CARL AZUZ, CNN STUDENT NEWS ANCHOR:  The week is rolling along.  I`m  Carl Azuz, welcoming you to Wednesday`s edition of CNN STUDENT NEWS.
Our  first story centers on a detention facility, a prison in Guantanamo  Bay, Cuba.  It`s operated by the United States.  It`s part of the U.S. 
naval base on land that America has leased from Cuba since 1903.
To  start, we`re covering the plan.  Yesterday, President Obama called for  the detention facility at Guantanamo to be closed.  The U.S. government  has 
identified 13 potential places where officials can transfer the remaining prisoners.  There are about 91 of them there.
But no specific location was proposed.  This isn`t the first time the president has pushed for Guantanamo`s closure.  
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JULIETTE  KAYYEM, CNN NATIONAL SECURITY ANALYST:  When President Obama was  elected in 2008, he vowed that he will close Guantanamo Bay within a  year.
BARACK OBAMA, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES:  There we go.
KAYYEM:  Seven years later, that has not happened.
SUBTITLE:  Closing Guantanamo Bay detention camp.
KAYYEM:   Let`s start from the beginning.  The Guantanamo facility was rented  from the Cubans and was normally used as sort of a naval and coast 
guard base for the United States.  When we went to war against  Afghanistan in 2002, soldiers were picking up what we`re called men who  were unlawful 
combatants, who were picked up on the  battlefield.  And they were sent to Guantanamo in a sort of a hastily  arranged agreement so that they might be 
processed while there.
Well,  they weren`t processed.  They stayed there, over the course of the war  on terror.  Close to a thousand men have been detained at Guantanamo 
Bay.
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AZUZ:  Now the debate.  
The  Obama administration says closing the detention center and transferring  the enemy combatants held there would save the U.S. tens of millions of  
dollars per year.  There have been accusations that some of  the prisoners at Gitmo had been tortured or mistreated, that the  facility is a dangerous 
symbol, being used abroad to recruit  terrorists.  And President Obama says keeping the facility opened is  contrary to American values.
But the administration says it  needs congressional approval to shut it down and Republicans and some  Democrats have said they`re concerned that moving 
the  prisoners to U.S. soil would threaten national security.  House Speaker  Paul Ryan says moving suspected terrorists to the U.S. is illegal.  And 
American intelligence suspects that dozens of the men who`ve already  been transferred out of Guantanamo have returned to terrorism.
Next  to India.  Almost 80 percent of people there are Hindu, and the  controversial caste system used to determine the advantages and 
disadvantages that different castes or classes would have.  That was  abolished 67 years ago.  And India has implemented programs to give  those 
ones considered members of lower caste advantages and getting jobs and admissions.
But  it`s relatively well-off group that recently protested, blocking  highways, burning buildings and looting.  They say reverse  discrimination 
has put them in a disadvantage.  And though  they reached an agreement with the government that ended the protests  after 16 people died, the 
demonstrations disrupted a water station that supplied part of New Delhi.
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SUMNIMA  UDAS, CNN CORRESPONDENT:  We`re at one of 150 water tanker filling  stations in New Delhi.  Since the crisis begun, they`ve been operating  all 
day, every five to seven minutes or so of water tanker  truck like this one has been arriving.  They`ve been filling it up and  going to neighborhoods 
nearby in the northwest of Delhi.  This  one is headed to a colony around the corner and we`re going to go along  and see what happens.
(voice-over):  "We`re going to block C4G.   We`ve been getting calls all day for water," he says.  As soon as the  water tanker arrives, residents 
emerged from what seems like nowhere, one after another.
(on  camera):  Words have spread that the water tanker has arrived.  So,  we`ve seen people coming from all over the neighborhood with their  buckets, 
containers like these, even kettles, basically  whatever container they have, to fill up as much water they can.  They  haven`t received any water 
here for the past three days and this is the first time the water tanker has arrived.
(voice-over):   They jostle for space.  They argue, as one after the other, to wait on  line.  The other shouts back, "Don`t take more than two buckets.  
Share!`
"We  can live without a shower, but what about cooking or cleaning our  utensils?  What about flushing our toilets?  It`s become so difficult 
nowadays, every morning, I just dream about water," she says.
Seventy-two-year-old  Lakshme Ramaswami (ph) has gone back and forth three times already.   Anything more than the steel urn would be too heavy.
She shows  me how she`s been storing what`s become her prized possession.  So,  she`s been carrying water in these small vessels because she isn`t able 
to carry the big buckets.
