tv CBS Overnight News CBS July 8, 2020 3:42am-4:00am PDT
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2020 are at risk." that risk is evident across the sports happenedscape as players from all four major league sports and major league soccer have tested positive for the virus. nick markakis is one of the latest to announce he's opting out of maying this season after teammate freddie freeman tested positive. >> the way he sounded on the phone opened my eyes. didn't sont good. >> the dallas franchise said it will not play. ten players and one coach tested positive after the team arrived there last month. and at least six nba teams have shuttered their practice facilities after a string of their players and staff tested positive. >> i see wld where sports beyond what's already back are able to come back. >> this is an epidemiologist at emory university.
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he said without testing it will be hard to guarantee the virus isn't testing. >> you need to why ary about the frequency of the test and how fast the turnaround is. a delay in either of those leaves open a wider window for somebody to be sick and transmit the disease without knowing it. >> so what happens if there's an outbreak in cases? that's one of the big questions out there. once the season resumed, both baseball and basketball have been very clear they'll treat individual cases adds if it's an individual injury. but if there's serious spread, adam silver and others say it could mean a stop amg in play. it's fluid. >> with sports facing an unfamiliar future, parents have a more pressing question. what will become of the new school year. president trump invited parents to the white house to discuss
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the issue after tweeting that schools must open in the fall. colleges and universities have their own views tt. me olitory fro cetoew jy univer ink on campus for one semester. seniors and sophomores in the spring. freshman and sophomores in the spring. across country the nearly 20 million students returning to college this fall can expect a very different experience. a rising junior at prince partnershipston plans to take his classes in south korea. he's decided to stay after traveling there for an internship. >> i don't know if it would be the best idea to go back and completely expose myself in that environment if people -- if not everyone's going to take it
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seriously, including college students. >> princeton will requiren to wear masks. >> to have to social distance and isolate everyone in their own room, it's just not appealing to me. it doesn't feel like the true college experience. >> up coming college freshman yazmeen besos was happy with the announcement that all freshman will be welcomed to campus. students will be tested ef three days. >> i want to start somewhat of a normal experience. >> you feel like you're taking a health risk going back? >> definitely not, especially with my age. if i were older, i'd be concerned. >> last week more than 100 students living in from teshity houses near the university of washington reported tng
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looked at the campus reopening plans at more that a thousand schools. 60% plan to return to an in-person semester. 24% will offer a mix with the others still deciding. schools also have to consider that students may not want to pay full television to learn on line. >> oourlts will under fm pressure, but that cannot be the driver of what happens. the health and safety of students, of faculty, of staff, administe administers, that has to be first and foremost. >> former u.s. secretary of education eddie duncan says he understands students' frustrations and hopes they'll see the big picture. >> this is one fall, this is on. we have to be willing to do the right thing to get to the other
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side so that the next fall and the fall after that will be much better. >> if there's an outbreak cdc advises shutting down buildings and disinfecting, trace contacts. they advice making sure that the in-person classes are suspended for a longer period of time. >> meg oliver. overseas britain has started to reopen and people were lining up outside their favorite publics. rocks anna saberi reports. >> reporter: greeted guests for the first time in three months, doing for indicate duffy. >> it's very good. >> looks like it tastes good. >> it's left me now. >>ptt the blic i like itsed to be. >> there's now plexiglas in front of the bar and if you want to see a menu or make an order,
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you have to use an app to trace up fedexs. the owner says he's following the british government's guidelines. >> we're allowed to have maximum of six people per zone at any one time. >> and hair salons reopened, some at midnight. but the english city of lester isn't celebrating. it went back into lockdown after a spike in covid-19 infection. boris johnson warns other cities could face the same fate. >> this government will not hesitate in putting on the brakes and reimponge tricks. >> back at the gray houpd, guests of all aims say they feel safe for now. >> it was nice when we had to do got it? got it. it's slippery.
