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undermine it to keep outstanding young people like ryan out of scouting. >> reporter: it all comes on the day the boy scouts were forced to release secret files it kept on decades of sexual abuse within the organization. including cases which scout leaders covered up and shielded abusers from prosecution. >> the bow scouts as an organization pride themselves on honesty and truthful nevertheless and yet the boy scouts don't practice it. that's outrageous. >> reporter: ryan says he enjoyed scouting for 12 years and is hoping that someday the scouts will change. >> unfortunately, the boy scouts are being bullies. they are pushing young men like me away who really need the boy scouts. i wasn't the first person to suffer under this policy and surely won't be the last. >> reporter: the boy scouts of america say they don't proactively inquire about someone's sexual orientation but in this case it came out because ryan was doing his project for his eagle scout award which was an anti- bullying wall at his middle school. as part of that project, he revealed that he had been bullied because of his sexual orientation. once that got out, the process was started to kick him out of the organization. >> i notice len, reading the editorials in the council district in contra costa county he is getting a lot of support from different people. >> reporter: that's right. the support is here locally as well as nationwide. 400,000 signatures. he said he thought that people out there understand this is not about sexual orientation, it's about the person you are inside. he wants that award. he feels he has earned it and hopes to put pressure on the organization that somehow they will relent and let him have it. >> keep us updated. len ramirez, thank you. one of the latest crime victims in oakland is a city council candidate robbed at gunpoint. it happened after he attended an anticrime meeting. cbs 5 reporter joe vazquez on the robbery right outside the candidate's home. >> reporter: we're in a neighborhood here 51st near broadway. you know, this is not a place where they see a lot of crime but neighbors say they have noticed street crime lately and a man running for city council noticed it firsthand last night. i had the phone with the earbuds in my phone. >> reporter: dan kalb, a candidate for oakland city council, district 1, was just getting back from a neighborhood crime prevention meeting last night around 8:30. he had just parked his car down the block from his north oakland home. >> i felt a poke right about here. >> reporter: what he felt, a robber's gun in his back. >> i thought oh, my god i just came from a neighborhood crime prevention council meeting and here i am now a victim of crime. >> reporter: he says he is okay. the robber took his iphone and wallet and told him to leave. he ran home and called the cops. he now can emphathize with his constituents in oakland. >> the heart is racing. the feeling of your life could end at any moment. now i know how some people feel when they are the victims of a crime. i just was lucky. there are some people in our city who are victims of crime who are not lucky who are shot, who are permanently injured or murdered. >> youth should be part of the solution of violence in oakland. >> reporter: teenagers who grew up with murderers of friends and family members have spent months trying to make their community a better place through video. >> they were film on the street. their project is based on using creativity and theater to try to imagine alternatives to violence. >> reporter: this footage is only part of the project done by those students who are participants in a program at the ella baker center for human rights. the rest of the video is gone in the hands of two young men who robbed the filmmakers before -- of about $3,000 worth of camera equipment. >> while they were doing one of the video shoots on the street two people came up behind them with guns and the whole group backed away from the equipment and the equipment was all taken. >> reporter: now, niece ella baker kids -- these ella bakers kids you would think they would say just forget it. but instead what i'm told by their mentors is they are more determined than ever to finish their video and they are asking the community to donate some money to help them buy new equipment make an antiviolence video. no better time than now to get that one out. >> that's what it's going to take is to turn it around and people have to stand up and take back their city an streets. >> reporter: absolutely. >> thank you. you don't need me to tell you it has been warm outside. our heat wave is waving good- bye, however. but not before setting a few records today. paul deanno shows us how hot it got. we're midway through october. >> 13 days away from halloween and talking about record highs. some of you near 90 today. mountain view a new record 89 degrees. sfo at the airport 86. new record high. also new record high set in oakland and concord. both of those communities in the mid- to upper 80s. so we broke these records today. already, we're