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New Law to Improve Veteran Care, Wait Times

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 A veteran’s healthcare bill signed into law Thursday by President Barack Obama seeks to improve access to care and reduce long waits veterans have experienced when trying to see a doctor.

In San Diego, VA Medical Center administrators say they hope funding from the new law will allow them to expand and hire more doctors.

“We don't know the total amount that will be directed to VA San Diego, but we have prioritized our critical positions and are in a position to move very quickly once we know how much of those resources will be directed to us,” said Cynthia Abair, the acting medical center director.

She said they want to add access for veterans in several areas including dermatology, GI procedures and the sleep clinic.

VA San Diego will also use the funding to help pay for the expansion of two additional clinics so the medical center has a place to put new doctors and nurses.

The bill will allow veterans who cannot get an appointment in 30 days or live 40 miles away from the medical center to use providers closer to home by using the Choice Card.

Veteran Henry Nelson told NBC 7 he has been very happy with his care at the San Diego VA, but said the funding is needed to make improvements.

“The VA is not equipped for as many veterans as there are now,” said Nelson. “I mean, we just came back, thousands of them from overseas. That's like forcing a lot of veterans on the system that is only designed for so many.”

Abair said just in the last two months, wait times have improved overall at the San Diego VA. Established patients are being seen in an average of five days and new patients are seen on average in 20 days.


$330K in Meth Stuffed Into SUV's Panels

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Images of smuggling attempts at their finest.

Photo Credit: Border Patrol

Bomb Squad Detonates Destructive Device in Trunk

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A San Diego bomb team detonated a destructive device inside a vehicle's trunk in the Morena area Thursday evening.

San Diego Police were tipped off to a suspicious situation when they stopped a man and woman walking on Pacific Highway around 4:10 p.m.

During the officers' interaction with the couple, the woman was arrested for possession of a controlled substance, the SDPD says.

Police had reason to suspect something was not right inside the man's vehicle, so they searched it where it was parked near Anna Drive and Pacific Highway.

Inside the trunk, they found what police will only describe as a destructive device.

San Diego Fire-Rescue's bomb squad was called in to investigate and ultimately detonate the object.

The man was arrested for possessing the device.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Hillcrest Hosts 30th Annual CityFest

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Hillcrest will be buzzing this weekend – specifically right under the community’s famous namesake sign – as the 30th annual CityFest floods the streets.

The free outdoor street fair is on Sunday from 12 p.m. to 11 p.m. under the Hillcrest sign on 5th and University avenues. The event will boast music, arts, crafts and an international food court as more than 250 artisans and vendors set up shop across more than six blocks in the heart of the neighborhood.

There will also be a special kids’ zone for the little ones, as well as a petting zoo, carnival rides and waterslide.

For the party people, local bands and DJs will take over the pop-up stage and 21 and up beer garden will boast brews from the Hillcrest Brewing Co. and Budweiser. Some DJs are part of the CityFest Night portion of the event, an after-dark outdoor music and dance party.

In terms of parking, visitors can park free at the AT&T lot on Robinson and 7th avenues or at the San Diego Unified School District lot at 4100 Normal St. and take the CityFest trolley to the festival.

CityFest began in the summer of 1984 when Hillcrest residents gathered on 5th and University to celebrate the re-lighting of the Hillcrest sign in what later became known as the first-ever CityFest.

Today, organizers say the summertime street fest attracts about 150,000 attendees each year.

For more info, including maps, visit the event website.
 



Photo Credit: NBC 7 San Diego

New Downtown Murals Celebrate San Diego

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 Ten murals now on display in front of Horton Plaza show off reasons why millions love San Diego.

Artists painted the murals on the temporary wall surrounding the park’s expansion project after winning a contest sponsored by NBC 7 and Westfield Horton Plaza.

Each artist had to submit artwork that answered the question: Why I Love San Diego.

The colorful art shows a distinctly San Diego theme, highlighting the surf and sun.

“I think it’s pretty cool that our artwork will actually be up on Broadway,” said artist Sara Ritchie, a fourth grader.

Each artist had to submit a sketch of the artwork, and judges picked the top ten winners. Their drawings then had to go from paper to a 6 by 10-foot piece of canvas.

The artists started painting on July 14 and had until Aug. 1 to finish.

“I have a combination of collages of the cityscape, the hills, the Coronado Bridge and underwater scenes,” said artist Charlene Mosely, 24, a Fine Arts Major at SDSU.

“We’re very coastal, and then we have a history that includes missions and El Camino Real,” said 15-year-old artist Josh Tremain, whose work includes a mermaid.

On Thursday, the artists gathered to see their work on display for the first time, some looking on with a self-critical eye.

“I’m pretty happy with it,” said Tremain. “It’s kind of the first time I’ve ever painted, so it’s kind of a challenge, I guess. Now that I see it up, I see a lot of things wrong with it.

