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Director wins award for her support of women in workplace

Director wins award for her support of women in workplace
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Beverly Parker | Obituary | The Daily Item

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UPDATE State records highest COVID death total since early May; 11 new deaths in Valley

UPDATE State records highest COVID death total since early May; 11 new deaths in Valley
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Grants put to good use in year of challenges

Grants put to good use in year of challenges
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Transcripts For WJZ Eyewitness News At 4 20091012

sglooe sgloo they're taking another -- they're keeping children from visiting patient care areas of the hospital. >> reporter: unless your children need medical care, leave them at home when you go to the hospital. in an effort to suppress the spread of the virus, several hospitals are keeping children out of patient care areas. that's because young people are considered more active transmitters of the virus. >> we already had 2,000 children dying from the virus, and it's only the beginning of october. >> reporter: 19 of the deaths came in the last week alone. last week, maryland lost its second child to the flu, 14- year-old destiny parker. some hospitals have already started turning children away. >> we came down here. they said we couldn't bring the children. they were pretty upset. >> reporter: mercy center will keep children out of obstetrics wards unless they're being treated. gmc is warning all visitors, not just children to wear surgical masks. the move comes as federal and state health officials struggle to warn parents that the vaccine is safe. a new study show that more than a third of parents don't plan on getting their children vaccinated. this week, the vaccine is expected to arrive in maryland. we're told unlike the nasal spray version, this one is safe for pregnant women and women with allergies. stay with wjz for complete flu watch coverage. get the latest on the vaccine and important details on the cdc by logging on to wjz.com. an horrific accident takes the life of a local team. vick is in the newsroom with more on an elkon the child struck and killed by an amtrak train. vick? >> vick, thank you. >> the rain was delayed for two hours while police investigated the accident. an all thes revealed a soldier died of heat stroke due to physical exertion. jamal brit was just a week away from graduating when he collapsed last week. he was participating in a two- mile run in the army physical fitness test. he is the second soldier to die this year. wjz speaks to his father. hear the interview coming up new at five. the taliban continues its bloody attack in pakistan, one deadly strike after another. we report for wjz. the region hit is where some al- queda leaders are said to be hiding and where some troops cross into afghanistan. >> reporter: taliban fighters threaten more attacks, like this suicide car bombing in northwestern pakistan. this man was one of a dozen injured when the blast ripped through a crowded market. the explosion, targeting an army convoy, killed more than 40 people. the taliban operating inside pakistan has unleashed a wave of violence, trying to upset the military's plans for a new ground offensive near the border. over the weekend, tally ban fighters swooped in on army headquarters, intending to capture hostages they could exchange for impritdzed servants. >> they wanted their release. >> the white house is watching the taliban maneuvers and the pakistani response. their fight is closely tied to the u.s. war across the border in afghanistan. hoping to encourage more cooperation, congress just passed a bill trip link u.s. aid to pakistan, but there are concerns inside pakistan that conditions for the money amount to u.s. meddling in pakistan's national interest. the legislation is still waiting for obama's signature. he sits down with his war cabinet again this week as they work on a new strategy for fighting the taliban and al- queda in afghanistan and pakistan. in washington, joel brown, wjz joins. today's air strikes killed militant and wounded 19 more. harford county county sheriff deputies have a sketch of an assault suspect they need help to identify. the victim tells police she was parked on a rock run road near stafford road last monday about can have. she says this man got into her car and attacked her. anyone with information about the attack is asked to call detectives at 410-836-5080. traffic jams aren't unusual during the rush hour on the baltimore beltway, but if you were stuck on the inner loop of 695 near liberty road this morning, the reason for the delay is a happy one. andrea tojihi is live in newsroom to explain. hi, andrea mom and baby are doing fine. the little boy weighs 6 pounds, 5 ounces. chilly weather to start the week. it's cloudy and cool, but it is october after all. wjz has traffic and weather together. bernadette woods is here with the numbers. great weekend, though, bern. >> it was, sally. things