She`s rationing.  She doesn`t know when the water tanker truck will arrive again.
From  the elderly to the youngest in the family, everyone pitches in,  collecting every last drop.  It only took 15 minutes to empty out this 
track.  
Now, back to filling station to carry out this routine all over again.
Sumnima Udas, CNN, New Delhi.
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AZUZ:  Our source for "Roll Call" schools: each day`s transcript page at CNNStudentNews.com.
Yeongcheon  High School knows this.  We found their requests on yesterday`s  transcript.  Hello to everyone in Yeongcheon, South Korea.
Jumping over to Wood River Junction, a village in Rhode Island.  It`s great to se the Chargers of Chariho High School.
And from Burlington, Kansas, we`ve got the Wildcats.  Burlington High School rounds out our roll.
OK.   Space travel, it`s not for everyone. But those who want a taste of it,  yet don`t see themselves working for NASA, a private spaceflight may be  in 
the horizon.  No engineering degree necessary.
The  downsides: it`s dangerous, at least at this point.  You wouldn`t have  much time before coming back down to earth, and you`ll need an extra 
quarter million dollars floating around.
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RACHEL  CRANE, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over):  Richard Branson`s Virgin  Galactic wants to be the world`s first commercial space line, that is  the 
first company to take regular people into space, on a regular basis.  
And this is the spaceship they say could do it.
(on camera):  Spaceship Two Serial Two was constructed here in the Mojave Desert, in this secretive hangar.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE:  We`re really looking forward to getting into the air, where it belongs and then eventually into space.
CRANE  (voice-over):  Dave Mackay is Virgin Galactic`s chief pilot.  He`s been  training inside of the simulator hundreds of times, waiting for a real 
spacecraft to fly again.
DAVE  MACKAY, CHIEF PILOT, VIRGIN GALACTIC:  After rollout, we expect in the  next couple of months to be in flight tests.  Of course, that`s hugely 
significant.
CRANE:   That`s because Virgin Galactic has not had a vehicle since a tragic  accident in 2014 left its spaceship in pieces and killed one test pilot.
SIR RICHARD BRANSON, VIRGIN GALACTIC:  We`re going to learn from what went wrong.
CRANE:  The NTSB ruled because of the accident to be human error.
Spaceship Two Serial Two was already in development at the time of the crash, but not nearly ready to serve as a replacement.
GEORGE  WHITESIDE, CEO VIRGIN GALACTIC:  When we begun this journey, we knew  that it would be hard, and it has been hard.  The number one thing is  that 
we`re going to test fly this vehicle.  We`re going to  test fly Spaceship Two and we`re going to make sure that we understand  what happened.
CRANE:  Virgin Galactic has made several updates to its new and improved spacecraft. 
MACKAY:   The actual accident itself was caused by a control being moved when it  shouldn`t have been done and we implemented a new system which 
prevents that ever happening again.
CRANE:   But building a spaceship and adding those new features has taken time.   Spaceship Two Serial Two has been under construction for more than 
three years.
ANNOUNCER:  Two, one, release, release, release.
CRANE:   This is how it works: the mother ship White Knight Two carries the  spaceship 50,000 feet into the air.  Then, it separates and blast off at  
more than three times the speed of sound, reaching between 50  and 62 miles above earth.  The six passengers on board will experience  about 6 minutes 
of weightlessness.
MACKAY:  And at this point, very shortly, we`re going to allow the customers to unstrap and they can float around.
CRANE:   More than 700 customers have already paid $250,000 for a seat when  Virgin Galactic eventually starts commercial operation.
MACKAY:   It`s a sensational experience, of course, but it`s more important than  not.  It`s a first step in opening space to the wider population of 
the world.
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AZUZ:   That last report wasn`t to say that only private astronauts would get  to have fun in space.  Aboard the International Space Station -- well, 
this happened.  
Astronaut  Scott Kelly, who`s spending almost a year in orbit, recently received a  care package from his twin brother back on earth.  It contained 
a gorilla costume.  So, why not?  
This  isn`t the first time an ape has spent time in space.  But it probably  is the first time that one chase other astronauts around.  
NASA, the National Aeronautics and Simian Administration.  
They  simian to have a go-really good time up there.  People say spaceflight  could be pretty hairy, at least they found a spacesuit that if not 
breathable, is still pretty ape-aling.
I`m Carl Azuz and NASA all the time we have for CNN STUDENT NEWS.