Others couldn’t keep the smiles off their faces.

“There’s always some things that if I could paint on and on and on I would add to it and fix up a little, but I liked how it turned out.”

The projects can be seen along Broadway between Broadway Circle and 4th Avenue.

Lifeguards Warn of Dangerous Rip Currents

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After a high number of rescues in the North County Wednesday, lifeguards are warning beachgoers about treacherous rip current conditions.

A large swell from the south is bringing big waves and strong rip currents to San Diego County, especially to the north, says Oceanside Beach Lifeguard Sgt. Mason Turvey.

About 32 people were pulled to shore by lifeguards in Oceanside Wednesday, and more rescues are expected Thursday and Friday during the swell’s peak. The area most at risk is Oceanside Harbor Beach, according to Turvey.

To prevent an emergency, lifeguards are contacting people in possible rip current areas, asking them to relocate and stay closer to shore.

They have also deployed a jet ski, which reaches victims faster in big surf than their boats.

Turvey says officials saw the dangerous conditions coming about a week ago as they tracked strong storms off the west coast of Mexico.

If you are not familiar with the area, officials recommend talking with the nearest lifeguard about where it is safe to get into the water. Those men and women study the surf every day and know which dangers to look for.

According to Turvey, 2014 has proved to be a busier year in terms of rescues compared to the past two, slower years. Lifeguards especially had their hands full with big swells and a huge number of visitors during the 4th of July week.

In June, a man and a teen swimming along Moonlight Beach drowned after getting swept up by a rip current.

Teen, Last to See Slain Cop Alive, Pays Respects

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A teenager who was the last person to see a San Diego police officer alive before he was fatally shot in the line of duty paid his respects to the slain hero Thursday.

City Heights resident Daveon Scott, now 16 years old, attended a remembrance ceremony for late SDPD Officer Jeremy Henwood three years to the day he was killed.

Alongside local leaders, community members and law enforcement, Scott remembered the fallen officer and the special moment they shared minutes before Henwood was mortally wounded by a gunman in City Heights on Aug. 7, 2011.

In his final act of kindness before his death, Henwood bought cookies for Scott at a McDonald’s restaurant on Fairmount Avenue.

Scott was hungry and short on change and Henwood, a total stranger, offered to buy him the cookies in a tender moment caught on surveillance tape. The two shared a smile and some small talk, with the officer telling Scott to work hard, before Henwood took off.

Moments later, Henwood was critically shot while sitting in his patrol car by suspect Dejon Marquee, who pulled up alongside the officer’s vehicle and opened fire in an unprovoked attack.



Marquee was later killed in a shootout with police officers outside his City Heights apartment. Henwood died from injuries sustained in the assault.

Three years after Henwood’s shooting, fellow officers gathered Thursday for a memorial ceremony at Officer Jeremy Henwood Memorial Park. A fundraiser was held throughout the day at the very McDonald’s where Henwood met Scott.



For Scott, like so many others, the memory of the slain officer lingers, especially on Aug. 7.

“This day is not just another day. It’s a day that your body feels cold. It makes me feel hurt and sad,” the teenager told NBC 7. “I’m happy that I met the guy before it was his time to go because everything happens for a reason.”

The teen said he thinks of Henwood often and that meeting the compassionate cop changed his outlook.

“It changed my perspective on policemen. I used to not like policemen. Now I don’t think they’re bad. We need them – without officers it would be chaos in City Heights. It would be chaos everywhere,” said Scott.

The teen remembers how happy and grateful he was when Henwood bought him those cookies and took time to talk to him at the McDonald’s. When Scott found out the officer had been shot moments after their interaction, he was devastated.

“I couldn’t believe it,” he recalled. “I’m sad he had to go.”

As he paid tribute to Henwood, Scott said he closed his eyes, tapped into his memory and remembered the officer's face clearly.

“I know he’s looking down on me right now, shaking his head like, ‘You’re a good kid, man,’” he added.



Photo Credit: NBC 7 San Diego

Track Employee Rescues Boy From Fire

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It wasn’t his usual routine.

But Del Mar Races employee David Martinez happened to be driving by a trailer up in flames Wednesday morning and made a startling discovery: A 7-year-old boy was trapped inside, inches from being burned.

“I couldn’t believe it at first,” the 38-year-old said. “Just, ‘Oh, you’re kidding – there’s a fire going on?’ Then I started getting really scared.”

He was scared because it was 5:45 in the morning and he knew people in the trailers were sleeping.  He did a U-turn and came back to the trailer. Then, he honked his truck horn repeatedly. 

“I could see fire coming out of here and smoke billowing across the front, so I came up and just pounded on the door as loud as I could,” Martinez said.

Martinez opened the trailer door and saw the flames. When he started crawling on the floor, he had to turn back when he heard a small voice. But he couldn’t see past all the smoke.