are changing big-time this week. not a whole lot going on in our area, though the clouds have come. in we're going to open it up and show you two different storms, one off to the north with some rain, and off to the south, a whole lot of rain. there are clouds. we could see a few showers through the evening and overnight hours. this storm is going to get out of here. though it will be mild tomorrow, some really cool air is coming our way. we'll have the forecast coming up. let's check on the roads with sharon shavala. >> hi, kai. looking good out there. it is a holiday after all. a few problems to report. nothing too major. one of the problems an accident on 95 on the northbound lanes at the toll plaza. traffic is light coming in and out of the fort mchenry tunnel. we have one past eastern avenue. no delays there. an accident in pikesville. that one on oak avenue at glenn beck, another crash in the city. winds at north forest park and one more on erdman on federal street. a slight delay on the topside outer loop between delaney avenue and charles. you can see the slow spot at 28 miles per hour. there's a look at the beltway, at 83. looking good there. no issued on the west side at baltimore national pike. this report brought to you by the maryland home and garden. the 2009 maryland home and garden and living and fall and craft show will be held at the fairgrounds the 16th through the 18th. for more nfths, log on to m.d. home and garden.com. back over to you. thank you, sharon. baltimore copes with a bummer of a loss to the bengals. sports director mark explains it was a combination of penalties by therives and clutch plays by cincinnati that ultimately led to the loss. >> the bengals came to town as the heavy underdogs, but as it ends it is the bengals who are tops in the afc north, not the ravens, after a stunning result at the stadium. >> carson palmer drops back to the sideline, caught out of bounds. henry. >> reporter: carson and the bengals drove 80 yards in the final few minutes. he picked apart the defense. one on ravens d back chris car for illegal contact, another on ray louis, 15 yards unsportsmanlike for a helmet to helmet hit. a critical mistake for ray louis, who likely faces a fine and maybe even a suspension for the dangerous play. pass interference flagged on frank walker, who made contact while breaking up a pass to ocho cinco in ravens territory. for a second straight week, the ravens fall short, and for the second straight week, the fishiating may be called into question. but the ravens stayed away from referee talk after a stunning defeat. >> i'm not thinking about it. i'm just thinking we have to play better. the idea is to play so well that those things become irrelevant. and that's the point -- that's what you have to do in the league. and we didn't do that today. >> if you dominate calls don't matter. you know what i mean? so referees and stuff, that is of no importance to me whatsoever. >> reporter: after two straight defeats, we asked you the fan what the ravens need to do to get back on track. it's our question of the day. >> less penalties. less penalties will make it for us. >> they have to really watch the penalties. they're absolutely killing us. >> yes, mason is really good. yes, throw to him, miami. >> they didn't do it yesterday, and of course, that's why we lost. >> the ravens head back onto the road next weekend to minnesota to brett favre and the undefeated vikings. see the game sunday right here on wjz 13. doesn't sound like it will be an easy one. still ahead on eyewitness news at 4:00, nesting natives. an australian couple cannot get their own mail for risk of being attacked by mag pies. and despite hiking prices and still losing money, the united states post office is paying people to stand around and do nothing. . >> month after his sudden death, hear michael jackson's new song for the first time. gray and chilly. get your first updated warning forecast. some australian residents are fearing they'll be attacked by birds. swooping mag pies not unusual during breeding season. these birds are a little aggressive. there is little people can do to drive off the birds, because the species is protect. resident face a $25,000 fine if the birds are harmed. >> a cleveland area man is lucky to be alive after a minivan crashes into a gas pump, setting the pump on fire. employees freed the man pinned by the pump. then they doused the flames. the victims suffered serious burns and bruises, but is expected to survive. investigators are still trying to determine the cause of the crash. michael jackson may have passed away, but his music keeps on coming. a new single "this is it" was released today. charlie dagget reports from abc. the music comes to the delight of many fans. >> reporter: michael jackson's newest single debuted online early monday morning. security was heavy with a dash of show biz flashed as men in black delivered the disk to sony headquarters in london. jackson fans waited all night to hear the song. >> going to be one of the biggest hits. > "this is it" featured jackson's trademark vocal style. since then, a full orchestra and his brothers singing