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  • Two bubbly tweens spit out nothing but racist garbage

    Monday, April 24, 2006 By: Jeremy Kauffman

    When kids are raised to think that the Caucasian race is superior to others, the result is the Neo-Nazi pop group Prussian Blue. The band consists of two thirteen-year- old twins, Lamb and Lynx Gaede,

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  • Same Equation, Different Culture: Exchange student faces new outlook on education

    Monday, April 24, 2006 By: abraham swee & amelia holcomb

    At 2:44 p.m. students pour out of the school doors and dash to their cars like mad cattle, only to find themselves caught in a web of traffic. It seems like a normal time to rush home for an after-sch

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  • N.C. Lottery sales top $28 million in first 6 days

    Monday, April 24, 2006 By: Caroline Outten

    It looks like North Carolinians have joined the masses who are feeling lucky and hoping to strike it rich. The North Carolina Education Lottery started off with a bang, earning $28 million in its firs

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  • Relay for Life returns for more

    Tuesday, April 25, 2006 By: Brandon Edwards

    For the second year, FFHS’s football field will be making room for the worldwide annual event, Relay For Life, in May. For 10 years, the relay has been held on the Outer Banks to honor survivors and p

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  • Firefighting Teens: Volunteers make difference in community

    Tuesday, April 25, 2006 By: Zach Warhover

    After a house or business catches fire, you may see not just the age-old veterans or the chiseled men you see on TV fighting the fire, but you might also see the face of a teenager helping his or her

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  • Terrorism limits overseas school trips

    Tuesday, April 25, 2006 By: Tommy Lozupone

    The terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, shook this country to its very core, from the airline industry to the start of a war halfway around the world. But the shockwave of that day has also changed s

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  • Movielink Revolutionizes Video Downloads

    Tuesday, April 25, 2006 By: Noelle Grudzinski '09

    It is amazing how fast technology is updated and outdated. First, everyone was enchanted by the iPod and its extraordinary characteristics- small, holds a thousand songs, perfect sound quality. Then

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  • Sophomore teaches seventh grader without words

    Tuesday, April 25, 2006 By: Kelsey Lilley

    It’s 3 o’clock on a Wednesday afternoon. Sophomore Meghan Rodgers sits in the back of the Berkeley Middle School cafeteria with 15-year-old seventh grader Mark Smith*. He can’t speak because he is non

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  • Lincoln gives students cars the boot: New alternative to towing successful

    Wednesday, April 26, 2006 By: Wendy Walters

    A new method of controlling the parking situation has arrived at Lincoln. This semester, the administration introduced an alternative to towing students not properly parked in their assigned spots.

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  • New superintendent sees challenges in LISD

    Wednesday, April 26, 2006 By: Irma Hernandez and Christian Sanchez

    Who would have known that the district’s 14th superintendent, Dr. Daniel Garcia Jr., would be coming all the way from Brownsville?

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The National Edition - Teen Generated News From Around The Nation my.hsj.org
Issue Date: Sunday, April 30, 2006 Issue: Week of May 1, 2006
 
The National Edition is a collection of great journalism posted on my.hsj.org.

At-a-glance

News
With less than two months left to choose a new principal after current principal Peter Hamilton retires, many students feel their voices are not loud enough in the selection process for his replacemen
full story 
Several hundred people gathered Sunday at the Federal Building to protest the genocide that is occurring in Darfur, Sudan.
full story 
Tucson residents and students have participated in marches and demonstrations against HR4437.
full story 
Despite the lottery’s initial success, it is still a hot issue among those who believe the moral consequences of gambling outweigh any of the positives.
full story 
The district librarians have given $10,000 to build the high school library.
full story 
Some feel that these measures are a result of issues at other schools.
full story 
Features
Tanemori’s play about the atomic bomb and its effect on his life enlightened students about the importance of forgiveness and peace.
full story 
When neither of your parents holds a college diploma, being on the college-bound path can be especially challenging.
full story 
Sophomore teaches seventh grader without  words
Using American Sign Language two students are helping a child with Down's syndrome relate to the world.
full story 
This blind student describes his life as similar to any other student except that because he cannot see people he does not pre-judge them based on looks.
full story 
<< 1 2 3 >>  Number of stories in this edition: 29

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