He went to a window outside the trailer where he could finally make out that a small boy was inside.

“When I pulled this window open the little boy was sitting right in here and his head was here,” Martinez said. “His legs curled up. I just reached in and grabbed him.”

How close to the flames was the boy?

“Right around his head,” Martinez said. “It was pretty intense.”

The boy, the son of an exercise rider, is doing OK and his father is grateful for Martinez’s heroics. The blaze was determined to be an electrical fire.

As for Martinez, he doesn’t consider himself a hero, although the whole track has given him that distinction.

“I can’t say I didn’t think about it. Just wasn’t an option, especially when you hear the little voice,” he said. “What do you do? I’m just glad I came back.”


Driver in Zombie Walk Crash: "I Panicked"

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The driver whose car ran over a pedestrian near Comic-Con has opened up about the incident, telling an online news site that his family's safety was his priority.

On Saturday, July 26, a black Honda Accord was stopped near 2nd and Island Avenues and waiting for participants of the Zombie Walk to cross the intersection.

Video from witnesses shows the car suddenly move forward, rolling through the crowd. A 64-year-old woman was injured. San Diego police said she was taken to a nearby hospital with non-life threatening injuries. Two other people suffered minor injuries. 

The 48-year-old driver, a deaf man, was not cited and not arrested, officials tell NBC 7.

He was not identified in the interview with iDeaf News but did give his side of the story. 

The interview, done in American Sign Language and captioned by someone at the online news site, runs five minutes and covers what happened in the moments before the crash to how San Diego police handled the situation.

“I panicked about my family. Everything was a blur about what happened to this woman," the driver signed according to the report.

He said he was leaving Comic-Con after having worked as a volunteer. In his car were his girlfriend, his girfriend's sister and her son.

As he was waiting at the intersection, he said a woman walked up to the car to speak to him. He decided to open the window and ask someone what was going on.

At that point, the driver says he became confused and describes people sitting and leaning on his car and laughing at him.

“I couldn’t trust anything,” the driver signed according to the report.

He said when he honked his horn and moved slowly, one man punched his front window and another person opened a back door.

"That’s when I plowed my car through the crowd. I had to do this to save my family," the report quotes him as saying. "Once they broke my front window and the car door opened, I had to move my car quickly."

In the interview, the driver goes on to say that he was unaware he had struck someone until he talked with a police officer away from the crowd.

The driver said he has cried over the incident and lost sleep.

“She is all I can think about,” he signed according to the report.

According to the SDPD, several people from the crowd surrounded the car and began punching it, shattering the windshield.

Witnesses in the crowd gave a different account. 

Diana Jackson, who said she was about 10 people away, told NBC 7 on Facebook that the driver took off with such aggression "that his tires squealed."

Counter to police information, witness Sean Foley said the driver's window was broken after he hit people in the crowd, not before. 

According to the Twitter page for the SDZombieWalk, participants of the event had nothing to do with the incident.

While the incident remains under investigation, a San Diego police spokesperson told NBC 7 Thursday that the driver has not been cited.

Stalked Student Seeks Right to Carry Gun at University

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A San Diego woman who attends Dartmouth College in New Hampshire is seeking permission to carry a concealed weapon on campus to protect herself against a man who’s been stalking her for four years.

Taylor Woolrich, 20, a junior at the Ivy League school, is pushing for legislation that would allow her to carry a concealed weapon after the college denied her request. Woolrich shared her story at the Students for Concealed Carry national conference at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., in a video published on YouTube this week.

During her speech, Woolrich went into detail about the 67-year-old San Diego man, Richard Bennett, who’s stalked her since she was in high school and why she feels she needs to be armed for her own protection against him.

Woolrich said she lives each day in fear, wondering “what if?”

“What if today’s the day? What if today’s the day that he posts bail? What if today is the day that he realizes that I live in a gun-free zone?” Woolrich asked at the conference. “I go to sleep. I wake up. I walk out the door. I look on Facebook. I look in the rearview mirror. I can miss lecture. Everything that I do, I’m constantly wondering ‘What if?’ because I have no way to protect myself.”

According to Woolrich, Bennett began stalking her in late 2010 when she was 16 and worked at a coffee shop in San Diego’s East County.

Like all other customers, Woolrich served him coffee with a smile. Soon enough, she said he began coming into the coffee shop every single day, sometimes sitting there all day during her shift.

Woolrich said Bennett would allegedly follow her home and to work on the highway in the mornings. She was frightened, but didn’t think she had anything to worry about at first.

The situation came to a climax a few months later when, according to Woolrich, Bennett attempted to attack her high school boyfriend by throwing a hot cup of coffee in his face and telling him to stay away from her.



After that, Woolrich sought a restraining order against Bennett. The document was filed in August 2011 and was valid for three years – until this month.