backup completed the mix. >> the song will be included in a two-disk cd set that will accompany a documentary on jackson. the film opens at the end of october, in only two weeks. it features the singer rehearsing for his london concerts. they never happened because of his sudden death. jackson died on june 25th after he collapsed at his home in los angeles, and his death is still under investigation. despite the controversy of jackson's life and death, his fans are thrilled. >> it means a lot. i've heard so many unreleased songs, but this is one that no one has ever heard, and we are the first ones to hear it. >> it could be the first in a line of unheard jackson music. live, wjz eyewitness news. >> the new single is available on michael jackson's web site, and being sent to local radio stations. jackson is expected to sell millions of albums in the coming years. some money was made on wall street. the dow passed the 9900 mark, but lost ground in the closing hours. the dow was 21 points, the s and p up 5. the nasdaq was down a fraction. the dow was up there, by the way today. let's go to new york, where alexis christoforous has tonight's money watch update. >> the dow continues to struggle toward the 10,000 mark. trading volume was light because of the columbus day holiday, and the market was closed. the earnings parade kicks into high gear this week. many of the big banks that received government bailouts will show us their profit report cards, including bank of america, jpmorgan chase and citigroup. consumers continue to get a break at the gas pump. the price of a gallon of gas dropped a nickel in the last two weeks. according to triple a, the national average is 2.47 a gallon. if you own a t mobile side kik phone, you may have lost all the data stored on it including your list of contact numbers. t mobile says the information is certainly gone after a number of servers failed on friday. the lesson, always back up your important information somewhere else. don't be alarmed if bernie madoff knocks on your door this halloween. the real madoff in jail for life after bilking investors out of hundreds of billions of dollars, but the madoff mask one of the hottest selling costume mass public service commission year. other big sellers, michael jackson and super mario brothers. for more headlines click on cbs money watch, new york. some post office workers may not be working as hard as you think. the u.s. postal office admits to a practice of putting workers in standby rooms. close to 11,000 employees nationwide mostly in processing center have to sit it out and wait for work on stand-by, because there just isn't enough work to go around. officials say some union contracts guarantee workers full pay even with the reduced workloads. coming up at 4:00, she gave her life, the story of a terrible bus crash and how a teacher saved her students. want to keep an eye on your house from anywhere in the world? some technology that allows you to do it. and you'll need a light jacket, at least if you go outside. bernadette woods is updating the first warning forecast. wjz 13 is always on. for the top stories on wjz.com. for top updates, click wjz.com. complete forecast, and the first warning of severe weather. >> tried to clear today, but that never really happened. >> it did not. with the clouds coming in, all the cold air locked in place for today. up and down over the next few dazed, but a few more downs to come temperaturewise. we'll have that in a moment. but want to show you right now, where we are temperaturewise, and it is 05 degrees, and that's the high on the day so far. with a wind out of the northeast, and as we said, the clouds coming in to keep us cool. around the region, looks like generally 50s, but 66 degrees in the city, and look at oakland. has not gotten out of the 40s today so far for our highs, so definitely starting to fool that chill in the air. winds turning around to the east and northeast as a storm system comes our way. this is how it looks in the larger picture. the clouds have come and taken over. a constitute showers to the south, but we had two different storms out there right now. this other one, for the most part is going to stay off to the south, but this northern one is going to act us, and notice what's happening with it, a lot of blue, indicating the snow. we don't think we'll see that, but it will bring in the cool air that follows the cold front. tonight with the clouds around, a few showers possible between the two systems here, just a few showers, though, and all of this is going to get out of here tomorrow. the sunshine returns, and initially it is going to be mild tomorrow. but as the winds start to pick up during the day, that will bring in cooler air, the air sitting behind the front. by wednesday, high only in the 50s, and a couple of days. there is a chance that the highs could only be in the 40s. so that's the change coming our way later this week. now, in addition to that, here is some rain with another storm system. that will start to come our way thursday night into friday with a decent chance for some rain. we'll have to see if that linkers into the weekend. the