Angel takes Akron man under wing, flies to Baltimore for medical treatments
and last updated 2021-05-13 22:48:54-04
AKRON, N.Y. (WKBW) â Akron Resident, Scott Woodward, has been living with cancer for 15 years.
âI can figure out anything, but I cannot figure out this cancer thing. Multiple Myeloma is a weird beast,â Woodward said. âThe doctors said âwell we are going to be able to keep you alive for awhile, but it is going to suck. Please try to find one of these new novel therapies.ââ
So, Woodward signed up for a trial two years ago that put genetically modified T cells back into his body to help fight off the cancer.
State lawmaker recovering from kidney transplant
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Tech programs help high schoolers prepare for jobs
Published: 2/1/2021 8:05:27 AM
Today’s job market demands a better-educated workforce than ever before, and jobs in this new economy require more complex knowledge and skills than jobs of the past. So if students want to be prepared for success after high school, they’re going to have to find a way to gain a competitive edge.
That has been the mantra of New Hampshire government, business and education officials over the last decade, and is the momentum behind the state’s Career Readiness Drive for 65 legislation (passed in 2019), which, in part, requires New Hampshire’s high schools to assess student career interest and place them on a pathway to a career credential (which could range from a diesel certificate to an medicine degree). New Hampshire has an economic competitiveness goal that 65% of our working-age population has a workforce-valued credential by 2025.