Archive for Tuesday, December 07, 1999
At-Risk Students Get Free Computers
For a long time, Marcell Reynolds has yearned for his very own computer.
“I’ve gone to bed and prayed for one,” said the seventh-grader from Hawthorne. But he knew that his mother, a single parent, could not afford one. “We’re on a tight budget,” he explained.
Monday morning, Marcell and 13 other boys and girls from economically disadvantaged families were jumping up and down after learning that they would each receive a home computer system, complete with software and a printer.
The giveaway, held in an auditorium at Pierce College in Woodland Hills, was organized by Second Byte Foundation, a Westlake Village-based nonprofit group dedicated to increasing access to computer technology for at-risk youth.
“Technology can help kids stay interested in education and school,” said Juliette Harris, the foundation’s executive director.
Because computers are so pervasive in the workplace and everyday life, they have become “an integral part of education,” said Darroch “Rocky” Young, president of Pierce College. But technology has also contributed to a “bifurcated society” between people with access and those without, he added. “That’s why I think the work of the Second Byte Foundation is so critical.”
The gifts came with strings attached. To keep the computers, the youths must maintain satisfactory grades and 95% attendance at school. They must also perform two hours of community service a month, take a computer class and pledge to make the world a better place.
It’s important for kids to have access to computers, because it gives them more opportunities, said former National Football League star Eric Dickerson, who also spoke at the news conference.
Shana McNealy, a ninth-grader from South-Central Los Angeles, believed having a computer would better prepare her for the future. “It will help me in school, get me ready for college and jobs,” she said.
Marcell, who said the gift was a dream come true, could hardly wait to look up current events Web sites. “As soon as I get home I’m going to hook it up,” he said.
- CalPERS' housing portfolio loses 35% in a year
- Angrier response to Prop. 8 steps up
- Mitch Mitchell dies at 61; drummer for the Jimi Hendrix Experience
- California economy loses $28 billion yearly to health effects of pollution
- Pregnancy has room for a little wine or beer, new studies show, but caffeine is a growing concern
- Supt. Brewer's failings
- Jay Fiondella dies at 82; flamboyant owner of Chez Jay made the restaurant a Santa Monica landmark
- Admirers of environmentalist seek a monument 14,242 feet high
- Fire destroys 80 houses in Montecito
- Scientists take first photos of planets orbiting other stars
- Wiping away stains of a troubled past
- Oscar De La Hoya takes on all comers at media day
- Strict conditions almost certain for automaker bailout
- Proposition 8 protesters target businesses
- Spam traffic plunges after report blames server hosting company
- If Dubai sneezes, who gets a cold?
- Vast Obama network becomes a political football
- Free agent season starts now
- Schedule also is working in Lakers' favor
- Design errors are blamed in Minnesota bridge collapse