Despite the restraining order, Woolrich said her stalker continued to contact her. He reached out to her on social media and when she went off to study at Dartmouth College, he managed to figure out where she lived.

Last summer, Woolrich said she came home to San Diego from college and by the next morning, Bennett was knocking on the front door of her parents’ home.

Her family called police and they arrested Bennett. Woolrich said that when officers searched his car, they discovered suspicious items such as maps of the area, duct tape, a rope tied into a slip noose and hunting knives.

Woolrich said police executed a search warrant at Bennett’s home and found her Dartmouth address, her parents’ address, information about her family and photos of Woolrich and her fiancé with his face scratched out.



With that, police filed a felony stalking charge against Bennett.

Woolrich filed another protective order against him on June 10, 2014, alleging that Bennett stalked her with a court order in effect between Aug. 1, 2011, and June 6, 2014. The document also charges Bennett with the unlawful possession of a firearm while under a restraining order.

Today, Bennett is being held on $300,000 bail at the George Bailey Detention Facility in San Diego. He’s charged with disobeying a court order and stalking, among other counts. Inmate records show he’s scheduled to appear in court on Aug. 12.

Woolrich fears Bennett will post bail or the charges will be dismissed, meaning he’d have access to her once again.

For this reason, Woolrich has asked Dartmouth to obtain a concealed weapons permit. She said she wants to be in control of her own safety given her situation.

The campus has denied her request and instead suggested she call for a campus security escort any time she feels unsafe. Woolrich said she’s called several times, but has allegedly been told not to call so much.

“My stalker doesn’t really care what time of day it is. He doesn’t care whether it’s light or dark or if I’m on the East Coast or the West Coast or in another country,” she said in the YouTube clip.

In a statement to “TODAY,” the university said:

"The safety and security of all Dartmouth students is a top priority. Any student who reports being stalked is provided with individualized attention and heightened protection. If there are improvements to our security services that we can make, we will. Like the vast number of colleges and universities across the country, Dartmouth has a policy that prohibits handguns on campus. As the American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU) has stated, 'Even with the best of intentions, armed students or employees could escalate an already explosive situation further, accidentally cause harm or use a gun in a situation that is not warranted.'"

"All Dartmouth students are part of a tight-knit community. We do everything we can to support and care for our students so that their time on campus is safe and productive."


“TODAY” reports that according to Dartmouth’s website, nearly all weapons are prohibited on campus, with an exception for “hunting rifles, knives, bows [and] archery supplies” that are registered and stored with the Department of Safety and Security.



Woolrich spoke to “TODAY” Thursday to elaborate on her case, noting that the university is taking steps to helping her feel safe on campus.

"My intention was not to join the political debate on gun control, but to speak out about my situation in hopes of bringing awareness to the distressing challenges faced by victims of stalking," she told “TODAY” in a statement.

"He is still awaiting trial... It’s a terrifying, emotional time for my family and me. I was concerned about not being able to protect myself once he is released from prison in the future. I think that my emotions on stage and my statements taken out of context online have led my message to be extremely misconstrued. At Dartmouth, we are a family. They are doing everything possible to ensure I’m safe and comfortable coming back to campus this fall."
 



Photo Credit: YouTube

Baby Boom Hits DFW Nearly 9 Months After Ice Storm

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Business is busier than ever for some hospitals across North Texas as a baby boom, not so surprisingly, is hitting almost nine months after the ice storm wreaked havoc across the Metroplex.

"The storm comes, and what else is there to do but stay inside and keep each other company?" said LaToya Scales, a nurse at Baylor Medical Center in Dallas.

She said it's not uncommon to see more births during the later summer months, but now more than ever, Baylor is bursting at the seems with babies.

"We're seeing more births. We've had 50 more deliveries in July than we did this time last year," Scales said.

She said on an average day, doctors will deliver 10 babies per day. Last month, they had 24 deliveries in just one day.

"We say it's job security. We'll never be out of a job," Scales joked.

One couple who cozied up during the storm was Monica and Marcus Sais.

The family had wanted a second child and after years of trying and no luck, but just weeks after the storm, Monica Sais said she got her Christmas present early when she found out she was pregnant.

Monica Sais said it's not just her. She has at least five friends who are all due within the upcoming weeks.

"It all makes sense. What else are you going to do when it's cold outside? Snuggle up!" she said.

This week, she received the perfect present in the form of her newborn son, Luca.

Weighing in an 9 pounds 2 ounces, he has a new nickname his parents might keep to themselves.

"We can call him that: Luca Winter Baby Boom," Monica Sais said.



Photo Credit: NBC 5 News

Man Crusades for Better Egg Sandwiches in NYC

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One Brooklyn man is hoping to make a stand against subpar breakfast sandwiches in midtown Manhattan and is raising money to send out instructional pamphlets to the area’s delis and bodegas.

