A business card may seem an unlikely item for a 13-year-old student to carry, but Ryan Dhindsa hands you his with a confident smile. "Poverty fighters," it reads. "A genocide that can be stopped. Ryan Dhindsa, president." Ryan, an eighth-grader at Sage Ridge School in Reno, also has a Web site and a worldview well beyond his years.
Tuesday, March 06, 2007
Teens take Darfur's suffering seriously
That's my boy!
A business card may seem an unlikely item for a 13-year-old student to carry, but Ryan Dhindsa hands you his with a confident smile. "Poverty fighters," it reads. "A genocide that can be stopped. Ryan Dhindsa, president." Ryan, an eighth-grader at Sage Ridge School in Reno, also has a Web site and a worldview well beyond his years.
A business card may seem an unlikely item for a 13-year-old student to carry, but Ryan Dhindsa hands you his with a confident smile. "Poverty fighters," it reads. "A genocide that can be stopped. Ryan Dhindsa, president." Ryan, an eighth-grader at Sage Ridge School in Reno, also has a Web site and a worldview well beyond his years.
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2 comments:
"The apple doesn't fall far from the tree", you must be very proud (that skinny kid is 13 already?).
S. A.
Deep- since you've posted it here, I really would like to know what Ryan expects "peacekeepers" to do.
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