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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Steve Fiorina has been at 10News for 35 years and, in that time, has covered some incredible victories. San Diego applauded when the Padres went to the World Series in '84, facing the Detroit Tigers.And again in '98 to take on the New York Yankees. No championship rings but the Pads made it to the grand stage.The Chargers hit the pinnacle with their '94 season, Super Bowl XXIX in Miami, January, 1995; San Francisco 49ers versus the San Diego Chargers.10News put out the word that we would simulate a road trip to Miami, flying into six cities you would pass through if driving the route. Chargers fans meeting us all along the way.People lining the street to welcome us and a massive rally at the high school gym.And the Chargers fight song rang out, too. The refrain repeated the next day in New Orleans.Final destination: Miami. A lopsided loss; 49ers trounced our guys, 49 to 26, but it was an electrifying time for Chargers fans.Every year the Padres home opener is a day-long party. Before Petco Park was built, we flew to Baltimore to illustrate the charm of Camden Yards; the template for our new ballpark.A personal thrill--seeing Tony Gwynn presented his 6th Silver Slugger award from another Hall of Famer; my boyhood baseball idol, the Cardinals' Stan the Man Musial.Last year, watching as a crowd of fans paid tribute to Mr. Padre. Tony's statue now gracing the Lake Poway Park near where he made his home.San Diego cherishes it's military; the Padres inviting and saluting our service men and women.And who can forget the pageantry of Opening Day at Del Mar Racetrack?Comic Con is magnificent! Almost a week of fun and fantasy every summer.Let's go back to 1985, when the Christian Emergency Relief Team out of Carlsbad invited us along on a mission of mercy. Flying to Honduras, along the border during the Nicaraguan War. These Angels of the Jungle built a hospital and treated these fragile refugees.There are angels out in force every spring at the Embarcadero Marina Park North. The Celebration of Champions honors the doctors and nurses at Rady Children's Hospital and raises the spirits of hundreds of children and their families fighting to live healthy, happy lives. Sports figures and media types running with these champions and honoring those tearfully paying homage to the ones who've passed. It's an emotional day.4th of July is a blast! Thousands descend on Scripps Ranch each year. Snow Summit was a bit colder but a fabulous time as well.Finally we remember a little Lakeside girl: an Angel in Heaven, Hero on Earth, Forever in our Hearts. Kiera Larsen was ten years old when the family SUV began rolling down the driveway toward her playmates. She ran over and pushed two younger friends to safety but was crushed to death herself. Kiera was recognized with a Carnegie Hero medal and a personal letter from then President Barack Obama. We celebrate Kiera. 2918
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Several designated cool zones around San Diego County are open to help San Diegans stay cool amid extreme heat conditions.Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, public health and safety measures will be in place at each of the locations. According to county officials, all visitors and staff at the cool zones will be required to wear face coverings and practice social distancing. Also, temperature checks will be conducted before anyone enters a cool zone and time limits will be enacted due to limited capacity.Animals, except service animals, are not permitted in cooling zones.LATEST 10NEWS PINPOINT WEATHER FORECASTHours and locations are listed below (UPDATED SEPT. 4):CITY OF SAN DIEGOEach facility will be open from 12 to 5 p.m. starting Friday through Sunday, Sept. 6, 2020. Additional locations may be added and dates extended depending on the severity and duration of the heat wave. Service animals will be allowed entry.MLK Recreation Center6401 Skyline DriveMountain View Community Center641 South Boundary DriveMid-City Gymnasium4302 Landis StreetCesar Chavez Community Center455 Sycamore RoadPhone: (619) 424-0464Hourglass Fieldhouse10440 Black Mountain RoadOcean Air Recreation Center4770 Fairport DriveRancho Bernardo Recreation Center18448 West Bernardo DriveTierrasanta Recreation Center11220 Clairemont Mesa Blvd.CITY OF CHULA VISTAChula Vista Center shopping mall (former Sears building)565 BroadwayM-F 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Sat. & Sun. 12 p.m.-5 p.m., open Labor Day 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Each visitor will have temperature checked before entryFace coverings required, social distancing will be enforcedWater allowed, food is notNo pets allowedCOUNTY OF SAN DIEGO Alpine Branch Library1752 Alpine BoulevardAlpine, 91901619-445-4221M-F 12 p.m.-5 p.m.; open Sat. & Sun. 12 p.m.-5 p.m., closed Labor DayBorrego Springs Library2580 Country Club RoadBorrego Springs, 92004760-767-5761M-F 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Sat. & Sun. 12 p.m.-5 p.m., open Labor Day 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Fallbrook Community Center341 Heald LaneFallbrook, 92028760-728-1671M-F 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Sat. & Sun. 12 p.m.-5 p.m., open Labor Day 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Lakeside Community Center9841 Vine StreetLakeside, 92040619-443-9176M-F 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Sat. & Sun. 12 p.m.-5 p.m., open Labor Day 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Potrero Branch Library24883 Potrero Valley RoadPotrero, 91963619-478-5978M-F 12 p.m.-5 p.m., open Labor Day 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Ramona Branch Library1276 Main StreetRamona, 92065760-788-5270M-F 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Sat. & Sun. 12 p.m.-5 p.m., open Labor Day 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Santa Ysabel Nature Center22135 Highway 79Santa Ysabel, 92070760-765-4098M-F 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Sat. & Sun. 12 p.m.-5 p.m., open Labor Day 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Spring Valley Community Center8735 Jamacha BoulevardSpring Valley, 91977619-479-1832M-F 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Sat. & Sun. 12 p.m.-5 p.m., open Labor Day 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Valley Center Branch Library29200 Cole Grade RoadValley Center, 92082760-749-1305M-F 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Sat. & Sun. 12 p.m.-5 p.m., open Labor Day 12 p.m.-5 p.m. 3024