Journalist Joseph Checkler launched a Kickstarter campaign to print and mail recipe suggestions to every business that sells egg sandwiches between 33rd and 55th streets from Park Avenue to Ninth Avenue.

“I will save the adequate-but-underachieving NYC egg sandwich by delivering instructional leaflets to all Midtown egg-sandwich makers,” Checkler said on the campaign's Kickstarter page.

He briefly outlined his suggestions for improving the breakfast sandwiches, recommending that cooks fry the eggs for shorter periods, use fresh sausage or bacon rather than reheated meat and put up to three slices of cheese on each sandwich.

Checkler said he didn’t want to offend cooks at delis and bodegas across the city -- he just wants to improve the quality of one of the Big Apple’s breakfast staples.

“I just think that at some point, certain delis started making sandwiches in a less delicious way and I want to revisit the time where they were more delicious,” he said.

The fundraising campaign, launched on July 24, has already hit its $310 goal. Checkler said on the page that for additional funding, he would send his pamphlets to more restaurants in Manhattan.

He said he also plans to for similar campaigns in the city’s other four boroughs.

Mom Dies After Philly Carjacking

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A brutal carjacking and hit-and-run crash that killed three children nearly two weeks ago has claimed another victim: the kids' mother.

Keisha Williams died just before 10 p.m. Thursday night at Temple University Hospital where she had been undergoing trauma care since the July 25 incident, Philadelphia Police said.

The 34-year-old mother was hit by an out-of-control SUV, that had been carjacked minutes earlier, at the intersection of Germantown and Allegheny Avenues. She, her three children and a family friend were selling fruit to raise money to build a playground.

All three children -- 15-year-old Keiearra Williams, 10-year-old Joseph Thomas Reed and 7-year-old brother Terrence Moore -- were killed while the family friend, 65-year-old Thelma Brown, survived.

Williams remained in a coma after the crash, officials said. It appears she did not know her children had been killed. She leaves behind two other children who were not involved in the crash.

Jonathan Rosa, 19, and Cornelius Crawford, 23, are already charged with second-degree murder in the deaths children and face other charges for allegedly carjacking and sexually assaulting the real estate agent before running down a family selling fruit on the sidewalk.

Prosecutors say they plan to add an additional murder charge in light of Williams' passing.

Homicide Capt. James Clark said Crawford and Rosa wanted to commit a robbery when they forced a real estate agent into her white Toyota SUV at gunpoint at 6th and Cumberland Streets around 11 a.m. that Friday. They then took off. Inside the truck, the Realtor was sexually assaulted as the suspects sped through the streets of the Tioga section of North Philadelphia.

After one of the SUV's tires blew, the vehicle jumped the curb and slammed directly into the family as they stood at their fruit stand. 

The children were laid to rest earlier this week. The funeral was paid for by Philadelphia 76ers legend Charles Barkley, according to authorities.

Rosa admitted to being involved in the carjacking, but denies driving the car and sexually assaulting the realtor, according to his attorney. Crawford has not made any statements and has a court appointed attorney.

Both are scheduled to appear for a preliminary hearing next Wednesday.



Photo Credit: NBC10.com

Watch: "Lion King" Cast Surprises Subway Riders

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Some unsuspecting New Yorkers were treated to a surprise performance from the megahit Broadway musical "The Lion King" when cast members took over a subway car and sang "Circle of Life." 

The impromptu performance happened on June 28 while the cast was taking a break between shows, though the video was only posted to YouTube on Tuesday by cast member Jamal Lee Harris. 

The video shows the plainclothed actors getting on an A train at 59th Street and busying themselves at first with typical subway activities: reading books, listening to music, scrolling through cellphones.

Then the first telltale notes of "Circle of Life" ring out, and cast members stationed up and down the car join in.

Fellow subway riders initially appear confused and surprised, then delighted before bursting into loud applause and cheers at the end of the song. 

In April, the Australian cast of "The Lion King" put on a similar performance on a flight leaving Brisbane.

Based on the popular Disney film, "The Lion King" is the fifth longest-running show and the highest grossing show in Broadway history, according to The Broadway Box.

Woman Falls Off Roof of Clairemont Store

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A woman fell off the roof of a Clairemont store Friday and fell 15 feet, hitting her head.

Emergency crews were called to the Crown Ace Hardware at 4615 Clairemont Drive in Clairemont Town Square around 1:30 a.m. and found a man on the roof of the building.

He was up there with a woman apparently before the woman decided to try and make it down and fell through an awning, landing on the ground 15 feet below.

Emergency personnel rushed her to a nearby hospital with head injuries, officials said.

San Diego police said the pair were drunk and trespassing but there was no evidence of an attempted burglary.

The man and woman will face charges of trespassing.

