Good evening, justine and Jonathan Police still out here on the scene tonight restaurant workers helping to clean up some of the wreckage here were told this driver may have suffered from some sort of medical issue before slamming his suv into this Outdoor Dining area witnesses describing the scene to us tonight as chaotic. Terrifying scene after a truck plows into an Outdoor Dining area in san jose people are seen scrambling to help victims as chairs and tables were sent flying a big loud sound when i step over i already inside the 10 and some people they want ram. Police say a 69 yearold man was trying to park his toyota 4 runner when he accidentally hit the gas witnesses say they saw the driver lose control just before the crash. Wheels. Screeching like you know use get ready to spin out. Well back well start spinning in smoke started coming out. The suv then slammed into the dining canopy at the dynasty chinese Seafood Restaurant striking at least 8 2 of the victims suffering life
Sting on bay area, we are looking live from our salesforce camera as we look south down the peninsula. You can see the fog rolling right in. Good morning. It is monday already. Im michelle griego. Im len kiese. Lets get to your forecast first. Mary lee is standing by. It feels so good. Good monday morning to you. If you like yesterday, you will like our cooling trend as we head through the week. We have a Pacific Ocean breeze making its come back. We are talking about better air quality, temperatures will be cooling down as we head through the week. Also some rain chances by the end of the week. Here is current quality conditions. We are dealing with unhealthy air across portions of the northbay due to the glass fire. As we head through the day, good to moderate air quality for most of us although unhealthy air for sensitive groups as we look to the northbay. Check at our temperatures. Looking at the Cool Temperatures along the coast, mild but still warming up inland. We will talk more
Of you dont own me. She attended law school here at harvard and was a fellow at harvards center for ethics, Kennedy School for government. She has taught and lectured worldwide including law school that gail, tel aviv and beijing and is the dawn wakes teen professor of law at university of san diego and the author of Award Winning business book talent wants to be free. Her most recent book, you dont own me was recently described in the new yorker as a hairraising account of an epic tale in the Financial Times described it as a real page turner of a decadelong court battle between Toy Company Mattel and mga the ownership of the immensely popular bratz dolls. Please toy me in welcoming our guests for the evening, orly lobel. [applause]. Thank you. This is really special for me to be at the Harvard Bookstore because i spent many years as a graduate students here at Harvard Square and Harvard University just roaming the shelves and loving it and being inspired by all of the different disci
And, dangerous move. The pro athlete reaching into a cage to pet a lion when the animal suddenly turns on him. And good evening. Thanks for joining us on this sunday. Im tom llamas. We begin tonight with the growing h growing humanitarian crisis in puerto rico. Fema now approving millioning an applications for assistance. Alex perez starts us off. Reporter tonight, as supplies and other necessities trickle in to san juan, People Living just 25 miles away wondering if theyve been forgotten. Nobody. Reporter nobody has come to help . No. Reporter the reyes family, in an isolated part of comerio, say they have been fending for themselves. 11 days now, no power, no cell service, no easily available drinking water. The hurricane ripping the roofs right off in this sprawling valley community. The river water now their means of bathing and cleaning up whats left of their homes. Whats the hardest part . The babies. Reporter theres no water to drink . No. Reporter very little. But in another sm
When antibiotics were first discovered in the 1940s, they were hailed as lifesaving wonder drugs preventing infections, but new strains of bacteria that are called superbugs have evolved, adapted and built up resistance. What does this mean for the future of modern medicine . That is this weeks cover story. They are called superbugs, strains of bacteria that have become resistant to antibiotics. They cause infections in 2 Million People in the United States each year and kill 70 years ago, antibiotics have saved millions of lives, but they have been overused causing bacteria to evolve faster and leaving medications ineffective. If current antibiotics fail to kill bacteria and doctors can stop infections, many procedures like organ transplants, chemotherapy and major surgery could become higher risk. How did we get here . Nearly onethird of prescriptions for antibiotics for some germs, the biggest source of resistance is animals in the food chain, and antibiotics are widely overused in