beginning to see a change. the onshore flow is slowly but surely returning to. pacifica is now down to 76. san rafael down to 77. and it's weird to say this but downtown san francisco is down to 81 degrees. we'll talk about the cool change. i'll ver weekend forecast and we may be setting records for rainfall coming up soon. details when that's going to happen coming up in a few minutes. >> thank you. investigators are trying to unravel a suspicious death and fire in castro valley. the alameda county sheriff's office says an accelerant was used to start the fire at this home on san carlos avenue. when firefighters arrived they discovered a woman's body inside. investigators say if this was a homicide, they, quote, have the upper hand on it. oakland police have given the "all clear" after a search for an armed man closes a campus. officers were called to holy names university this morning after someone reported seeing a man with a gun. they evacuated the campus, searched the buildings but didn't find a suspect. police reopened the school later this afternoon. in san francisco, a man who owned a dog walking business is sentenced to 60 days in jail for animal cruelty. his four dogs were malnourished and found living in filthy conditions. they are all healing now. 36-year-old abe were ham taylor will not -- abraham taylor will not be able to care or breed animals for three years. historians will tell you the cold war has been over for years. but we found an important relic of those uncertain days floating right in san francisco bay. and it's a story you will see only on cbs 5. >> reporter: from the outside, it looks like any other large rusting barge in the bay. but 40 years ago, it was the centerpiece of a top secret cia project code named jennifer. how see contract a project was this? >> ha. >> reporter: was this top secret? >> this is probably as tight as it gets. >> reporter: there was an elaborate cover story that this was built to do under water mining by howard hughes. the truth? the cia designed this to go pick up a sunken soviet submarine. >> wanted to pick up the sub, built a claw to pick it up. >> reporter: few cameras have been allowed inside the barge which was secretly submerged under the hughes mining ship and then positioned over the soviet sub. in 1974, the cia successfully raised the stricken gulf class sub along with the bodies of several russian seamen and several secret nuclear missiles. >> there's various stories. they only got part of the submarine. they got this, that. you know, that stuff will probably be aired out in a couple of hundred years when the cia declassifies the rest of the story. >> reporter: but that's not the end of the story. in 1985, the department of defense used the covered barge once again. this time to build and launch the sea shadow, the pentagon's first stealth experimental naval ship which is still here. the huge pontoons, the stealth steel skin, and the sophisticated bridge allstate of the art during the reagan administration. it was built inside the barge to shield it from soviet spy satellites. the project, though, was scrapped in the early 1990s. and now, sea shadow will be scrapped as well, sold off in five-foot sections. >> they operated it for a couple of years on two different occasions. and it was successful beyond their real -- beyond their expectations. >> reporter: all right. of the code name hmb1, the hughes mining barge number one. it will live on. the big barge, is being refurbished as a floating covered dry dock and headed back out we are told this time for civilian use. it could solve cold cases around the country. the secret bay area scientists can extract from the mouths of the dead. >> billions of dollars lost in less than five minutes. the mistake that sent google stocks on a freefall. >> if you missed the big boom, don't worry. the show is just getting started. where bay area meteorite hunters are searching for space debris. ,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,, a south bay pediatrician facing serious drug charges made his first appearance in court today. formal charges were brought against dr. marvin bonham in san jose. he is accused of prescribing powerful drugs such as oxycontin unnecessarily and to convicted drug addicts. it was allegedly in exchange for cash and methamphetamine. he is facing 18 charges but there may be more. >> the investigation is still ongoing as new information comes in, there is always the possibility that we'll be adding additional charges. it really depends on what the nature of those additional charges is, whether they get filed separately or added to the same complaint and it goes forward from there. >> dr. bonham did not enter a plea. his medical license has been suspended while this case is ongoing. >> the indicates of a murdered nursing student is -- the case of a murdered nursing student is going to the jury. prosecutors say giselle fernandez killed michelle le. defense attorneys protested today when prosecutors called the suspect a sociopath. the judge allowed it. esteban did not testify. the science of crime- fighting is taking another leap