forecast out on the waters with the winds picking up, small craft advisories go into effect. the bay temp 66 degrees. it is dropping. tonight down to 49 degrees, clouds sticking around. maybe a shower or two. but tomorrow then the sunshine returns. we go up to 68. it will be a breezy one. but enjoy it tomorrow, because as we said, only 50s for highs on wednesday. thursday and friday, there's a chance that we could stay in the 40s for our high. >> whoa. >> incredible, huh? >> yeah. is it going to stay dry for the rest of the week? >> not necessarily. some rain possibly thursday into friday for that. >> reality setting in. >> in a harsh way. >> you know what they say about reality. >> thanks, verne. a reminder tune into cbs's prime-time lineup at 10. a new episode of the drama csi miami followed by eyewitness news at 11. >> katie couric has a preview of what's coming up tonight on the cbs evening news. >> they were just six college kids who liked to shoot hoops. now they're an internet sensation. steve hartman goes one-on-one with the guys behind the basketball trick shot. a slam dunk assignment america tonight only on the cbs evening news. thanks, katie. a deadly mistake. a florida man shoots and kills an intruder, or did he? who he really killed instead? difficult court battle. martin luther king's children and his wife and the financial feud. a new understanding of the h1n1 virus. the studies that give doctors a new treatment option for those critically ill. the eyewitness news report continues with denise and vick right af this is wjz, baltimore. >> from the city to the county to your neighborhood, now complete coverage on wjz 13, maryland's news station. it is 4:29, 55 degrees, and cloudy. hello, thanks for staying with eyewitness news. i'm denise coke. >> and i'm vick carter. here's what people are talking about. >> three new studies are shedding light on the h1n1 virus. doctors are getting a better understanding of who the virus attacks and how to treat critically ill patients. drew levinson has the findings for wjz in tonight's flood watch flu watch report. >> reporter: the great majority of people who get swine flu will recover on their own, but for patients who need hospitalization, their condition can quickly worsen, leading to intensive care and even death; and according to two new studies, severe illness is most common in relatively healthy adults and adolescents. >> it's the young adults who are much more likely to be hospitalized. >> reporter: the virus becomes dangerous when it attacks the lungs, depriving the body of oxygen, but a third h1n1 study finds a treatment usually reserved for premature babies and heart patients can help. it's called,chmo. the patient's blood is run through a machine that pumps oxygen into the blood before returning it to the body. >> the addition of this system assisted patients in recovering and doing better. >> reporter: the swine flu has sent thousands of people to emergency rooms, and doctors fear, if the virus spreads rapidly this fall, the number of sick could overwhelm some hospitals. >> this summer, a presidential advisory panel warned a massive out break could lead to almost 2 million hospital at missions. up to $300,000 people would require intensive care, taking upmost of the beds in the icu. >> when a younger person comes in with systems of the flu, the doctors will have to be more aware that they can turn rapidly ill. >> only about 1 in 1,000 people infected with h1n1 will become severely ill, but researchers warn, if half the population gets the virals, thousands could end up dying. in new york, drew levinson, wjz eyewitness news. and remember, wjz is always on. for complete flu watch coverage, including the latest information from the cdc go to wjz.com. money battles continue for the surviving children of dr. martin luther king, jr. sally is in the newsroom with the latest in this ongoing case. a special day turns or rick in florida when a man shoots and kills his fiance the day before their wedding. he says it was an accident. kelly kobie has the story for wjz. >> is she conscious right now? >> honest to god she looks dead. >> it was friday morning, 2:47 a.m. 62-year-old john tav it called 911 saying he thought he heard someone break into his home in winter springs, florida. he got his gun. he says he saw a figure in the hallway. >> i thought i had an intruder in the house, and i shot the intruder. the intruder is my wife. >> okay. >> and she's got a gunshot wound. >> okay. where is she shot at? >> right in the chest. >> by the time paramedics arrived, tav it's fiance, 62- year-old nancy dinsmore had died. he said he thought dinsmore had been in bed with him the whole time. >> we were supposed to get married this saturday. oh, god. >> reporter: investigators are awaiting forensic test results but say all indications point to a tragic accident. cbs news miami. >> and once again forensic results point to it being a tragic accident. >> the university community will pause this evening to remember a murdered grad student annie lay, who disappeared in september. her body was found stuffed in the wall of a science lab on campus. the university