lightning. be very careful if you re already starting with your plans today. some of the rain could be fairly heavy. it s mostly going to be this afternoon and evening. we have the threat for strong to severe storms across the entire area. so, again, make sure you pay close attention. we ll be tracking it throughout the entire afternoon. also on our nbc 10 news app. you can always track the thunderstorms with us. here s a live look at the radar right now. most of the area is dry. we have a few showers in parts of cape may county. if you re along the shore for the fourth of july holiday, you re waking up to showers here, around sea isle city, those will continue moving up towards atlantic city. most of the heavy rain still offshore but we have another round just offshore west. this one that you see just east of chicago now, this is the area of rain that we re watching as we go through the afternoon. showers and thunderstorms from that will be approaching the area for the secon
franklin parkway. this is where we ll celebrate the sounds of philadelphia a little later on. you definitely want to keep that umbrella handy. this fourth of july may be a rainy one. we re tracking that rain and possible thunderstorms in the first alert neighborhood forecast. good morning. this is nbc10 news. i m rosemary connors. happy fourth of july. let s get to meteorologist erica martin. when it comes to the wet weather, it depends on where you live. it really does. we re seeing this system. in fact, it s a cold front or a stationary boundary that s now a warm front. a soorz of low pressure systems working their way in from west to east. but associated with that, of course, is lots of moisture and showers working their way in from the southwest to the northeast. current temperature, 68 degrees. notice the wind direction there, even though it s mild right now. your july 4th outlook, humid and overcast. i ll go with cloudy skies as showers work in towards the area. s
stations. she said she was waiting when the train passed by the ardmore station. everybody was running late, everybody was getting mad. reporter: tomorrow they plan toed a more cars to the capacity. they re encouraging riders to ride something other than regional rail for now. are you going to do anything differently tomorrow? are you going to take a different form of transportation? definitely. definitely. i m going get a ride in. reporter: good idea. they re encouraging all alternatives. remember, yesterday was a holiday. a lot of folks may still have the day off and may have not made the trek back yesterday. i m lauren make, nbc 10 news. all right. lauren. we re monitoring the trains for you. right now they appear to be on team. the biggest problem appears to be on the line where several trains are delayed including one that s a half hour late. monique paxton has more on the impact it s having on them. what s the latest? reporter: just in the past 15 or
the city after more than half a century of devastating losses. the fans return the love in rowdy fashion. good morning from the studio 57 newsroom at cbs news headquarters here in new york, good to be with you. i m anne-marie green. this morning, the city of cleveland is celebrating something it has not had in 52 years a major sports title. the cleveland cavaliers are the nba champs after defeating the golden state warriors 93-89 in the seventh and decisive game of the nba final, capping a historic comeback. for us to be able to end this, end this drought, our fans deserve it. they drerve it. it was for him. lebron james made good on his promise to bring a championship to his hometown, playing in his sixth straight james led with 27 points as cleveland captured the first championship in history. the cavs became the first team in the nba finals to come back from a 3-1 deficit james! reporter: james, the unanimous series mvp, said it was an important personal vict
taylor branch presents his thoughts on key moments of civil rights movement. this is about an hour and 15 minutes. thank you, mr. hale. thank you atlanta history center. i ve been here before. i m glad to be back, and i m glad to be back talking about something that s been a subject that s been dear to me for my whole life, and it s inescapable now that i m getting older that it is by life s work, and i m glad for it. this is another round. i m going to take more questions tonight than i normally do. i ll say provocative things about why this history is significant and about this project, itself, which is a little odd to spend 24 years writing a 2300-page trilogy and come out a few years later with a 190-page book. a lot of people who road the other ones think it s not true that somebody else wrote it, that i m not capable of writing something this brief. [laughter] i assure you that i did. there is blood on the floor of my office because it involved eliminating or at le