forward. researchers in the bay area have developed a new tool to help forensic investigators some some of their most baffling cases. as cbs 5 reporter don ford shows us, they have done it by unlocking a secret we all carry in our teeth. >> reporter: across the country hundreds of human remains were found each year that cannot be identified. right now there are almost 8,000 open john doe and jane doe case. a doctor a senior scientist at the lawrence livermore national lab. >> dna matching is the gold standard for identification. but if you don't have any idea who you're trying to match, it doesn't work very well. >> reporter: the doctor says carbon dating can fix that. if you knew the victim's date of birth would you dramatically increase the odds of -- you would dramatically increase the odds of determining who it is. he uses the victim's teeth. >> what our technique does is determine a date of birth from dental enamel plus or minus a couple of years. >> reporter: the sample is loaded into an ionnizing carbon 14 analyzers and ions are shot down this accelerator. the results are compared to a known amount. >> precision for something like that is typically plus or minus one to two years. >> reporter: one local coroner's office we spoke to has nearly 25 cold cases stretching back to the '70s and is very excited. they said this accuracy is unprecedented and might help them solve most all of their cases. when remains are found this lab can help tell quickly who should get the call, the archeologist or the coroner. >> in some cases they don't know if a body is found whether it's been there for 40 years or 4,000. >> reporter: the lawrence livermore national laboratory believes this new approach could significantly reduce the number of the nation's open cold cases. in livermore, don ford, cbs 5. you think of it as accidentally hitting "send" on an email only this sent google stock me a tailspin today. this morning, google released its 3rd quarter financial numbers which included a big miss on target profits. but that report was supposed to be released at the end of the day not at the beginning of the day. within four minutes, shares were down nearly 68 bucks or more than 9%. that's about $20 billion lost in less than five minutes. >> i don't recall ever seeing this happening where their earnings are mistakenly released early. sometimes they will be released early based on rumors or if they had good news and wanted to provide it to the market earlier. something like this happening where the statement is released earlier than it should it doesn't typically happen. wall street hates surprises like that. >> google hates them, too. it blames a printing company for the mistake. if you saw the flash or heard the boom, it only lasted for a few moments. but now the day after the big meteor show in the sky, people are looking for something more. cbs 5 reporter da lin joins us live from just outside martinez where the hunt is on. da. >> reporter: last night, people were asking, did you see it? and now they are asking, did you find it? we noticed a lot of folks out here looking for meteorite fragments. in fact there is a lady out here who owns some land. she says her son is on a horse right now tracking down any fragments. reporter: astronomers say this meteor about the size of a car hit earth's atmosphere around 7:40 last night and fragments might have landed in the hills around monsoonp martinez. that's got treasure hunters climbing all over the place looking for meteorite fragments. >> i was looking for something, looking for something dark, looking for something that might create a crater. >> meteorites do grab a little bit of money. >> reporter: michael kerwin came to mount wanda hoping to go home a richer man. >> did a little bit of research from last night to this morning finding the trajectory of it, about where it hit and the direction that it's going. so i've pretty good idea of where i might find some fragments. i could be wrong. >> reporter: can you share that information with us? [ laughter ] >> what, are you going to take away from my pocketbook or what? i have children to feed. >> reporter: some people came with binoculars. others came with bigger devices. michael came with a knife and magnet. >> i'm going to dig for it with that. and i brought a regular speaker magnet to let me know that i've got iron ore. >> reporter: some people hiked for hours under the hot sun and came up empty-handed. they say they will be back this weekend for more digging. >> i saw nothing. boy, it's hard to find something in acres of hills that are all brown. >> reporter: experts say large intact pieces could go for thousands of dollars. but dana, folks are telling me they are not finding anything out here today. >> yeah. no, that's way worse than a needle in a haystack. >> reporter: pretty much. >> that's like a needle on a planet. >> reporter: yeah. there you go. they are very small pieces. >> yeah. all right, da, let us know if you find anything. >> reporter: i'll be sure. >> okay. and we have more meteor images on our website, cbssf.com. here's the thing that's weird. we actually have