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About Jordan Denari

Age: 18
School: Brebeuf Jesuit
Throughout my four years at Y-Press, I've reported on a number of issues, including the Rwandan genocide, Burmese refugee youth living in Indianapolis, and the 2004 and 2008 presidential elections. Outside of Y-Press, I am a junior at Brebeuf Jesuit, where I participate in Varsity basketball and two clubs: STRAP (Students Taking Responsibility Against Poverty) and Amnesty International. In college, I hope to study Journalism and International Affairs.

Interests: current world events, social justice, art, writing, basketball, reading good books, politics, world religions, spending time with my family and friends

Favorite Color: I don't have one; it changes with my mood
Favorite Book(s): The Kite Runner
Favorite YPress Story: Interviewing Barack Obama
Stories by Jordan
Artwork by Johanna Richardson, 13, Y-Press
Most people watch a movie, critique it, and then move on. For Jenna Knapp, 19, it wasn't that easy. Jenna first saw the documentary "Invisible Children" during her senior year of high school, when a college friend brought back a copy from California.
True or false? 1. All blind people wear sunglasses. 2. If you read Braille in the dark, you need a flashlight and your fingers get tired. 3. All blind people have Seeing Eye dogs.
Y-Press members with first lady Laura Bush in June
After all the uproar over Sen. Joe Lieberman’s congressional primary loss, the national attention may soon shift to Indiana’s 9th Congressional District. Political experts have identified this district race -- which pits Republican incumbent Mike Sodrel against Democratic former congressman Baron Hill -- as one of the most critical in the nation this fall. That’s because the Republicans are trying to keep their majority in Congress, and the Democrats are hoping to overtake it.
It's his first day at Cathedral High School. As he walks through the noisy, crowded hallways, he is overcome with a sense of fear and anticipation. Then it hits him: He has no idea where his first class is. He finally finds it, but he's 20 minutes late. He tries to slip in without being noticed, but the door announces his entrance with a "Click, Errrrk!"
Political conventions are for kids, too. That's the take from Cy Hudson, the 17-year-old son of delegate Angela Hudson, of Jeffersonville, who tagged along for some political clarity. "I've been considering myself a Republican for many years. And now I have a lot of questions and things I hope will be answered," said Hudson, a senior at Choate Rosemary Hall School in Wallingford, Conn. "I thought
According to Paul Rusesaba gina, the two most abused words in the world are "never" and "again." In 1993, the Holocaust Museum opened in Washington, D.C. At the dedication, people spoke of the atrocities and how the world would never again tolerate genocide. A year later, halfway around the world, at least 800,000 men, women and children were systematically killed while the international community
E verybody has said it at least once, maybe while stressing over final exams or after a regrettable error: "I'm going to kill myself." But some people think about it seriously, and a few go through with it. Suicide is the third-leading cause of death among U.S. youth ages 10 to 19, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The effects of a young person's suicide are widespread,
Fifteen-year-old Rachel Swanson has a history of political activism. Coming from a politically active family (her dad worked as a legislative aide for Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin) she's continuing the tradition at Bryan Station High School, where she is vice president of the Young Democrats club.
Map of Myanmar (Burma)
Much has been written and reported on the throngs of youth involved in the presidential primaries and caucuses. But will youth actually have an impact on the general election? Will activism translate into votes?
According to CIRCLE, the Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning and Engagement at the University of Maryland, more than 32 million youth ages 18 to 25 will be eligible to vote in the upcoming election. If 55 percent of these young people vote – a record turnout, attained only once, in the 1972 election – more than 17.6 million ballots will be cast.
Despite living in Michigan's remote Upper Peninsula, Pryce Hadley has been able to maintain a high level of political activism. At Marquette Senior High School, from which he just graduated, he participated in "We the People," a nationwide competition in which students answer questions about U.S. government posed by government experts.
Considering how important young people have been to this election cycle, it's not surprising that their journalistic peers have the same enthusiasm for covering it.
On a warm September morning, we sat in our elementary school classrooms and watched collapsing towers on T.V. We heard whispers of an attack, and many of our classmates were whisked out of school by nervous parents.