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — San Diego State students will be able to learn all about Latinx representation in media through the life of the "Queen of Tejano."On what would have been the famed superstar's 48th birthday, SDSU's School of Journalism and Media Studies will offer a course dedicated to the late Selena Quintanilla Perez next spring called, "Selena and Latinx Media Representation."Students will be able to register for the class starting on Nov. 1, 2019.RELATED: Free textbook program saves Grossmont College students thousandsThe course will explore and deconstruct Latinx identities and socio-cultural representations through Selena's music, career, and influence, according to Nathian Rodriquez, assistant professor of digital media studies.“Students also need access to content in media landscapes to better understand the relationship between mediated representations and Latinx identity formation and maintenance,” Rodriguez said. “Speaking about these issues through the life of a well-known and visible celebrity allows students to utilize both pop culture and Latinx culture to deconstruct and interrogate the significance and broader meaning of minority-based mediated content.”Selena released 10 albums throughout her career, winning several awards including Tejano Music Awards, Billboard Latin Music Awards, and a Grammy. RELATED: MiraCosta College plans to offer first-time students two years of free tuitionNot only did her work on stage influence music, but her fashion and fame influenced thousands as she became a Latin music icon.In March 1995, she was killed by the founder of her fan club. A movie released two years later, starring Jennifer Lopez as Selena, further highlighted Selena's lasting influence on pop culture.“Selena was such an inspiration to so many Latinx individuals around the world, and continues to be today. Her music, fashion, and iconography have influenced every facet of pop culture, transcending the entertainment world and influencing socio-cultural spaces world-wide,” Rodriguez said. “I grew up listening to Selena and wanted to create a course that highlighted her impact on not just Latinx culture, but pop culture in an international scope.” 2205
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- San Diego resident Jenifer Raub describes herself as a fighter.“I just don’t give up. If I see a window, just a little crack in the doorway of opportunity, I’m going to jump on it," said Raub.She never imagined to find herself in the fight against Parkinson's Disease, a progressive nervous system disorder which affects movement and has no cure.“For me, it was I had a hard time walking, but it was real intermittent, it just made no sense, and then my hands started to shake," said Raub.In the beginning, Raub refused to believe the diagnosis, eventually finding a doctor who told her what she wanted to hear."He told me I didn’t have the disease and he told me to go off all those medications you're fine. I did, and I couldn’t walk at all at that point.”So Raub shifted her fight towards finding a cure for Parkinson's.She's now president of the Summit for Stem Cell Foundation, a nonprofit created to support the use of stem cells to treat Parkinson’s; research underway in Dr. Jeanne Loring’s Torrey Pines lab. “We’re right on the edge of a revolution, in which these particular cells, because of their power and our ability to manipulate them, are going to change the way medicine is done," said Dr. Loring.Her research focuses on pluripotent stem cells, the remarkable cells that self-renew and can give rise to every cell type in the body.Parkinson’s Disease breaks down and eventually kills certain nerve cells in the brain, dopamine neurons that affect movement. Dr. Loring's team is working to transform patient's skin cells into pluripotent cells which can then become dopamine neurons. “We plan to transplant those cells to the brains of people with Parkinson’s to replace neurons they’ve lost," said Dr. Loring. Because the cells come from the actual patient, they are a perfect match which the body will not reject. After the implant, Dr. Loring says over time they'll make connections and restore circuits that have been broken by the loss of dopamine neurons. Patients, she says, will likely start seeing changes in their symptoms in six months. Dr. Loring believes the treatment could also work for other diseases like Alzheimer's and Multiple Sclerosis. ‘These diseases are not going to able to be treated with a conventional drug that you take, it's going to have to be more sophisticated than that, and I think this opens the opportunity for really scientifically-based, knowledge-based therapies. Stem cells are medicines; we can't forget that. They're living drugs," said Dr. Loring.Her team has already proven the treatment works in animals. Now they're waiting on FDA approval for a clinical trial of 10 patients, Raub will be one of them. Raub is also a patient advocate and works tirelessly to fundraise for Summit for Stem Cell Foundation. "The disease is a progressive disease and their [patient's] time is of the essence, it's critical to people with Parkinson’s. The disease does not wait for an answer, it just keeps going," said Raub.Raub says she won't stop either, on behalf of all the patient's up against time. 3077
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Shake Shack will flip on the lights and open its doors at Carmel Valley's One Paseo development on Monday.The East Coast burger chain welcomes its third San Diego location Monday, March 18, at 3705 Paseo Place, Suite 1140, at 11 a.m., according to the chain. As an added bonus, the first 100 people in line for the opening will also get a free custom T-shirt, according to Eater San Diego.RELATED: One Paseo set to open in Carmel Valley following numerous setbacksShake Shack joins other One Paseo eateries including Salt & Straw second San Diego location, Tender Greens, The Butchery, Mizukiyama Sushi, and others.The menu will continue to feature locally created items such as the Pie Oh My concrete, a vanilla frozen custard and slice of Four & Twenty pie, to benefit the organizations I Love A Clean San Diego. And fans can already expect more of the chain's burgers, chicken sandwiches, hot dogs, crinkle-cut fires, and forzen treats.RELATED: Salt & Straw to open second San Diego shop at One PaseoShake Shack first broke into San Diego in 2017 with its Westfield UTC location, before adding a Mission Valley stop a year later. The burger joint had also announced intentions to add a fourth location in Little Italy sometime this year. 1275
来源:资阳报