president among the speakers scheduled for tonight's memorial service. raymond clark the third a former lab technician has been charged with her murder. a high school marching band is mourning the loss of their teacher today after their bus crashed coming home from a competition. we explain, she died while trying to save her students' lives. >> reporter: the students on board the bus that crashed say they were watching a movie when suddenly the ride got very bumpy and out of control. one student said she saw her teacher scramble to the front of the bus and grab the steering wheel. >> i think that's when heather went through the front windshield. there were no seat belts in the buses, so we were all thrown around, and we were so scared. people were screaming. >> and then everyone calmed down enough to scramble to safety. >> we tried to get out of the bus as fast as possible. we had the staff running from other buses. the medical people arrived quickly. >> but not quickly enough to save the life of heather christianson who put her life on the line for others. many students could only watch and feel the horror. >> i looked out the window, and i saw a tipped bus, and immediately everyone stood up. people started talking, and i stood up and said, "everybody pleads sit down," and we started to pray. >> a chain of praying that stretched from bus to bus. >> i didn't hear any details, but i called one of my friends on the bus and said, "heather doesn't have a pulse, but they're working on it. and then mr. miller came on an hour later and said she was gone. >> everyone agrees, if it hadn't been for heather, the outcome could have been much different. >> i'm aware there was a ditch about 40 feet back, a pretty big ditch. if she wouldn't have kept that bus going straight for about 5 more seconds, there could have been a lot more deaths, i believe. >> 40 more students were injured in the crash. but all are expected to recover. the bus driver is in stable condition. police say a maryland woman died after falling eight stories from her public housing apartment. it happened at walnut tourist in hickerstown. 30 minutes before the accident, the woman told police she had been locked out of her apartment. police say she was trying to reach it when she fell from an 8th floor ball connie accessible from a common area in the building. carbon monoxide poisoning is an ongoing concern in ocean city. firefighters are aggressively making sure nobody else gets hurt. >> kai jackson is live in the newsroom with details. kai? >> yeah. >> the fee for noncompliance can reach $1,000 per dry per violation in an occupied build. it's been a cool columbus day feeling a lot more like autumn. take a live look out right now. still cloudy. what can we expect for the evening? wjz has weather and traffic together. bob is here now with up the dated numbers. bob? >> the sun is trying to get out of here. we have quite a few clouds a little bit of a slight drizzle down to the south. take a look at radar. extreme southern portions of maryland, the lower eastern shore there, just some light activity. i mean, you can barely see it. but there's plenty of clouds down there. very light rain going on. for news our part of the world, there may be some clearing later on, but we still have a slight chance of a shower, and tomorrow a nice warm-up, about 10 or 12 degrees warmer than today, which will take us back to normal with sunshine. denise? thank you, bob. let's check on the roads right now with sharon duvala. hello, sharon. >> quieter than normal on area roadways, because it is a holiday. as far as problems, only a few really. a few accidents, nothing too major. one of them on 95 in the southbound lanes at the fort mchenry tunnel. you can see speeds, close to full speed on the outer loop on the east side, we also have an accident just past eastern avenue. that is on the left shoulder. two accidents right at erd avenue. one more on dawson street at north utah. as far as delays go, slight ones on the top side. but they are actually an improved situation from about 15 minutes ago. on the topside outer loop, costing you three minutes between delaney and charles between 83 and delaney valley, only 2 minutes of a delay there. here's a look at the top side, looking good. here's a look at the west side. busy, but not congested. the traffic report wrought to you by home and garden. the 2009 home and garden and craft show will be held at the maryland fairgrounds the 16th through the 18th. for more information log on to md home and gardens. back to you. imagine you could go on vacation and still keep an eye on your house from anywhere in the world. with network cameras it's now reality. brian cooly has this week's seen it tech minute from wjz. >> you probably know about web cams, but even more fan are their big brother the network camera. a network camera is a lot like a web cam, except it has a built-in internet connection. it can work on any computer on the internet, even on your smart phone. some of them will let you zoom in and out and even listen in to what's going on where the camera is placed. great for keeping an eye on your kids when they come