Jourdan Urbach, 15, of Roslyn Heights was named one of America's top ten youth volunteers for 2007 in a ceremony today at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, receiving a national Prudential Spirit of Community Award for his outstanding volunteer community service. Selected from a field of more than 20,000 applicants across the country, he received a personal award of $5,000, an engraved gold medallion, a crystal trophy for his school, and a $5,000 grant from The Prudential Foundation for a nonprofit charitable organization of his choice.

Also honored in Washington was Yaneisha Burroughs, 13, of the Bronx. She and Jourdan were named New York's top youth volunteers in February, and were recognized last night at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History, along with the top two youth volunteers of every other state and the District of Columbia. At that event, all 102 Prudential Spirit of Community State Honorees were presented with $1,000 awards and congratulated by Indianapolis Colts quarterback and Super Bowl MVP Peyton Manning. The honorees also received engraved silver medallions and an all-expense-paid trip with their parents to Washington, D.C., for this week's recognition events.

Conducted in partnership with the National Association of Secondary School Principals (NASSP), The Prudential Spirit of Community Awards were created 12 years ago by Prudential Financial, Inc. to encourage youth volunteerism and to identify and reward young role models. Since then, the program has honored more than 75,000 young volunteers at the local, state and national level.

?Jourdan and Yaneisha have demonstrated a level of compassion, dedication and achievement that is truly exceptional,? said Arthur F. Ryan, Chairman and CEO of Prudential Financial, Inc. ?We are proud to give them the recognition they so richly deserve, and hope that their example will inspire other young people to become actively involved in their own communities.?

Jourdan, a home-schooled sophomore and a student at the Juilliard School's Pre-College Division in New York City, has used his reputation and highly acclaimed abilities as a violin prodigy to raise more than $1.3 million for national charities focused on neurological illnesses. When he was just 7, Jourdan met an internationally renowned neurosurgeon, who took Jourdan on a tour of a pediatric intensive care unit. ?I saw firsthand the suffering of children with neurological diseases,? Jourdan said. ?I left with a strong determination to bring these children some measure of peace, temporal enjoyment, a little contagious enthusiasm, and a reminder of what's outside the ICU door.?

Jourdan recruited other musical prodigies from Juilliard and began presenting monthly performances for children in hospitals throughout the New York City area. Jourdan then realized that he could do even more for kids with neurological illnesses, by drawing upon his reputation and contacts in the classical music world to stage benefit performances across the country for large audiences, and enlisting entire symphony orchestras to join him. Since then, he has headlined a series of concerts, including gala performances at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center and the Wortham Center in Houston. All of the proceeds have been donated to medical charities such as the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, The Children's Hearing Institute, The Institute for Music and Neurologic Function, and Beth Israel Medical Center's Hyman-Newman Institute for Neurology and Neurosurgery. Jourdan also promoted neurological research by delivering lectures for national medical organizations, and appearing on network television programs.

Yaneisha, an eighth-grader at The Children's Storefront in Harlem, organized an ongoing community drive that has collected more than 2,100 new and gently used books for disadvantaged and hospitalized children. Her mother, who works in a school, told Yaneisha one day that many schools in low-income areas don't have enough books. With that in mind, Yaneisha cleaned her room and realized she had many books that she no longer needed. ?I figured that there probably were many other people who had books that they didn't need and wouldn't mind donating,? she said.

After donating her own books, Yaneisha made and handed out hundreds of informational flyers to launch her collection drive, and encouraged friends, parents and teachers to tell others about her campaign. With her mother's help, she set up weekend appointments to pick up donations of gently used books and monetary contributions, which she used to purchase new books. Yaneisha then formed a partnership with a community organization to distribute the books to public schools serving disadvantaged children in New York City. In addition, she dresses up as a clown and goes from room to room at a local hospital delivering books and laughter. Yaneisha plans to continue her drive until she collects 10,000 books, and now wants to start a service organization to give her peers an opportunity to volunteer. ?The joy that comes from volunteering is better than anything materialistic,? she said.

Applications for the 2007 awards program were submitted last fall through schools, Girl Scout councils, county 4-H organizations, American Red Cross chapters, YMCAs and Volunteer Centers affiliated with the Points of Light Foundation. The top middle level and high school applicants in each state and the District of Columbia were announced in February. These 102 State Honorees are in Washington this week with their parents for four days of special recognition events.

Ten of the 102 were named America's top ten youth volunteers for 2007 at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce headquarters today. These National Honorees received additional $5,000 awards, gold medallions, crystal trophies for the schools or organizations that nominated them, and $5,000 grants from The Prudential Foundation for charities of their choice.

