel published an academic paper that is the first to connect climate change with the formation of that ridge. the study is based on a comparison of two types of model atmospheres: the one we have today with carbon emissions, compared with others showing how it would have been before cars, coal plants and modern agriculture. a perfectly natural atmosphere. >> i don't think there is any evidence that this is a permanent condition, although what we have shown is there is an increased risk that this sort of extreme pressure pattern will occur. >> so what does this study by a 25-year-old mean to the rest of us? a confirmation, mostly. a peek into the mechanism behind california's water crisis, further proof that it has a cause. >> from stanford university, wayne freedman, abc7 news. >> and that drought situation just persists and is heating up. >> and that big ridge of high pressure he was talking about, still over us. but there are indications of changes right here by the golden gate bridge where we can see the fog right on the deck there. it's lead to go cooler temperatures. san francisco in the 70s. our beaches most 70s. inland, a different story. but your cooling is coming. i'll tell you when coming up. >> thank you, lisa. also up next a huge win for the giants. and some record-setting post-season play. mike shumann has your highlights coming up. it's a fresh approach on education-- superintendent of public instruction tom torlakson's blueprint for great schools. torlakson's blueprint outlines how investing in our schools will reduce class sizes, bring back music and art, and provide a well-rounded education. and torlakson's plan calls for more parental involvement. spending decisions about our education dollars should be made by parents and teachers, not by politicians. tell tom torlakson to keep fighting for a plan that invests in our public schools. nds]fighting for a plan that the wait is over for even faster internet. xfinity is now doubling the internet speed... ...on two of our most popular plans. xfinity continues to innovate, bringing you the fastest, most reliable internet...period. xfinity internet from comcast, now double the speed. abc is honoring hispanic heritage month with our instagram feed. today we welcome a bay area specialists. they have a new program working with children and in nonenglish speaking house holds. we have more details on instagram at abc7 news bay area. a new record has been set. it's the record for the most expensive lot of wine ever sold. 114 bottles of this wine sold for about $1.6 million. that's about $1,700 per glass. the french burgundy bottles were sold by sutherby's in hong kong. you and i were drinking great wine on friday night and it was so hot to be drinking red wine, but it was good. >> yes. lots of fun. and the cooling, although it's been delayed, it's here. we were anticipating it for yesterday but right any we are looking at not only the push, we are seeing the fog. i'll show it to you from our cameras and feeling the effects this afternoon with already 14 degrees cooling at half moon bay. there is the fog. we will look for the influence of our afternoon high temperatures. nice and sunny in san jose. temperatures only about 2 degrees cooler here this afternoon. and we are looking at morgan hill. high elevations, already in the 70s. look at half moon bay. a quarter mile visibility, just 57 degrees. san carlos 68. nice and mild there. and you see the fog here from mt. tam. upper elevations, not only is it warm, it's dry, and mount ham relative humidity, just 11%. but half moon bay is at 100%. we are looking at slowly, slowly getting back to a little bit more typical weather here for october. 64 in concord and 58 still, though, up in santa rosa. so right now the 14-degree cooling temperature compared to yesterday at half moon bay. a few degrees cooler oakland. san carlos. this should be the rule. the afternoon temperatures are maybe a couple degrees cooler in oakland. san francisco, you will come down at least 10 to 12 degrees today. there's a look from emeryville. you see the fog there right on the deck of the golden gate. still warm to hot for most of you, but conditions will be in the 70s to upper 70s at the coast. even san francisco 79 and cooler temperatures right through the middle of the week. so we've got a light, light on shore push right now. but through the afternoon by 5:00 a little pit of fog off the coast, but the winds 10 to 15 miles an hour. that means it will be cooler in golden gate park for you for the festival and we will look for a little bit of fog sneaking in there. high pressure in command here. it continues to slide to the east, however slowly. as it does, we are getting the return flow of the slight on shore push. the marine layer, not really organized. in fact, it is quite squished. but in the days ahead with the cooler temperatures we get more fog back at the coast. it will be in the 70s by tuesday and just about 70 degrees in oakland by thursday. then we warm up friday and saturday. in san francisco, average high is 70. today upper 70s to near 80 and then the coming off through thursday. temperatures shouldn't be as hot with the next warmup. 76 and tahoe waking up to just the 20s. and hot water in l.a. at 91 degrees. some fog golden gate park. temperatures in the 70s. cooler than it has been. we will lack for the numbers today from the 70s half moon bay, 85 in san mateo, and the accuweather seven-day forecast with slightly cooler numbers is going to take a couple of days to get back to the 70s and 80s. but when we do, we around going to stay there for long. we will warm up again friday and saturday. >> all right. that's more like it. >> all right. let's check out sports. record-setting postseason baseball for the san francisco giants last night against the washington nationals. the g-men are now just one win away from advancing to the national league championship series. here's schu. he's got the highlights in this morning's sports. >> good morning. well, the giants played the longest game in postseason history last night. 