home from school or for your babysitter or keeping an eye on your pets, and many of the cameras have motion detection technology. they can send you a text or e- mail and tell you may want to log on and see what's going on because something is changing. a good camera in the range of 2 to $300. a couple of tips on using them. make sure you turn on the security when you install it on your network through your router so that just anybody can't log on and watch it. for wjz eyewitness news news, i'm brian cooly, cnet.com in san francisco. and wjz is always on. for more information on network cameras as well as other cnet.com reviews as well as views on technology, log on and click on the technology section. we have breaking news to report for you right now. captain mike perry is live in sky chopper 13 over this event in baltimore county. what's going on? it's near catonsville, mike. ahead, tragedy. while the former heavyweight champion says he doesn't want to know how his daughter died. a mystery deepens. what caused two people to die and more to fall ill at an arizona retreat. >> and it is gray and cool. bob is updating your first weather forecast. complete coverage continues. with -- vick carter seven years after the deadly bombs in bali, victims' relatives gather to remember their loved ones. 200 people were killed when islam immilitants blew up two night clubs on the resort nightclub in 2002. the victims were mostly young backpackers, including 7 emerges. today's anniversary is the first observance of the tragedy since the eggs cushion of the men charged in connection with the attack. new information emerging about the two people who died in a sweat lodge at a retreat. we're following the news from the newsroom. sally donnerer has more. sally? >> rner bays and dormersí (c) trellis has more. sally? >> thank you. autopsy results have not been released, but authorities have ruled out carbon monoxide poisoning as the cause. police want to know who abandoned a three-year-old child and why. a woman says a woman was sitting with a boy in her lap at a los angeles bus stop. she then got on a bus leaving the child behind. over the weekend, someone came forward, claiming to be the child's grandmother. police are still working to confirm the woman's identity. the stepmother of a missing florida girl has stirred up controversy since sitting down for an interview with the cbs early show last week. as maggie rodriguez reports, the woman who last saw the five- year-old continues to maintain her innocence. >> my story has not changed. it's the truth. >> reporter: from the beginning, 17-year-old misty cummings has insisted she had nothing to do with her stepdaughter's disappearance. >> i woke up. she was gone. >> reporter: . >> reporter: misty was babysitting haley and her little brother. >> the last time you had seen her before then was when? >> 10:00 when i laid down for bed. >> you put her to bed. >> uh-huh. she went to bed at 8:00. >> but your brother told police that when he went to the trailer that night that you were suppose delay putting haley to bed, you weren't there. did you go somewhere that night? >> no, i did not. did not leave my house at all. >> why did he tell police you weren't there? >> trying to get out of jail. that's what i think. >> so your brother was in jail. >> he was in jail. >> your own brother would betray you like that? >> that's how my family is. >> although police have focused their attention on misty, they appear to be no closer to making an arrest. >> if they had nothing on you, don't you think they would have moved on? >> i don't know what they're doing or anything like that. i mean, if that's what they've got to do to look into me to find haley, they can look into in to me, but they need to move on, because i'm not the right person. >> misty suggests the right person is someone from the other cited of the family. >> when you stay the other side of the family, you're talking about haley's natural mother? >> yes. >> why would she harm her own daughter? i mean, that's a pretty serious accusation. >> she wasn't close with her daughter. she admitted that they didn't have a close relationship with her daughter. >> so what do you believe in your heart of hearts she may have done? >> i don't know -- i don't think that she personally had anything to do with it. just someone on her side of the family. >> can you sit here and tell me with a hundred percent certainty that you had nothing to do with haley's disappearance. >> a hundred percent positive that i didn't have anything with haley gone missing, and i don't know who did. >> shortly after her appearance on the early show, the attorney for misty cummings said he would no longer represent her, but he wished her well. >> mike tyson says he doesn't want to know what led to the death of his four-year-old daughter. the boxing star says he's gotten past the initial arrange he felt due to his father's passing. tyson's daughter exus the died last may after her leg become stuck in a cord. doctors say the tragedy makes him even more appreciative of the family. a new title for one of hollywood's rising stars, unicef has named orlando bloom its