Im marcus washington. And im laura garcia. Lets get a look at that forecast. It will be slightly cooler in the inland areas, so it will continue to cool off as we head through the week. A beautiful look at the sunrise over san jose. Evergreen, well be about 79 at lunchtime. And well get a look at the cooler forecast coming up. And freeways are getting wider . Thats what i like, when they are opening lanes. So instead of a two lane freeway, we have five lanes approaching the Richmond Center bridge. The bay bridge with the cash lanes are starting to stack up a tad bit. No other problems around the bay. Back to you. A drive by shooting sent someone to the hospital. And this is got far from San Jose City college. T thom, what can you tell us about what happened . Reporter and i can tell you that this neighborhood was lit up with gunfire overnight. You can see remnants of what went down on this car with the bullet hole through the windshield and glass dust still spread across the dashboard
Dr. Readys liver transplant table. Not now. Absolutely. I feel like one in a million. Reporter lucky to no longer be one of more than 3 million americans suffering with chronic hepatitis c virus infection. July will be two years. Reporter two years since doctors detector any help of hep c in joes blood. Like night and day. Reporter its like cured. This is a big deal. It is indeed. An exciting time. Its a big deal. Reporter dr. Ready oversaw Clinical Trials locally in which joe took part. What is the rate of cure . The curate is about 90 . Reporter its why the fda recently approved the hep c using a regimen of fast acting pills, more effective and tolerable than inter fewer ron injections. The virus is gone as early as four weeks some patients as early as two weeks. Reporter just like that. So i probably have had it before i was cured over 50 years. Reporter and he had no idea until a random test in the 90s. Its depressing. Because you dont know what your time its a biological clock tic
Two high school students from The Woodlands, Texas, were awarded a $50,000 prize at the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair for creating an ultrasonic filtration system to remove microplastics from water.
Two teenagers from Woodlands, Texas, have developed a groundbreaking device to tackle one of the most pervasive pollution problems on Earth: microplastics.