video coming in, there were some security cameras on somewhere, you can't get away with anything these days. >> no, not even meteors. not even a little piece of space dust in the atmosphere without being caught. we caught a beautiful sunrise this morning with lawrence karnow showing you the forecast. i want to show you what should be a gorgeous sunset, as well. but look at this image here. look off in the distance. what's that? that's cloud cover. the onshore flow is back even though we had record highs today. things are changing. and you're going to notice a big drop in temperatures coming up tomorrow. rain will be dropping from the sky and we employed the strongest radar in town, call it hi-def doppler looking at the north bay right now. marin county, you're dry but next wook it is going to get very, very wet. here's the change that's coming tomorrow. first things first. high pressure being shoved down to the south. the squeeze play is on. low pressure to the north winning a battle and with high pressure farther to the south we are not getting an offshore wind, we're getting a northwest onshore flow bringing back morning cloud cover dropping the temperature down 10 do 15 degrees. next week this low will sit off to our west three or four days firing in waves of low pressure into the bay area. rain chance begins on monday likely will not end until wednesday night. so three days of rain coming up next week. for tomorrow, temperatures cooling down. we are talking 80 for livermore, 67 degrees for downtown san francisco. redwood city just back to normal but it's not the upper 80s. it's the mid-70s tomorrow. san jose 76 and concord all the way down to 76 degrees. even cooler over the weekend. upper 70s low 70s near the bay. mid- to upper 70s inland with morning clouds afternoon sunshine. then the rainfall. rain likely on monday, rain likely on tuesday. rain likely on wednesday. [ applause ] >> ken and his lawn are thrilled. i hope you are, too. >> yeah! >> like it or not it's coming. that's your cbs 5 forecast. extreme sports hits the bay area. why there's criticism over the sponsor of one event. >> one of the world's most expensive yachts is docked here in the bay area. the billionaire owner of the octopus. ,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, by mountain dew. san extreme words being used against an extreme sports event sponsored by mountain dew. san francisco supervisor john avalos is criticizing the dew tour toyota championships going on at civic center plaza right now. he is questioning why a soft drink brand is sponsoring an event in a city trying to fight childhood obesity. avalos also says construction for the event shut down the plaza for too long. the competition kicked off today and will run through sunday. it's one of the world's largest most famous yachts. and for the next five weeks, it's calling san francisco bay home. the octopus has been docked at the richmond terminal for minor repairs. the $200 million megayacht belongs to microsoft cofounder and owner of the seattle seahawks, paul allen. the 414-foot-long yacht includes two helicopters, seven boats, and a 10-man submarine. >> no slide? >> can you believe it? send it back. coming up in the next half hour, governor brown pushing hard for prop 30. >> tuition will go up in the university of california by $2,400. >> the governor's sit-down interview with our sister station in sacramento. >> i can't sleep at night knowing that these people are going to be dug up. >> human remains unearthed and reburied. the effort to halt a bay area expansion project. >> and it's been a newsstand staple for 80 years. when "newsweek" will publish its final print edition. ,, sleep train's best rest event is ending soon. don't miss your chance to get sleep train's very best mattresses at the guaranteed lowest price. plus, pay no interest for 3 years on beautyrest black, stearns & foster, serta icomfort, even tempur-pedic. and rest even better with sleep train's risk-free 100-day money back guarantee. but the best rest event ends soon at sleep train. superior service best selection, lowest price, guaranteed. ♪ sleep train ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ >> your realtime captioner: linda marie macdonald now at 6:30, why should californians vote to raise their own taxes? governor brown is making his best pitch and is warning about what happens if you don't. the governor is spending nearly all of his political capital on proposition 30. today, he sat down with cbs reporter koula gianulias and she asked him point blame: why voters should send lawmakers more money with their reputation for wasting it? >> right off the bat, the tuition will go up at the university of california by $2,400. >> reporter: that's the ultimatum governor brown is delivering to college students across the state urging them to vote yes on prop 30 to prevent nearly $6 billion in additional cuts to education. we sat down with the governor one on one to ask why schools are the target. why not cut pensions? why not cut more at corrections? why does it have to be schools? >> because we have been cutting all these other