 



Photo Credit: NBC 7

Chargers Open Pre-Season With a Bang

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In their first game of the 2013 pre-season, the Chargers got smashed by the Seahawks 31-10. While both teams had their starters in the game, it was a fairly even match.

However, when the second and third teams hit the field, Seattle's depth was laughably better than San Diego's depth.

On Thursday night at Qualcomm Stadium, the Chargers did to the Cowboys what they had done to them a year ago by the Seahawks.

The Bolts depth was markedly better than the Cowboys, leading to a 27-7 Chargers win. San Diego's first-team offense played just one series, and it was stellar up until the last play.

Quarterback Philip Rivers completed all four of his passes for 61 yards, including a 20-yard strike to tight end Ladarius Green on 3rd and 5. The Bolts moved the ball to the 1-yard line, when running back Ryan Mathews tried to leap in to the end zone but fumbled before he reached the goal line.

The Cowboys recovered in the end zone and scored against mostly the Chargers' second defensive unit. After that, it was all Chargers.

Undrafted rookie running back Branden Oliver had several head-turning runs. He finished with 64 yards on seven carries and a hard-fought, 16-yard touchdown run. Every year an unknown player becomes a fan favorite, and Oliver is the clubhouse leader in that category for 2014.

New quarterback Kellen Clemens did his part to make people forget about long time backup Charlie Whitehurst. Clemens completed all five of his passes, including a 70-yard score to former CFL star Dontrelle Inman.

Inman caught three balls for 107 yards, taking the inside track on the 5th wide receiver roster spot.

The Chargers defense was solid, as well. In the second half, the Bolts only allowed 95 total yards of offense. Thomas Keiser sacked Dallas quarterback Caleb Hanie, forcing a fumble that was recovered by Damik Scafe.

That turnover set up a Kerwynn Williams 1-yard touchdown run to make it 24-7 Chargers.

It's just an exhibition game, but winning big is still better than losing big. The Bolts showed a quality roster that's light years ahead of where it was at this time last year.

If they improve as much during 2014 and they did in 2013, they will be a legitimate Super Bowl contender.

(I know, I know, just let us all be unnecessarily excited for a week)



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Persons of Interest in Flag Mystery

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Authorities have identified persons of interest in connection with the Brooklyn Bridge white flag mystery, Police Commissioner Bill Bratton tells NBC 4 New York, but the city's top cop won't say when arrests may be executed. 

Officials had said they were looking for four people captured on video entering the Brooklyn Bridge around the time two bleached-white American flags were planted on the span July 22. They were found fluttering that morning from poles perched on the stone supports where two American flags are normally positioned, confusing passersby, who weren't sure if it was a publicity stunt or something more nefarious, and stumping police. 

Bratton said police believe they know what happened -- and who did it.

"We believe we know who a number of the people are that engaged in that action and that investigation is moving forward and is consuming a lot of investigatory resources as it should," Bratton told NBC 4 New York. "That event should not have happened."

The police commissioner also said the investigation indicated there was "no terrorist threat" involved.

Investigators have been running license plate numbers, scouring social media, examining cellphone transmissions and collecting DNA as part of their investigation. 

The high-quality flags, measuring about 11 feet about 20 feet, were made out of white linen, and the stars were individually stitched on, according to a senior law enforcement official. There were also large aluminum pans affixed over the bridge lights that normally illuminate the flags, secured with zip ties.

The NYPD obtained a small amount of DNA from the flags or tin pans that investigators planned to test. It wasn't clear if the results from that DNA test helped police identify the persons of interest.

The bridge is one of the most heavily secured landmarks in the city, constantly monitored by surveillance cameras.

The American flags fly from above the pillars year-round and are replaced by transportation workers when they become frayed about every two months, police said. They are lit from the bottom by a lamp at the base of each tower at night. 

More than 120,000 vehicles, 4,000 pedestrians and 3,100 bicyclists cross the Brooklyn Bridge every day, said the city's Department of Transportation, which maintains the crossing.



Photo Credit: AP

Gift Me: College-Bound Turn to Registries

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Teens across the country are now applying a tradition once reserved for brides-to-be and expectant mothers to another life milestone: going away to college.

Faced with rising costs and more options for dorm decor, thousands of students a year are creating online registries asking family and friends to help complete their shopping lists. 

Triniti Henry hadn't even decided which college she would attend when she started thinking about all the things she'd need in her freshman year. As she weighed her choices, the 18-year-old compiled a list on her phone of must-haves for transitioning from home to dorm life.

"After I was finished I just looked over and I kept scrolling through everything," the Oak Park, Illinois,  resident said. "I was surprised at how long it was, how much stuff I need."

So she logged on to MyRegistry.com, where she filled a graduation gift wish list with everything from hangers to iPhone speakers. She sent the link to family as part of an invitation to a graduation party.

The teen's mother said the registry was helpful both for organizing their shopping list and giving family the opportunity to pitch in as she prepares to send her only child to college. 

