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Pilgrim Hall Museum to host Zoom in June virtual programs

Ian Livingstone donates £30k to buy PCs for Bournemouth children

GAMES Workshop co-founder Ian Livingstone CBE has donated £30,000 to help gift schoolchildren in Bournemouth with computers. The Fighting Fantasy author donated the sum through his foundation to provide youngsters without PCs with the technology to help them with online learning. More than 100 children have benefitted so far with 132 computers allocated, and the kit also includes webcams and support to set up. A further batch of 43 computers are in the process of being distributed. Mr Livingstone, who is set to open the Livingstone Academy in Bournemouth this September, collaborated with the Raspberry Pi Foundation, which reached out to the local YMCA to ensure the computer kits supplied were handed out to the children who needed them most.

Who Counts and When: On Women s Suffrage, Census, and incremental steps towards citizenship and Civil Rights

Milwaukee County’s census data currently is being tabulated by the U.S. Census Bureau for its end-of-December scheduled delivery to the President, who in turn delivers the count to Congress. In March 2020 COVID-19 protocols disrupted and replaced years of 2020 census planning – extending collection timelines and shifting collection processes that, in turn, were suddenly abbreviated by presidential order in September. On December 18, 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a census-related decision – just thirteen days before the census was scheduled to be delivered to the president. The Court reviewed a July 2020 presidential order directing the Census Bureau to present two sets of data: 1)the total census, and 2) the full census minus the total number of undocumented persons. The presidential intent is that Congress use the immigrant-purged data for Congressional reapportionment and state taxation purposes.

Blackburn s Youth Action gives free computers to children to help mitigate damage of lockdown

An award-winning charity is continuing to provide free computers to children in East Lancashire as part of their Get Digitally Connected initiative. Youth Action, based in Preston New Road, Blackburn, has been supporting children and families for more than 19 years. And this month they announced that their digital poverty project with the Raspberry Pi Foundation is set to continue, meaning they will be able to provide families in Blackburn with Darwen with access to technology so that whether at school or at home, children are ready to learn and catch up after lockdown. CEO of Youth Action, Amar Abbas said: Now more than ever, children face serious long term consequences to their education and life chances.

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