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NEW YORK (AP) — The National 4-H Council is growing in a new direction – online – by launching its e-learning platform Clover with a collaboration with Netflix and its new movie “Spy Kids: Armageddon,” the organization announced Wednesday. The innovation, Bramble says, comes in the way the Clover platform engages with the students by using gamification and entertainment, which led to the collaboration with Netflix. “When you think of the intent behind ‘Spy Kids,’ those kids are tackling some of the world’s most pressing issues and they’re doing this through coding and gamification. “We feel that Clover can support a way to catch up, but it can’t do it alone. It’s so valuable to have an in-person program that goes along with it -- the mentoring aspect that comes with 4-H.
Persons: Jill Bramble, ” Bramble, , Bramble, Bob Hughes, Melinda Gates Foundation’s, ” Hughes, , Clover Organizations: Netflix, H, Associated Press, Melinda Gates Foundation’s United States Program, Lilly Endowment Inc, AP Locations: Manhattan , New York, Manhattan , Kansas
National median closing prices for single-family homes have been on the rise for the last 13 weeks. The major contributor to the upward price pressure is a lack of inventory, says Brandon Lwowski. Below are two tables that demonstrate the inventory and price changes by state. The major contributor to the upward price pressure is low inventory. Supply of single-family homes has been slipping since the 2008 financial crisis.
Persons: Brandon Lwowski, we're, Price, Lwowski Organizations: MLS, HouseCanary, Dakotas, New, District of Columbia, Alabama, South Carolina Locations: HouseCanary, Wyoming, Dakotas . State, New Mexico, Texas, Florida, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi, Tennessee, Arizona, Carolina, Utah, Georgia, Nebraska, Michigan, Oregon, Indiana, Hawaii, Delaware, Virginia, Maine, Nevada, Iowa, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Washington, Ohio, Maryland, Vermont, York, Minnesota, Massachusetts, California, Illinois, Hampshire, Wisconsin, Idaho, Colorado, Missouri, Connecticut, Jersey, Alaska, Kansas, Montana, Arkansas , Wyoming
REUTERS/Gabriella Borter/File PhotoOct 18 (Reuters) - An abortion rights vote in Kentucky on Nov. 8 will determine if the conservative state becomes Kansas 2.0. The upcoming vote is a test of public support for Kentucky's strict abortion laws, which took effect after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade's federal abortion protections in June. Kentucky is the only one of those states to have voters weigh in on abortion rights while enforcing a near-total ban. A coalition of state and national abortion rights groups called Protect Kentucky Access aims to win support from conservatives who disagree with the overturn of the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling and the state's abortion ban. Leticia Martinez, a consultant who has advised both opposition campaigns, said while the Kansas win informed the Kentucky efforts, the current strategy was tailored to Kentucky voters specifically.
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