things. we have tens of thousands of felons who would otherwise go to prison stay at the local level called realignment. a lot of people were against that. we have cut back the university 25%. >> reporter: to avoid deeper cuts prop 30 would temporarily raise income tax on high earners and the sales tax by .25%. how do you pass a tax when people can't pay for gas and mortgages? >> most of the money will come from the very highest income earners so to ask those who have so much to give one or two or three percent more for seven years to help us as our economy come back i think is morally right. i think it's practical. >> reporter: so what's the guarantee? when this money gets here, if it passes, will it actually go to the place intended? >> because that's where it goes under the law. the law says it goes know a special fund. i'm governor. i'm going to make sure it happens. >> reporter: concerns about how tax dollars are spent in sacramento fuel the fight led by opponents to defeat prop 30. critics share examples of government fraud and waste including the recent scandal in the state parks department where more than $50 million was found standard in a fund as state parks faced closure. that leads to a major public perception issue for what you're trying to do here. >> i was frustrated enough to get rid of all the people responsible but i was also very glad that instead of misusing by spending the money, they mismanaged by saving the money. so after i got rid of the people who caused this mess, we still have the money and we can spend it probably. >> reporter: reporting in sacramento, koula gianulias cbs 5. >> and here it comes. the election less than three weeks away both candidates are focusing on a key demographic, young voters. cbs 5 political reporter grace lee with a look on a bay area university he was effort to get students engaged. >> reporter: the biggest criticism of young voters is they don't care and they don't vote. but we saw a huge uptick in 2008 with the obama campaign really making a point to reach out to the demographic. he won with 66% of voters 18 to 29. so why should candidates care about the demographics? because there are a lot of them, 46 million, way more than seniors and it's. >> one of the dominican university is running a new hands-on crick lamb hoping to inspire them. [ pause ] >> walks through that doorway of opportunity... you do not slam it shut behind you. >> i don't have to say what i feel. but i improvised -- [ pause ] >> reporter: all right. apparently we don't have that story. we'll try to get it later. the students we spoke with are great. they typical debunking the whole idea that youth voters are disengaged and the two biggest issues they say for them is getting a job out of college and paying off student loans so they are going to be operating exit polls. you might look for them in marin county on election day. so we also want to tell you about the candidates and what they are doing tonight. the presidential candidates are sharing the stage but this time, unlike the debate, it's supposed to be a more pleasant setting so right now, president obama and republican challenger mitt romney are at the annual alfred e. smith memorial dinner. this is in new york. here's a live picture of it going on right now. the fundraiser is a roast where each candidate gets a chance to trade barbs, supposed to be funny, and here's a sample of governor romney. >> ladies and gentlemen, the archbishop of new york... >> that's going on live. apparently, we don't have that bite, either. but i can tell you i swear, ken, he is really funny. a lot of critics said that governor romney couldn't tell a joke. tonight if you were listening, he was very funny. so check it out. >> yeah. we'll have some of that on eyewitness news at 11:00. hey, grace, one quick question for you. i know a lot of the students you talked to at dominican maybe didn't fit the misconception that a lot of people have that all young people vote for obama. not the case, right? >> reporter: that's absolutely not the case! in fact, one of the students said she had voted for president obama and was going to vote for mitt romney this time around. there was another guy who said he was still undecided. and you know, as they talked about it, they talked about, you know, the expensive student loans. they also talked about, you know, they are poly-sci students but some of the other students involved they read a lot about politics. they are really involved in the issues. and they read everything from the "new york times" and they watch things like cbs news and they watch "the daily show" with jon stewart so it's a wide range of things they are seeing. >> for sure, not to mention the internet and social media and all that other stuff where people get info. all right. grace lee, thank you. the expansion of a reservoir in contra costa county has dug up more than dirt. they found the remains of native americans at a reservoir. one native american says the developer is doing needless digging and wants it stopped. >> reporter: andrew galvin is the curator at the old mission dolores. some of his relatives