Subtitles section Play video
-
CARL AZUZ, CNN ANCHOR: Thank you so much for watching our penultimate program of the school year.
-
I`m Carl Azuz. Our first story today on CNN STUDENT NEWS actually started more than two years ago.
-
That`s when the violence began in the Middle Eastern nation of Syria.
-
In March of 2011, some people started protesting against Syria`s government.
-
The government reacted with force.
-
Eventually, rebels armed themselves and started fighting back.
-
The United Nations estimates that nearly 70,000 Syrians, most of them civilians, have been killed in the country`s civil war.
-
Both sides have claimed victories in it.
-
The latest victory is by the government.
-
On Wednesday, Syrian forces took control of the city of Qusayr.
-
That`s after nearly seven weeks of fighting.
-
Qusayr is in a strategic location which is why it`s important to both the government and the rebels.
-
Syrian officials are celebrating their victory.
-
Rebel groups are promising to continue their fight despite losing this battle,
-
and the thousands of civilians living in Qusayr don`t know what their future holds.
-
Next we`re moving over to Europe, where a couple of countries - Germany and the Czech Republic - are struggling through severe weather.
-
FREDERIK PLEITGEN, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Large areas of Central and Eastern Europe are being hit by these floods right now, and in the Czech Republic, several people have died.
-
A lot of the water that you`re seeing here in Meissen actually is coming from the Czech Republic.
-
AZUZ: CNN reporter Frederik Pleitgen was in the German city of Meissen, where river levels are more than four times higher than average.
-
Here is what it looks like in other parts of Germany.
-
What`s happening is that heavy rain has caused the waters in several major rivers, like the Danube and the Elba, to rise.
-
These images are from the Czech Republic.
-
A huge part of that country is under a state of emergency.
-
Tens of thousands of people have been evacuated because of these floods.
-
Forecasters are predicting more heavy rain for this weekend.
-
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Today`s first Shoutout goes out to Mr. Douglas` current world problems class at Columbia River High School in Vancouver, Washington.
-
What car company makes the jeep line of vehicles?
-
Here we go. Is it Honda, Ford, Chrysler of Cadillac?
-
You got three seconds, go.
-
Chrysler makes jeep vehicles, like the Grand Cherokee model.
-
That`s your answer and that`s your shoutout.
-
AZUZ: Some of those models are at the center of a standoff between Chrysler and the U.S. government.
-
It`s not about all jeeps, it`s not about all Grand Cherokees.
-
Just vehicles made during certain years.
-
The issue is the gas tank`s location, and how it might be impacted during a collision.
-
The government wants a recall.
-
Athena Jones tells us how Chrysler responded.
-
ATHENA JONES, CNN CORRESPONDENT: In a rare act of defiance, car company giant Chrysler refuses to recall almost 2.7 million vehicles,
-
as requested by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
-
For nearly two decades, some Jeep SUV models have had a tendency to burst into flames after a rear-end collision.
-
The NHTSA is requesting that upgrades to the older models be installed to keep fires from starting.
-
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: The definition of a safety defect is if it`s a bad design, if it`s harmful to people, and if it occurs repeatedly. And that`s all been the fact here.
-
JONES: The models in question are 1993 to 2004 Jeep Grand Cherokees and 2002 to 2007 Jeep Liberties.
-
The company says it`s been working with the government on the fuel tank fire issue since 2010.
-
Chrysler says their SUVs met the minimum standards for rear-end collisions,
-
but in a June 3 letter from NHTSA to Chrysler, the agency said bluntly quote,
-
"the existence of a minimum standard does not require NHTSA to ignore deadly problems."
-
Chrysler responded in a statement, saying "we believe that the NHTSA`s initial conclusions are based on an incomplete analysis of the underlying data,
-
and we are committed to continue working with the agency to resolve this disagreement."
-
But it`s the data that is scaring some consumer advocates.
-
The Center for Auto Safety says its data shows the risk of fire for a Grand Cherokee in the model years in question is more than 20,000 times greater than the risk in a comparable Ford Explorer.
-
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Chrysler defends that their gas tanks on these vehicles were built according to the government safety standard available at this time,
-
and basically that there is no problem, that the number of people who have died in rear-end collisions is far lower than safety organizations are alleging,
-
and that at any rate, it`s less than the industry average for that type of vehicle built at that time.
-
JONES: Recalls are not unusual, but this is the first time since 1996 that an auto maker has challenged a recall demand from the NHTSA.