In addition to Jourdan, the National Honorees are:

Taylor Bell, 18, of Little Rock, Ark., a junior at Pulaski Academy, who created Little Rock's first organized soccer league for special-needs children, engaging more than 100 kids who otherwise would have very limited opportunities to play team sports.

Kendall Ciesemier, 14, of Wheaton, Ill., an eighth-grader at Franklin Middle School, who formed a nonprofit organization that has raised $80,000 since 2004 through Web site donations and T-shirt sales to benefit AIDS orphans in Africa.

Kelly Davis, 18, of West Bath, Maine, a senior at Morse High School in Bath, who spearheaded the enactment of a state law allowing third-party nonprofit organizations to raise money for the police, and then raised more than $40,000 to purchase a bulletproof vest for every working police dog in Maine.

Anna DeSanctis, 13, of Houston, Texas, an eighth-grader at Holy Spirit Episcopal School, who raised more than $22,000 to create libraries at four orphanages in the region of China where she was born.

Bryce Pfeiffer, 14, of Raton, N.M., a member of the Colfax County 4-H and a home-schooled seventh-grader, who led a project to purchase and install a handicapped-accessible fishing dock on a lake at a local state park.

Robert Rasmussen, 14, of Hutchinson, Minn., a seventh-grader at Hutchinson Middle School, who made more than 600 cement markers to place at the graves of all U.S. veterans in a local cemetery, providing a permanent memorial to their sacrifice.

Mollie Singer, 18, of Las Vegas, Nev., a senior at Nevada State High School in Henderson, who has helped raise public support and more than $100,000 for diabetes research since she was diagnosed with the disease at age 4.

Kelydra Welcker, 18, of Parkersburg, W.Va., a senior at Parkersburg South High School, who invented a way to purify drinking water in her community by developing a test for the presence of a controversial industrial compound, and then creating a method for removing the chemical from water.

Heather Wilder, 13, of Las Vegas, Nev., a seventh-grader at Ernest Becker Middle School, who has written a series of 10 booklets to help foster children understand and cope with their situations, based on her own experiences as a foster child.

The National Honorees were chosen by a national selection committee that was co-chaired by U.S. Senator Norm Coleman of Minnesota and Arthur Ryan of Prudential. Also serving on the committee were actor Richard Dreyfuss; Alma Powell, Chair of America's Promise ? The Alliance for Youth; Robert Goodwin, former President and CEO of the Points of Light Foundation; Amy B. Cohen, Director of Learn and Serve America at the Corporation for National and Community Service; Kathy Cloninger, CEO of Girl Scouts of the USA; Donald T. Floyd Jr., President and CEO of National 4-H Council; Michael Cohen, President and CEO of Achieve, Inc.; Kathryn Forbes, National Chair of Volunteers, American Red Cross; Joe Militello, President of NASSP; and two 2006 Prudential Spirit of Community National Honorees: Geneva Johnson of the Bronx, N.Y., a student at Binghamton University, and Ajay Mangal of Pascagoula, Miss., a student at Columbia University.

NASSP President Joe Militello said: ?Every year, the Prudential Spirit of Community Awards program brings out some of the best and brightest youth in the country. This year is no exception as we take another welcomed opportunity to honor these young people for displaying great character and leadership as they try to effect positive changes in their communities, this nation and the world.?

In addition to the organizations above, The Prudential Spirit of Community Awards are supported by the American Association of School Administrators, the National Middle School Association, the National School Boards Association, the Council of the Great City Schools, the National School Public Relations Association and many other national youth and service organizations.

More information about The Prudential Spirit of Community Awards and this year's honorees can be found at www.prudential.com/spirit or www.principals.org/prudential.

The National Association of Secondary School Principals ? the preeminent organization and the national voice for middle level and high school principals, assistant principals and aspiring school leaders ? provides its members with the professional resources to serve as visionary leaders. NASSP promotes the intellectual growth, academic achievement, character development, leadership development, and physical well-being of youth through its programs and student leadership services. NASSP sponsors the National Honor Society?, the National Junior Honor Society? and the National Association of Student Councils?. For more information on NASSP, NHS, NJHS or NASC, visit www.principals.org.

Prudential Financial, Inc. (NYSE: PRU), a financial services leader with approximately $616 billion of assets under management as of December 31, 2006, has operations in the United States, Asia, Europe, and Latin America. Leveraging its heritage of life insurance and asset management expertise, Prudential is focused on helping individual and institutional customers grow and protect their wealth. The company's well-known Rock symbol is an icon of strength, stability, expertise and innovation that has stood the test of time. Prudential's businesses offer a variety of products and services, including life insurance, annuities, retirement-related services, mutual funds, asset management, and real estate services. For more information, please visit www.prudential.com.

[Editors: full-color pictures of the Spirit of Community Awards program logo and medallions are available at www.prudential.com/spirit.]