are buried in the mission cemetery but it's a humble cemetery. another cemetery has ohlone blood lines. >> back in the mid-'80s my father reburied 200 skeletons. >> reporter: this nondescript plot owned by galvin's family is where up to 8,000 indian remains many discovered at construction sites have been reburied. galvin, his father and cousin often working with developers and burying the remains themselves. so when contra costa county started work on expanding a reservoir, galvin was called in to help retrieve remains many times before expecting that the county would rack up what he considers a massive and unnecessary body count. >> this situation is now up to 70 skeletons remains. >> reporter: galvin says this project is different that contra costa county is digging up dozens more human remains than is absolutely necessary and breaking the rules along the way. they say they have never seen anything like it. the county digging the remains up, not because of a housing development or other structure going in but because he says archeologists are bent on studying the remains. >> it seems so greedy, so dehumanizing, so disrespectful. and essentially, to me what it amounts to is cultural genocide. >> i can't sleep at night. i can't sleep at night knowing that these people are going to be dug up. i hear them telling me, stop this, do something. >> reporter: so they are doing something. lobbying the water district, which owns the land to temporarily halt the digging. >> can they stop and look at other ways to protect the remains in place? >> reporter: it's a touchy subject. the location of the remains so protected by state and federal laws that county officials told me they are not even allowed to talk about them. >> those laws do include the requirements to keep those sites confidential. >> reporter: an official assured us the district is handling any remains according to state and federal laws. but galvin says he is ready for a fight. >> the gloves are on! the gloves are on. no more of this for me. no more of this for my ancestors. >> reporter: prepared to do battle against this insult added to a long list of injuries to his ancestors. christin ayers, cbs 5. if someone promises to paint your curb, there's a good chance it's a scam. coming up on the consumerwatch, how bay area homeowners are being tricked into giving up money and how yelp is cracking down on businesses who pay for positive reviews. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, is making a come- back. it's a warning tonight for homeowners. a popular scam is making a bit of a comeback. cbs 5 consumerwatch reporter julie watts tells us police are trying to curb the activity. >> reporter: we hear about the curb painting scam every few years. someone puts a note in your mailbox saying your house number will be painted on your curb in a few days. the note claims it's to better help first responders locate your house in an emergency. and it suggests you pay $15 for the service a donation. but one san francisco homeowner was well aware of the scam and recently confronted a curb painter who came by to collect. >> his response was actually kind of being shocked that somebody would actually, you know, call bs on this guy and he ended up just kind of walking away looked a little defeated. >> reporter: he notified police and they arrested the man on outstanding warrants but it's also illegal to impersonate a city worker. contrary to the scam, the city says first responders don't rely on curb numbers because they are usually blocked by parked cars. they rely on the house number. if you rely on, online reviews you may be happy to know yelp is going undercover to expose businesses who pay people to write fake favorable reviews. employees respond to ads offering as much as $200 for a positive review, but instead of a review they get a consumer alert label added to their page. yelp says it plans to out more companies in the next three months. it's estimated as many as 40% of all online reviews are fake or biased. and there will soon be one less magazine on the newsstand. "newsweek" announced today it will publish its last print edition at the end of the year and going all digital. the sales have shrunk from 3 million to one million in the past six years. "newsweek's" editor-in-chief says it's a difficult moment for all of us. your newsstand will never be the same. >> wow. there goes another one. >> and the ipad version just isn't the same, you know? >> no. >> okay. i'm old fuddy duddy but i do like the feel of it in my hand. >> it's like reading the newspaper and drinking coffee in the morning. >> reporter: i love "newsweek" when i get on the plane. you can't use the ipad during take-off and landing. >> we'll have to read something else. >> new reality. >> julie, thank you. time to talk about weather. already we are seeing a change in the clouds and returning to the coast and speaking of changes, how about a taste of winter? coming up the extended forecast. we'll have it next. i'm dennis o'donnell live in st. louis. we know where one half of the world series is going to be played plus the big game is much bigger for one cal bear. it's coming up in two minutes. ,, ?