6 hours, 23 minutes, 18 innings worth of baseball. came down to one swing of the bat from brandon belt and they lead 2 games to 1. -- two games to none. nat fans waving the white towel and giant fans hoping for another postseason victory. washington opens the scoring in the third. singles through the hole at short. 1-0. tim hudson put on a show. gave up just one run on 7 hits in 7 1/3. no walks, struck out a career playoff high 8 batters. jordan zimmerman was better. went 8 2/3. 6 strikeouts, walked 1. that pass did him in. the manager pulled him for drew one out away from victory. giants took advantage. pablo sandoval lines a double down the left-field line. he scores to tie the game. buster posey coming home for the go-ahead run. gunned down at the late. they reviewed it, still out. fast forward to the 18th. brandon belt crushes the fastball. no doubt, giants win the longest game in postseason history 2-1 and come home with 2-0 series lead. >> it's awesome. it's a great feeling. it's something you kind of dream about your entire life and i'm just very fortunate that i was able to experience it. >> just a great ballgame to be a part of. you are hoping somebody gets a hold of one and belt finally did. you know, that's the game i'll always remember. it was just a great battle between these two teams. >> stanford and notre dame has become a great rivalry over the years and this year may be the most important game for the cardinals. they are undefeated, ranked 9th. stanford ranked 14th with one loss -- make that two. notre dame knocked them out of the national title picture. first bad weather game of the season. makes it tough to throw the ball. hogan can run, 7-0, cardinals. the fighting irish answers in the second. the short pass to brown. he will do the rest. 17 yards. 7-7 ballgame at the half. down 10-7 with three minutes left in the game. untouched. 11 yards. stanford back on top 14-10. notre dame needing a touchdown to win. 1:09 left. 4th and 11. from the 23. to the end zone to ben, who a wide open in the back corner. busted coverage. irish win 17-14. stanford falls to 3-2. >> cal and washington state. get ready, connor holiday. it's a footrace, he outruns everybody. 86 yards. holiday had a record 734 yards passing. 6 tds. the teams combined for 66 third quarter points. in the fourth, cal. down 52-41. jared gulf. over 570 yards passing, 5tds. 60-59. lines up for the game winning 19-yard field goal. the snap is low. they yank it wide right. cal escapes, winning the shootout 60-59. they are first place in the pac-12 north at 4-1. and the 49ers host the chiefs today at levi's stadium. i'll have those highlights for you at five. i'm mike shumann. have a great day. >> still ahead, salvation for all. pet owners bring their critters to mass. a blessing for animals of all shapes and sizes. trying to mislead you about the effects of proposition 46. well here's the truth: 46 will save lives. it will save money too. i'm bob pack, and i'm fighting for prop 46 because i lost my two children to preventable medical errors and i don't want anyone else to lose theirs. the three provisions in 46 will reduce medical errors and protect patients. save money and save lives. yes on 46. >> here are the winning numbers from the power ball draw. >> known matched all six numbers, which means the jackpot goes up to $70 million. check out the winning numbers from last night's $9 million superlotto plus. 8, 12, 27, 33, 35. the meganumber 27. no one matched all six there either and that jackpot rises to $10 million. this is st. francis day weekend and as a result animals all over the world are being blessed. in the philippines that includes several types of animals. dogs, of course, were on hand but they had to share the holy water with snakes and even spiders. st. francis is known as the pay trot saint of animals. the ritual allows catholic devotees to hear mass, along with their pets, and then have the animals brought toward the front of the church for the special blessings. they certainly do that here in san francisco. >> eats like wild kingdom. you know, they will like the weather better. i know my dog was hot yesterday. here's a look at mt. tam. a little bit of fog in the distance. the on shore flow coming back into play, bringing temperatures down at the coast into the mid-70s. san francisco 79. some 80s in oakland. 90 san jose. so inland we will see mid-90s, and the changes occur farther inland by tuesday. so it's going to take, oh, three, four days before we get back into the 70s and 60s. it's not going to last. the fog is going to be pretty shallow. so we will be back with sunny skies, warmer temperatures come friday and saturday. but you know this time of year is our warm time. >> yeah. all right. thanks for joining us on abc7 sunday morning news. i'm carolyn tyler, along with lisa argen. you know the news continues now online, on twitter, facebook and on all of your mobile devices with our new abc7 news app. abc7 news continues at 5:00 p.m. have a great sunday and a great week ahead! >> "jack hanna's wild countdown" is sponsored by nationwide. >> hi, everybody, i'm jack hanna, coming to you from my base camp here at the columbus zoo. and welcome to "wild countdown." today's featured creatures are some of nature's greatest engineers and architects. is it digging a hole? >> yes. five feet deep. >> construction workers who build cities from leaves. >> look, there's about 20-something in a row. >> good night! predators that design camouflaged front doors... >> no way! >> no! >> some creatures build structures so strong, they inspire human engineers. look at it, look at the bees climbing in there. look at this.

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