"She received scholarships and everything, thank God for that, but with everything else, we just needed that help so we were like, yes we need to do a party and invite people and have them help," Tabitha Henry said. 

The Henrys aren't alone in feeling the purchasing pinch of going to college. Average spending on furniture, supplies and electronics is expected to hit more than $900 per family this year, an increase of 10 percent from 2013, according to the National Retail Federation's  annual "Back-to-College Survey." Businesses, meanwhile, see an opportunity to cash in on what the retailers'group expects to be a $48.4 billion back-to-college spending season.

"They need so many things and when they make a list it’s good for everybody," said Nancy Lee, president of MyRegistry.com. "It’s good for the retailers because the things get purchased, but they’re not getting hit with returns. ... It’s good for the student because they were able to specify what they wanted."

Lee, whose site allows users to register for a wedding, a baby, or create a general registry for an occasion of their choosing, has seen an uptick in registry use by the college-bound. Two years ago, the idea of creating a graduation or school supply page wasn't even on the radar of top executives. Now, she estimates thousands of registries are created for that purpose each year.

Target launched its own college registry in June. The site attracted thousands of users in the first month live, spokeswoman Jenna Reck said. Reck attributes the interest in part to the young shopper's desire to incorporate more personal style into their purchases.

"On the college side, we’re definitely seeing a trend toward personalization, people not wanting a boring white comforter," she said. "They want a dorm room that reflects their personality."

The chance to customize her dorm style -- and hopefully the graduation gifts she'd receive -- drove Christine Campbell to give Target's registry a try. The decorating and interior design fan, who lives in the Philadelphia suburb of Harleysville, filled her site with extra-long sheets, decorative cork-board letters and throw pillows adorned with giraffes, flowers and foxes.

She figured creating a college-specific wish list for things she'd need in her first year at Liberty University increased her chances of getting gifts she actually wanted, instead of cash, which she would likely save. Plus, using Target's service, she said, was "not as awkward as sending out a wedding one when I’m not getting married."

As someone who came to age in a time of online shopping, Facebook and Pinterest, sharing the link with family and friends felt natural.

"We’ve been sharing our whole lives so why not just share something we want instead of you trying to guess what we want," she said.

While that view may be common among young consumers, use of registries for college is still a new, and relatively rare, concept. Some caution that asking family and friends to foot the bill for decorations to spruce up the traditionally spartan dorm experience could be seen as extravagant or entitled, especially among older generations. 

"If you go into a registry and create this category, you might come across as being selfish and a bit arrogant to ask for it," said Lars Perner, a professor of marketing at the University of Southern California's Marshall School of Business.

Those feelings may deter people from being the first among a group of friends or family to give the idea a try, he said. But changes in etiquette, and the popularity and ease of online shopping, could lead use to become more common and accepted. 

"Norms change over generations certainly and certainly this generation is much more brazen than previous generations," he said. "So maybe this is the new norm."

The registry tradition itself is fairly new in the U.S. In 1935, Macy's launched what it says was the country's first registry experience, a "Brides House" on the eighth floor of its Chicago store. The section was fully furnished and staffed with "advisor to the bride," intended to "give the bride suggestions on her new home from kitchen to bedroom," Macy's says.

The concept spread, with more stores, and later websites, offering services tailored to both for weddings and other less traditional occasions, like getting a dog or finalizing a divorce.

"It's gotten almost whimsical," said Barbara Kahn, director of the Jay H. Baker Retailing Center at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business. "But this notion of back to school and this milestone of going to college is back in keeping with the original premise."

Like starting a new home with a spouse or welcoming a first child, leaving for college has "become an orchestrated shopping experience triggered on this change of life event," Kahn said. Unlike other similar turning points, such as a major move, starting college creates both a purchasing need and a sense of sentimentality.

"My prediction is this will catch on because this one does make sense," Kahn said. "You really want to wish the kids a good start. It's a life-changing event and there's just so much of an emotional thing."

Lee, the MyRegistry.com executive, believes the ease of sharing and buying items online, as well as shifts in gift-giving etiquette, have also paved the way for the trend.

"If somebody wants to get a gift back in the olden days we would smile politely and either return it, regift it or stick it in the closet," she said. "I think people are starting to be more practical."

On an even more practical level, the rising expense of school is driving use. That was the case for Triana Rivera. Even with scholarships and GI Bill funds helping cover the Georgia teen's tuition costs at Mercer University, the tab for staples like a comforter and a water pitcher for her dorm fridge added up.

"That really sent me in the real world, that not everything my parents can buy," she said of seeing her shopping list.

So she created a registry online, filled with basic supplies and a few frills, and and sent it to family who live as far as Colorado and Spain. It wasn't long before her desired items started to arrive, allowing the aspiring chemistry and psychology double major to focus on her dream of becoming a doctor instead of paying for the things she needs.