-
That case also involved Chrysler, and the company prevailed in a two-year, federal court battle.
-
Athena Jones, CNN, Washington.
-
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Today`s Shoutout Extra Credit goes out to Mr. Kurzanowski`s (ph) social studies classes at St. Joseph`s School in Botavia, New York.
-
Bud Selig is the commissioner of what pro sports league?
-
You know what to do. Is it the NBA, NFL, NHL, or MLB?
-
Put another 3 seconds on the clock, and go.
-
Selig has been the commissioner of Major League Baseball for nearly 15 years.
-
That`s your answer and that`s your shoutout extra credit.
-
AZUZ: Some major names in the major leagues could be called out for the rest of the season.
-
ESPN is reporting that 20 players could be suspended over an issue baseball has dealt with before,
-
the illegal use of performance enhancing drugs like steroids.
-
ESPN says this could become the worst drug abuse case in baseball`s history.
-
Major League Baseball hasn`t come until yet, but says there is an investigation going on.
-
According to the sports network, this centers on an anti-aging clinic in Miami, Florida.
-
It was called biogenesis.
-
And it`s accused of supplying Major League players from around the country with performance enhancing drugs and teaching them how to avoid testing positive for taking the drugs.
-
In fact, Major League Baseball filed suit against biogenesis early this year for doing exactly that.
-
The clinic is now closed, but the ESPN says the man who ran it has agreed to cooperate in the investigation
-
and the Major League Baseball might drop its lawsuit against him for doing that.
-
Officials are hoping he`ll able to identify players who were doping, anyone caught could be suspended for 100 games.
-
Early we talked about flooding in parts of Europe, we`ve covered a similar story yesterday here in the U.S.
-
There has been all kinds of severe weather, all over the country in the past few weeks.
-
Everything from floods to fires to funnel clouds.
-
Chad Myers has a wrap up for us.
-
CHAD MYERS, CNN CORRESPONDENT: In May, a devastating tornado ripped through Moore, Oklahoma.
-
Leaving 24 dead including seven children from a leveled elementary school,
-
raising questions about why Moore storm shelters weren`t available.
-
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: There was a tornado on the ground.
-
MYERS: Just two weeks later, this monster storm, an EF-5 touched down in El Reno, Oklahoma, less than 30 miles from Moore.
-
When the unthinkable happened here in Moore, it was a mile wide, EF-4 and EF-5 damage as far as you can see.
-
The storm in El Reno was 2.6 miles wide, twice as far as here.
-
That`s wider than the island of Manhattan.
-
And the widest tornado ever recorded in the U.S.
-
On the West Coast wildfires are raging, firefighters have battled more than 2,000 wild fires this year, nearly twice the five-year average.
-
The powerhouse fire burning near Los Angeles has charred more than 32,000 acres and destroyed six homes so far.
-
Hundreds of homes are also threatened in New Mexico and Colorado fires.
-
And now, dangerous flooding along the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers.
-
Several levies have been breached and officials have urged the evacuation of more than 300 residents in the St. Louis area.
-
More rain is forecast for that area this week.
-
A week that also marks the official start of hurricane season.
-
Chad Myers, CNN, El Reno, Oklahoma.
-
AZUZ: How much do you remember about some of the news stories from this school year?
-
Take our end of the year news quiz and find out.
-
Ten questions covering events from August through May, see if you can score a perfect ten.
-
The quiz is up in the resources box at cnnstudentnews.com
-
As we`ve said, tomorrow`s show is our last one of the school year.
-
We`re going to be looking back at some of those major stories.
-
For example, remember this? It caught our curiosity.
-
And had some people seeing red.
-
Come back tomorrow for a longer look back and maybe a surprise or two as we close out the year.
-
It`s going to be a gag.
-
If you get a hankering for house hunting, this last video is for you.
-
Impressive? No, maybe not at first, but don`t be put up by surface appearances.
-
With this home, you`ve got to look a little deeper.
-
The property used to be the property of the U.S. government.
-
It`s an old missile silo.
-
It`s been decommissioned and redecorated, one bedroom one bathroom,
-
properly insulated against a potential nuclear war, asking price $750,000.
-
But if multiple interested buyers launched into a bidding war, that price could skyrocket.
-
Anyone else would miss aloud.
-
It isn`t a ton of room, so you should pick space saving furniture like bunker beds.
-
It`s time for us to turn in, but we`ll be back tomorrow with our last show of the school year.
-
Hope to see you then.
-
END