newest goodwill ambassador. he has started in movies. he'll travel the globe representing the organization and advocating on behalf of needy children worldwide. russell crowe as a legendary out law. mark sty minutes has more. >> coming up our epic robin hood exclusive. we venture to the heart of nottingham village to join russell crowe on his breathtaking adventure. >> you told me you were day care the hiking, yoga, getting up at 4:30 in the morning. are you still on the routine? >> you can't do it fully when you start shooting. the weekends, i get probably three hours a day of working out on the weekends. >> wow. >> but when you start shooting, you've got to sort of hold on to your energy a little bit, because you don't know what would happen. >> and we didn't expect this to happen. >> oh, my. >> russell introducing us to his sword-wielding son. >> do you know how to use it? >> yeah. >> can you show us? >> you're asking for it now. you are so asking for it. good boy. hit that. >> good shot. that's good. >> s a tonight, new jon and kate legal developments as they brace for their courtroom battle tomorrow. plus csi miami with the bernie madoff money scandal ripped from the headlines. we'll have that and so much more coming up later right here on entertainment tonight. and that's at 7:30 right here on wjz 13. the prize of a lifetime for two american professors. earlier today the two professors were named nobel prize winners for economics. eleanor ostrun and oliver williamson won the award for their study of the way authority a exercised in companies and economic systems. the pair will share the $1.4 million given to the nobel prize winners. she is the first woman to ever win that award. >> excellent. >> a big moment for women. there's a definite chill in the air. >> bob has your updated weather forecast coming up after the commercial break. now first warning weather, complete forecast and the first warning of voter. >> i saw someone in the newsroom with a gigantic apple a few minutes ago. this is my favorite time of year. apples are year, apple picking time. >> yes. >> just be careful. look out for the yellow jackets, because there are plenty of those out there, too. it felt more like november than october this afternoon. only 05 now. the dew point is down at 43, humidity at 63%. northeast winds bringing that cool air in. the barometer right now is kind of holding steady, 30.29 inches. around the state it's been cool pretty much everywhere. 57 eastern, the warm spot ocean city. a few sprinkles down there, and 56 in oakland. most places didn't get out of the 50s all day long. and last night, it didn't get all that cold, because we did have cloud cover. right now, slightly seeing a northeast wind here. now tomorrow probably beginning to see a bit of a shift out of the northwest, which will clear things out, give us some sunshine for tomorrow, and temperatures will be going back up again probably just about normal tomorrow. as you see, a lot of clouds. early on, we had some clearing down to the south. but early during the day, clouds moved in. a few sprinkles. light showers up there to the northwest. breaks in the cloud cover, and also a few light sprinkles or showers across the appalachia mountains in pennsylvania. so it's possible tonight maybe we might see a brief shower. that is the snow across the plains. not a whole lot. but moving into canada. behind us some chilly air will be with us later this week. we had several systems that will be acting us. right now we're in between some light showers to the north, some heavier rain to the south. but tomorrow this rain to the south moves off as a front movers through the area. we'll see some sunshine. all in all tomorrow. our region gives us a chance of rain thursday and probably friday as well. and then it will move up the east coast, up here across new york state, new england, even as far south as maybe northern pennsylvania. they may see the first snowflakes of the fall. we'll be looking for that. a small advisory tomorrow. northwest winds clearing things out. the big temp down to 66. so tonight we may see a brief sprinkle or shower, although most places probably stay dry. about 49. tomorrow 68. more sunshine in the afternoon. but a little breezy. all in all a decent day, and wednesday looks nice as well. but thursday and friday, maybe into saturday, some additional showers expected along with chilly temps. >> okay. >> still to come on eyewitness news tonight. >> tragedy on the tracks, another marylander dies after being hit by a train. i'm mike holmgren at the scene in cecil county with the investigation and a closer look at this dangerous problem. coming up next, breaking knew. teenager killed, a 13-year- old is shot. what are these tents doing outside of gbac, and why are children being prevented from visiting the hospital, i'll explain coming up on wjz eyewitness news. and a soldier dies in basic training, what happened? >> check in on all these stories on wjz news, the news starts now. hi everybody i'm sally torner. >> i'm chad johnson. >> captain mike perry has more on what happened, mike. 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