"Actually getting that package at the door," she said. "It made me really relieved that I could rely on a website to get what I wanted."

 

 

 

 



Photo Credit: Getty Images/Fuse

Rested Padres Face Equally Hot Pirates

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Not that you ever turn down a day off at this point in the season, but the Padres have to be looking to get back on the field before they cool down.

The hottest team in baseball got a rare two off days this week and is now well rested heading to Pittsburgh to take on the Pirates this weekend.

After splitting a two-game series with the Minnesota Twins, the Friars have won six of their last eight and still only have one series loss since the All-Star break. They lead the league in hitting and are third in the National League in runs scored during that time with 84. Of course, the team in the other dugout is first in that category with 94.

The Pirates are almost as hot, winning four of six and seven of their last 11.

Could we see a slugfest this weekend at PNC Park? Well, let’s not get carried away.

Matchups:
Friday, 4:05 p.m.:
Ian Kennedy (R, 8-9, 3.59) vs. Vance Worley (R, 4-1, 2.43)
The winner of three straight decisions, Kennedy also beat the Pirates back in June. Worley has allowed just two earned runs in his last three starts.

Saturday, 4:05 p.m.: Eric Stults (L, 4-13, 4.94) vs. Nelson Liriano (L, 3-7, 3.91)
Well, it’s nice to see a Padres player atop the stat list, even if it is Stults leading the league in losses. He’s coming off 6 1/3 scoreless innings in his last start, a win over the Braves. After going more than two months without making it through six innings, Liriano now has three straight quality starts.

Sunday, 10:05 a.m.: Tyson Ross (R, 10-10, 2.62) vs. Charlie Morton (R, 5-10, 3.43)
The streak of two or less earned runs is up to nine starts for Ross. Is there a better .500 pitcher in the league? No, there is not. Morton has just one decision (a loss) in the last month.

What’s at stake: After literally decades of meaningless baseball in Pittsburgh, the Pirates find themselves in the playoff hunt for the second straight year. They trail the Milwaukee Brewers by a game and a half for the NL Central lead and are just a half-game out of the wild card. In fact, the Central could get three playoff teams if the Cardinals hold on and the Bucs beat out San Francisco.
They are separated from the Padres by 8 ½ games and four teams in the wild card race. Seems like a whole other world.

The Pirates took two out of three at Petco in June. This is the last time the teams wills see each other this season.

Who to watch:
Padres:
It’s almost harder to find a player in this lineup who is not hot. First baseman Yonder Alsonso had six hits and a homer against the Twins and is hitting .429 over his last 10 games. Outfielder Tommy Medica is staying hot after his five-hit, two-homer performance last week. He has 10 hits in his last five games. Shortstop Everth Cabrera is breaking out of a months-long slump with nine hits and 4 RBIs in his last five. And we obviously have to mention Seth Smith, who leads the team in just about everything, including average (.290), homers (12) and RBIs (34). He also has a four-game hitting streak.

Pirates: First off, who we won’t see is reigning MVP Andrew McCutchen, who might be facing a trip to the disabled list after breaking a rib. We will see Josh Harrison, who has been mauling the ball over an 11-game hit streak. He has five home runs and 21 hits over that stretch. Catcher Russell Martin is working on a six-game streak of his own and has seven RBIs in that time.

Coming up: The Friars head home to face the Colorado Rockies next week before embarking on a 10-game road trip that includes the Cardinals, Dodgers and Diamondbacks.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

El Niño Chances Decrease for Drought-Stricken California

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Just a few months ago, the forecast for a wet winter looked promising. But the summer has revealed a drier future.

Now, the climate foresight is part of the extensive oceans exhibit at the California Science Center in Exposition Park with a global view of what covers 70 percent of the earth.

Chuck Kopczak, the center's curator of ecology, has been keeping a close watch on a developing El Niño in the western Pacific Ocean, which has led to wet winters in Southern California in the past.

"We're hoping for rain, we need rain," Kopczak told NBC4 Thursday. "That warm water that is evaporating into the atmosphere bringing more humidity, more moisture in the air, and of course if we've got more moisture in the air, there's more water to fall as rain."

NASA satellites indicated a strong El Niño was taking shape this year, but the National Weather Service reduced the odds that it will develop by next winter from 80 percent to 65 percent.

The NWS found the warming of the tropical Pacific Ocean had actually reversed in July, and an expected atmospheric signal of El Niño has yet to emerge.

"And so it's the difference in air pressure between those two points in the Pacific Ocean that sort of details or determines how strong an El Niño might be," Kopczak said.

With climate so difficult to predict, experts still aren't sure the amount of warming that will take place, and how much rain -- if any -- will be the result.

"We just hope," Kopczak said. "All the cards have to fall in the right order in order for it to produce a lot of rain necessarily."
 

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