ó???óóñ when i take a picture of this check, it goes straight to the bank. oh. oh look the lion is out! no mommy no! don't worry honey, it only works on checks. deposit checks from your smartphone with chase quickdeposit. just snap a picture, hit send and done. take a step forward and chase what matters. weather time. record highs, a lot of you were near 90 degrees today. by the top of next week you will struggle to make it into the 60s with widespread rainfall. for some of you who love winter weather and waiting for the rain to start, it's about three or four days away. here's a sign of a change cloud cover nonexistent the past couple of days at the coast but a look at ocean beach and we have clouds run. marine layer will return tonight. and near the bay you will start off the morning cloudy tomorrow. that's a big change from where we have been the past couple of days. now, it's still mild downtown san francisco 78, san jose 76. santa rosa 74. low 80s now for concord and oakland you hit a record high in oakland today, livermore currently 82 degrees. this saturday the big game. we have the game in berkeley stanford, cal, nice weather, sunny, mild, 71 degrees your kickoff temperature. we had a big show in the sky last night. let me show you one more shot of this meteor that passed over the bay area. if you were outside you couldn't have missed it. it lit up the sky and exploded like fireworks and then we heard the sonic boom a few minutes later. this is video from that incident. the orionid meteor shower peaks sunday and that was probably part of the show we'll have the next couple nights. tomorrow morning mid-50s concord down to 54, livermore 53, redwood city 54, santa rosa 50. changes coming up tomorrow. low pressure is acting like a bully and shoving our area of high pressure out of the way. that shoving process will now move high pressure down to our south and west. that will give us an onshore flow tomorrow. that's why clouds are already returning and tomorrow will be more cloudy and ten to 15 degrees cooler and low pressure takes over next week after a dry but partly sunny weekend. this guy right here is it going to fire up waves of lower pressure into the bay area giving us rainfall monday through wednesday. a much different much wetter cooler cloudier weather pattern coming up in the top of next week. so we're cooler tomorrow, that already will be the first change. afternoon sunshine. cooling trend over the weekend with rain likely three days next week at a minimum. what are we doing tomorrow? we are just cooling back down to normal. oakland at 70, concord, san jose 76 exactly average. other highs, morgan hill 79. hayward high tomorrow 75 degrees. fairfield 82. san ramon 78. napa 74 degrees. 65 for stinson beach. and 67 for downtown san francisco tomorrow. as i mentioned the weekend will be dry but the cooling trend will continue. partly sunny skies, rain moves in by monday afternoon. and monday, tuesday and wednesday next week, rain is likely. some computer models say more than an inch of rain over that three-day period. back in the early '90s we had a major incident in the oakland hills. likely you remember it and roberta gonzales is live now to talk about the lessons learned from the oakland hills fire. good evening. >> reporter: paul, this is gateway gardens pavilion. this is the staging area that was actually built in the wake of that oakland firestorm. it was built because it was a lesson learned. the neighbors, the friends, the families that lived in the buckingham neighborhood around here one thing that we learned is that they had no communication with each other during that very dire emergency situation. now they can come to the staging area. so this was one lesson learned. but we wanted to know about other lessons so i called on battalion chief from the oakland fire department. i asked him about that. >> amazing rate of spread. the fire jumped the freeway which was sort of unheard of, a span that huge. so the winds as you said before, everything was just the perfect conditions for the catastrophe to happen. they figure a house caught on fire every 11 seconds. >> reporter: october 20, 1991, 3,642 homes destroyed. but more importantly, 25 lives were lost. and you can see that firefighter memorial on the edge of tunnel road off highway 24. roberta gonzales in the oakland hills for cbs 5. we'll be right back. ,, ,, thirty-eight. schools. trouble, we all should help out. under thirty-eight they do. more a year. bucks. money for schools. every school dollar must be... spent on student learning. student wins. hello everybody, busch stadm just over my shoulder here n dennis o'donnell is live tonight in st. louis with tonight's sports report. >> reporter: the good news is there is no rain delay. the bad news the giants are in big, big trouble. right now, top of the 6th inning, san francisco trailing 4-1. lincecum is now out of the game. he struggled from the get-go. cardinals outfielder carlos beltran is not playing in tonight's game. he strain his knee trying to beat out a double play ball yesterday and was too sore it play the outfield so he is available to pinch hit if need be. matt carpenter starts in his place. while the giants and cardinals fight it out the picture is much clearer in the american league. tigers piling it on the yankees starter cc sabathia in detroit. miguel cabrera a two-run home run 4-0 tigers in the 4th inning. same inning peralta goes yard for another two-run homer. 