services, life classes and vocational programs. at the women s detention center, i believe the most effective vocational program we have here is our cosmetology because they have the opportunity to receive a certification and it does not print they received this in jail so then they can present that to a possible employer when they get out. hold your ridge, hold your ridge. start to clean out. swing it. that s it. see it closes up the openings? you got it? elizabeth valenza is the head instructor for the cosmetology program. i m here for them and that s very important to them. i mean, that they would tell you straight out. they would tell anybody. that s good. to them, it s just very important that they have this class because otherwise they re upstairs for five hours in their cell doing nothing, except perhaps getting in trouble.
eric: hello! they re getting detainee classes, painting or my favorite, personal finance. kimberly: wow! dana: first, on ksm, that photograph of him, that glamour shot he posted somewhere in a cave or something is ridiculous. we should always show the one where he was caught as well. okay. and on gitmo, it s kind of hard to swallow how vitriolic the press and the left was about gitmo in the bush administration. now you do not have a thing from them. now we have the upgrade. i understand the soccer field. they need to get out aggression. flat screen tv. you buy a new tv, that s the kind you have to have. i don t nigh why they need more than one. but enriching life classes for detainees? what would you possibly teach in that class?
services, life classes and vocational programs. at the women s detention center, i believe the most effective vocational program we have here is our cosmetology because they have the opportunity to receive a certification and it does not print they received this in jail so then they can present that to a possible employer when they get out. hold your ridge, hold your ridge. start to clean out. swing it. that s it. see it closes up the openings? you got it? elizabeth valenza is the head instructor for the cosmetology program. i m here for them and that s very important to them. i mean, that they would tell you straight out. they would tell anybody. that s good. to them, it s just very important that they have this class because otherwise they re upstairs for five hours in their cell doing nothing, except perhaps getting in trouble. take the comb out. clean it out. clean it out. and swing it back.
eric: hello! they re getting detainee classes, painting or my favorite, personal finance. kimberly: wow! dana: first, on ksm, that photograph of him, that glamour shot he posted somewhere in a cave or something is ridiculous. we should always show the one where he was caught as well. okay. and on gitmo, it s kind of hard to swallow how vitriolic the press and the left was about gitmo in the bush administration. now you do not have a thing from them. now we have the upgrade. i understand the soccer field. they need to get out aggression. flat screen tv. you buy a new tv, that s the kind you have to have. i don t nigh why they need more than one. but enriching life classes for detainees? what would you possibly teach in that class? greg: why not stop
there s also a new headquarters for the guards and plans for a new hospital. also, enriching your life classes, where detainees can learn to paint, write a resume, even handle personal finances. personal finance? well, that s one class. but it s not a popular class. it s just to keep the guys busy. reporter: a lot has changed here. camp x-ray where the first detainees were brought 10 years ago is now an abandoned relic, overgrown with weeds, preserved as evidence under a court order. but many of the detainees who were once locked up in these cages are still being detained at gtmo with no prospect of going home any time soon. today, 169 detainees remain here, and it s costing u.s. taxpayers $140 million this year. some $800,000 per detainee. this is camp six, the most modern facility here at guantanamo. and exclusively communal living compound housing 80% of the detainees, all of whom are