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Woman Recovering After Being Hit By UC Shuttle Bus

BERKELEY (CBS SF) - A woman who was struck by a University of California shuttle bus Monday was in serious, but stable condition after surgery, a Berkeley police official said.

The 54-year-old woman was one of two female pedestrians who were injured Monday afternoon in Berkeley when one of the women was struck in a crosswalk by a University of California shuttle bus and the other injured herself trying to gain the bus driver's attention, police spokeswoman Sgt.  Mary Kusmiss said.

The women, who knew one another, were walking together in a crosswalk at the intersection of Center Street and Shattuck Avenue when one of the women was struck and run over by the bus, Kusmiss said.

The other woman injured herself when she then banged on the bus with her hands to gain the driver's attention, Kusmiss said.

The bus, which is operated by the University of California and runs between the campus and Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, had been traveling westbound on Center Street and was making a right turn onto northbound Shattuck Avenue, Kusmiss said.

She said the women were walking west in the north crosswalk at the intersection.

Calls began pouring into Berkeley police at about 4:30 p.m.  reporting the crash, Kusmiss said.

A large crowd formed around the collision site as Berkeley firefighters worked to extricate the woman from beneath the bus, Kusmiss said.

Once freed, the woman who had been struck was transported to a local trauma center with serious injuries to her lower extremities. She underwent some surgeries and was communicative as of Tuesday night, Kusmiss said.

The other woman was treated on the scene and released.

Berkeley police are still investigating the incident, Kusmiss said.

Campus police declined to comment on the incident citing the Berkeley Police Department's lead role in the ongoing investigation.

(Copyright 2011 by CBS San Francisco. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Wire services may have contributed to this report.)

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