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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  September 25, 2020 3:42am-4:01am PDT

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will be given an option to reserve a time for a rapid airport for or do a test. >> this is a great access to get them back in the air and traveling as safely as possible. >> reporter: hawaii has largely been closed to tourists since march. but next month, the state will waive it's two-week quarantine. they'll verify the results as flights come in. richard flew to maui tuesday. >> a lot of extra time back to me. can also make sure i'm not getting my friend sick or anyone who is in the risk zone sick. >> reporter: the rapid test was already available to airline employees. it takes about 20 minutes to get results and will cost about $250. the at home test will give results in 48 hours.
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it hopes to expand testing options in cities like new york, chicago, and los angeles. >> being able to identify a positive case and pull them out of a public hotel situation and put them in isolation and then be able to kind of winnow that group oichb effect chus individuals is what's really going to have an impact. >> express check is offering passengers flying any airline a rapid test before departure. a recent survey found three fourth of fliers support preflight toefd testing. airlines are pushing for, quote, air bridges between major cities like new york and london that would require preflight covid tests for all on bompltd there does appear to be lawmaker support for the air bridges as well. lufr tanz airks the german carrier says it will start rapid
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testing passengers next noochlt airline has set up two testing points for arriving paechblgts american airlines says it, too, is considering rapid testing for passengers. >> kris van cleave on the tarmac. remote learning is difficult enough for some young students. for many children with special needs it can be all but possible. jamie wax talked to a family. >> reporter: a new approach is taking shape. >> he doesn't have much receptive language and he's starting to understand small things. he's starting to want to participate in group activities, which he'd never really wanted to do and then covid happened. >> reporter: christian is mom to hudson, an in jikt five-year-old on the autism spectrum. she's co-founder of a nonprofit.
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the group offers for children with special needs by encouraging socialization and engagement within a group setting. temperature checks are performed at the entrance and all parents are required to wear masks. at what dpoint you decide to do something about this? >> a lot of schools in my area that were for special needs children decided that they weren't opening. shortly after that i did a post on my social media. when everybody volunteered i was like all right, i guess we're doing this. >> reporter: the cdc estimates one in 54 american children have autism spectrum disorder and one in six are diagnosed with a developmental disability. jiets an earthquake. it was such a huge transition to take special education and to move it home. >> reporter: the vice chairman at new york university.
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>> we have a misconception that a lot of autistic people don't want to be in social situations or don't want to have friends. we know a lot of kids who thrive on those situations with as well as thriving on routine, but missing that cohort of teachers or students. >> reporter: someone that brought them out of their shem. exactly. >> reporter: a recent survey revealed that 20% of those students received the support they were entitled to during the pandemic. >> they're just having fun and it's really something special. >> reporter: katelyn is the mother of two special needs children. >> you can almost feel like you're missing out on your children's childhood, if that makes sense. like your kid might not be the star baseball player or on honor roll, but when they're here all
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together, you can see how each of them are special in their own way. >> reporter: have you seen other people be inspired by your model here? >> we're our biggest advocates. if you want something done, you have to do it yourself. you can't look at the school and say my child's dedressing, do something about it. i hope this gets parents to take it into their own hands.
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we love our new home. there's so much space. we have a guestroom now. but, we have aunts. you're slouching again, ted. expired, expired... expired. thanks, aunt bonnie. it's a lot of house. i hope you can keep it clean. at least geico makes bundling our home and car insurance easy. which helps us save a lot of money oh, teddy. did you get my friend request? uh, i'll have to check. (doorbell ringing) aunt joni's here! for bundling made easy, go to geico.com. hello?