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milk and cream and only sustainably farmed vanilla. with herbal ashwagandas help turn the stress life into your best life live like a stress baller with stressballs communities large and small have been battling the coronavirus pandemic for months now. adriana diaz paid a visit to suburban illinois north of chicago to see how small businesses there are coping with the new normal. >> reporter: in evanston illinois a familiar sound is returning to main street. afhis is really busy compared to what it was two months ago.
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there was no traffic on the streets, zero. >> reporter: terry should know. he's opened guitar works for 40 years. ♪ there's sound iutdown the music almost stopped. >> i ran out of money to pay my people four or five days before the p.p.e. money came in. the following tuesday was when the money hit my account. >> how did you feel in that moment? >> oh, i was very pleased. >> friends and customers also raced more than $22,000, which he used to cover parallel for five weeks. while customers can't come in and browse, there's still plenty of work coming in. >> everybody's digging out their old guitar and bringing it in to get repaired. my shop is overflowing. my two shop guys are busy little we'vers. >> a few doors down it's quiet.
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just a trainer and his tripod. >> you may sprint and go. >> he says he's lucky. just before covid hit he had just started expanding into virtual trainings. it became his lifeline during the pandemic. 85% of his members have stuck with him. >> a lot of clients say it's comfortable being at home, anyway. it's my own gym, my own space. >> reporter: the tiny technology has had a huge impact. he credits the smaller overhead that comes with a one-room operation and the shutdown forting him, like many main street owners, to evolve. do you think it u to be? >> i think eventually it could, i'm not sure. >> it's still a far cry from business as usual all along main street. this family frame store will
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close after 117 years, a biz passed down through four generations of the same family. and the corner mexican restaurant is just getting by says owner eric young. what's the hardest thing about surviving this pandemic? >> i don't even know where to start. >> the list is that long? >> yes. >> he had to lay off 15 employees to stay afloat. half of his staff. people are calling checking is there any time we'll come back or do you know of any job leads. >> leaving generous tips. what was the largest gift? >> 2500. >> $2500? yeah. >> they said hey, you guys, we want you to survive. i don't want to get choked up. >> yeah? >> yeah. >> indoor dining has resumed but
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europe is getting back toe normal after its efforts to tame the coronavirus. the louver in paris slivesay has try >> now after nearly three months of coronavirus shutdown, the museum has finally been unlocked. visitors get a thermal scan and new rules of the road about where to walk and where to stand. >> standing six feet apart like we're doing right now. >> reporter: he says the pandemic my changed museums for
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the better. >> botticelli's birth of veepous, bump into somebody else or somebody else selfie but they can really concentrate on the work of art. >> you thinkotticellin >> nearby the florence cathedral social distance necklaces where are all the buzz. it was the dome that was tut cutting edge. today, it's these. but it does allow you to enjoy the art safely, says the director timothy burden. >> after this experience people really need to return not only to normalcy but to the neuroishment that beauty can give. obviously it would be a cruel joke that the monuments in the museum became in turn places of con takon.
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>> a con takon that so far killed more than half a million people worldwide and halted tourism here, a gut punch that will cost 13% of gdp. as sites reopen, internatural flights remain largely groued,i. they u tave,0 visitors a day. today, only 600. jur over 2 too,000 people came on the first sunday it reopened compared to 8,000 on many sundays before the pan democratic. for italy's bottom line social distancing is anything but springtime. >> it may be reopening but it's monumentally difficult to get t. it's launched its own tiktok account posting playful videos of the artwork set to music.
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it's important to remember to smile. chris livespay florence. >> you get all the tough ♪ ♪ captioning sponsored by cbs >> o'donnell: breaking news-- the dire prediction tonight: coronavirus deaths in america could surpass 200,000 by november. and, the one step experts say cove nearly 50,000 lives. this comes as hospitals are short on beds and crucial medical supplies. supplies.ly two dozen states now nearly two dozen sta pause their reopening plans. testing crisis. long lines to get swabs, and long waits for results. why dr. anthony fauci says we're esovernoo get eed to be. back into the classroom. why the first lady says children's mental and behavioral health is just as important as physical health. racing to a cure.
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