6-0 tigers a four-run 4th inning and the sweep was on. matt scherzer took it the rest of the way ten strikeouts for the right hander. the tigers staff allowed just two earned runs against new york in the entire series. 8-1 in the 9th when there was a popout ending the game. detroit is going to the world series. the yankees are swept in a 7- game series for the first time since the ford administration. >> you know, i have the utmost respects for them and if somebody would have told me we would sweep the yankees in this series i would have told them they are crazy. a little luck, good pitches, good hits, sometimes you get on a roll. it's pretty good. >> reporter: the big game will kick off saturday at noon in berkeley and jeff tedford's bears are catching fire thanks in part to one player whose bear traditions just runs through his veins. >> the ball is still loose as they get to to roger. >> reporter: richard rogers senior now a coach with the cal line in a panthers made two of the five laterals in the most famous college football play in history. >> the bears have won! >> he is modest about it. he doesn't say much about it. >> rogers another one. >> in fifth grade i found out how big it was a deal on tv and like top plays and stuff like that. >> reporter: 30 years later his son richard rogers, jr., dons the golden bear uniform following in his dad's footsteps. >> the bears have won!! oh, my god!! >> reporter: the folklore of the play has evolved through the years as rogers junior learns about his dad's role in the huddle. >> i have heard from some people that he actually called it, like a lot of people have given up on the game and he was in the huddle and the special teams and was pulling people on the field that weren't even on special teams. so i think that's the craziest thing i have heard. >> reporter: with 11 catches and 164 yards, the sophomore tight end is having a breakout season. after only playing on special teams last year, coming out of memorial stadium's north tunnel before the game will be just a little more special this year. >> it happened for my dad. it was sprung on him and obviously, it lasted the rest of his lifetime. so you never know when somebody big is going to happen and you just have to be ready for the moment and that's what preparation does for you. >> reporter: and tonight at 11, more on the 30th anniversary of "the play" including rarely seen footage of the play shot by a former cbs 5 photographer we found in our vault. so northwestern football team is 6-1. but head coach pat fitzgerald thought they looked a little sluggish in their last game the players' solution? nap time. >> i can give you a copy of our itinerary. we got them up early and will get them up early on saturday full team breakfast and then team nap. this is mandatory. [ laughter ] >> so i'm just master motivated. just unbelievable. so we'll be taking a nap about 9:30 on saturday morning. this is what i get paid to do, you know what i mean, seriously, create nap time. it's pathetic. [ laughter ] >> reporter: great stuff. finally people in california don't have many problems like this. in germany, this guy thought he was going to jump through a frozen pool. instead he slams into the ice without breaking it. [ laughter ] >> hello? mcfly, no broken bones for the guy. maybe a broken ego. do not try this at home. guys let's go back to you. [ laughter ] >> oh. nasty. >> that is brutal, dennis! yikes! that's a butt pointer not a hip pointer. >> dennis, i ran into joe starkey the other day. he is still here's from that call 30 years. >> reporter: still getting royalties for that call! [ laughter ] >> a big game. the voice you hear screaming in this thing. >> i was so not expecting him to jump into the ice. >> very funny. so all right, so we're keeping an eye on the giants and we'll let you know. >> yeah. for news throughout the evening including any sore butt falls we see on the ice we'll have them for. >> we'll bring them to you. >> the latest is always on cbssf.com. >> thanks for joining us. e you -- see you at 10:00 and 11:00. captions by: caption colorado comments@captioncolorado.com ,,,,,,,,,,,, don't miss your chance to get sleep train's very best mattresses at the guaranteed lowest price. plus, pay no interest for 3 years on the best brand-name mattress sets. but hurry! the best rest event ends soon at sleep train. ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪

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SunLive - Battle of Te Ranga commemoration - The Bay's News First

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SunLive - Te Ranga - the battle that shaped Tauranga - The Bay's News First

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