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fans of the james bond franchise will soon have a chance to own their own piece of cinematic history. the astin martin db 5 complete are machine guns in the grille. charlie d'agata reports. >> reporter: chief creative face-off recalls the moment that it popped up in the last bond movie. >> there was a cheer in the theater. great. bond is back in a db 5 again. >> what did that feel like? >> a feeling of being part of history. we're part of a legend, db 5 is
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a legend. >> and this legend is brand spanking new fresh off the assembly line, one of just 25 built and at a price tag of $3.5 million. here it's a gorgeous car even by 007 standards, but there's something about the db 5 that's just timeless. from the first moment sean connery's bond tossed it around in glorious technicolor in its debut in 19464's "gold finger," the car has outlasted every actor to play bond, starring in seven films already and count. the cameo with pierce brosnan -- >> stop this car at once. >> >> in 1995's "golden eye." resurrectsed in 2012, "sky
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fall." >> it's not very comfortable, is it? >> are you going complain the whole way? >> well, go on, eject me. see if i care. >> reporter: including scenes that weren't just a gentle joy ride. and it will show up again in "no time to die," this fall's upcoming bond offerings. >> it's outlived many bonds, because it has a stronger character. jazz yully it's got character. it has an eyes, it has a face and it has a presence. >> the new old db 5s are continuity cars, not replicas, each one hand made using the same materials and techniques including the light weight aluminum body. >> to say this is a lost art doesn't go far enough.
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and to call charlie brings an panel beater doesn't go far enough. >> you want to caress it into shape rather than battering it into shape? >> caressing, yes. >>. >> reporter: it takes 400 hours just to paint a single car. >> buhl using this astin martin db 5. you take the to which off -- >> reporter: a bond car wouldn't be a bond car without gadgets. as chief executive paul spiers enthusiastically demonstrated. >> if i'm being pursued by the bad guys and i want to smoke them out -- >> ok. >> show me the machine guns. >> machine guns. >> ha! that's awesome. seriously.
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$3.5 million price tag in time mean the machine guns means it's not even street legal, it was time to get the full bond experience. >> oh, it's such a fine car. it's -- it drives like an old car. it was the lap of luxury at the time and smells like muscle and testosterone with a shaken martini. jai see how he stayed fit. >> it handled like a 56-year-old car ought to. not that i was allowed to press any buttons. >> can i? >> absolutely not. >> reporter: when it was over you begin to understand why it's been so hard for any bond to say goodbye. >> i thought you'd gone. >> i have. there's just one thing i need.
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finally this half-hour, the stouffer a small farm in upstate new york working to use fresh produce to help battle racial inkwauchlt errol barn ets paid a visit. >>. >> reporter: over the past two decades this farmer and activist has plowed through history and traveled the globe. >> i spent six months in ghana a and learned from the women there. >> reporter: leah is stepping up to combat racism and injustice in the food system. she says while violence against african-americans deserves the attention it's getting, black americans are more likely to die from document entitled-related issues. >> i'm talking about the
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mortality rates based on cancer, diabetes, kidney failure, obesity and heart disease. >> reporter: all of that can be related to food? >> that does not say that food issues are more important. i have think fundamentally we fail at creating a just society if we don't address the interconnectedness of food injurvegts housing discrimination and so on. >> reporter: they provide fresh produce at little to no cost and serves as a means to an end to what she called food apartheid. you don't have access to fresh groceries. you use a different term, food apar tiechltd why is that. >> the use of desert is that it's natural. did reason we call it apartheid
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is because that's human. anything humans create, you can undo. >> reporter: she's helping to educate young aspiring farmers like justin who raises pigs. >> if you're eating meat, you should be able to take part in the food system. >> there's mother of two to shya ellis. >> things that they swroont had otherwise. access is key, especially in troy, where we don't really have any grocery stores that people who are walking can get to. >> reporter: thanks to the resources provided by the farm, alice is able to pay it forward, building a community guarden i her backyard. what are you getting out of this? >> there's a beautiful moment, a 4-year-old child, a little black girl, said when i grow up i want to be a farmer like you. so when you drop it off and people say all i have for the
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week, that feeds me and feels like i'm living a worth while live. >> errol barn etd reporting. and that's the overnight news for this friday. it's friday, september 25th, 2020. this is the "cbs morning news." dangerous demonstration. protesters in los angeles are hit by a car as they rallied for breonna taylor. how they tried to fight back against the driver. doubling down. president trump raises doubts about mail-in voting and the election. the bipartisan pushback and the possible solution. the pac 12 is back. how the shortened football how the shortened football season will work without fans. captioning funded by cbs good morning. good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green. we are going to begin this morning with aec

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