May 10, 2021 Submitted photo MCCTC STEM students show off their graphic design skills with completed license plates for the Go Baby Go cars. From left, James Groom from West Branch, Aiden Ripple from Austintown, Shelbi Heid from Poland, Dillon Shipley from West Branch and Dominic Pratt from Poland.
CANFIELD On April 24, 22 children received ride-on cars that were adapted to compensate for various mobility needs courtesy of the Magic of Michael Foundation and dozens of passionate volunteers.
The event, called Go Baby Go Youngstown, is in its 6th year of modifying ride-on cars for mobility-impaired children in the community.
Prior to the event, students from the Mahoning County Career and Technical Center (MCCTC) began their work on the project. STEM students used their graphic arts expertise to design custom license plates for each car based on the child’s favorite colors, characters, and other interests. Engineering students from the MCCTC began setting up the cars, purc
Submitted material
MCCTC STEM students show off their graphic design skills with completed license plates for the Go Baby Go cars. From left, James Groom from West Branch, Aiden Ripple from Austintown, Shelbi Heid from Poland, Dillon Shipley from West Branch and Dominic Pratt from Poland. (Submitted photo)
CANFIELD Â On April 24, 22 children received ride-on cars that were adapted to compensate for various mobility needs courtesy of the Magic of Michael Foundation and dozens of passionate volunteers.
The event, called Go Baby Go Youngstown, is in its 6th year of modifying ride-on cars for mobility-impaired children in the community.
Prior to the event, students from the Mahoning County Career and Technical Center (MCCTC) began their work on the project. STEM students used their graphic arts expertise to design custom license plates for each car based on the child’s favorite colors, characters, and other interests. Engineering students from the MCCTC began setting up the car
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Unprecedented US job losses continue while Congress dithers over shrinking “relief” bill
Catastrophic job losses continued for the 39th straight week in the United States, as documented by the latest US Department of Labor first-time unemployment claims report. The report revealed there were 885,000 filings for state benefits for the week ending December 12. This is the highest number since early September and 22,000 more than last week’s revised total of 862,000. The nearly 900,000 claims are roughly three times the 270,547 claims that were filed at this time last year.
In addition to state claims, federal claims through the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) program, designed for self-employed, contract and gig workers, were reported at 455,037, bringing the total number of claims to over 1.3 million for the second week in a row.
The CDC banned evictions for those affected by Covid Why are tenants being thrown out on the street? nbcnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nbcnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.