EDITOR S NOTE: This calendar is being regularly updated to reflect all event cancellations and postponements. However, it is recommended that readers contact event organizers before they attend. For the most updated version of the calendar, please visit or troyrecord.com.
RACE IN AMERICA: At 6 p.m. on Tuesdays April 6, April 20, May 4, May 18, June 1 and June 15, Dr. Jennifer Thompson Burns will lead a Race in America: A Reading and Discussion Group through the Troy Public Library. This reading and discussion series will explore the inception, inculcation, and function of race in American society. We will discuss this topic in order to improve our understanding of systematic, and social, inclusion and exclusion in American systems. Our goal is to tease out the implicit ways race serves as a real, and imagined, force in the lives of all Americans. This group will explore racial dynamics in America, expanding beyond the black-white binary and our understanding of race, and develop a d
EDITOR S NOTE: This calendar is being regularly updated to reflect all event cancellations and postponements. However, it is recommended that readers contact event organizers before they attend. For the most updated version of the calendar, please visit or troyrecord.com.
UNDERSTANDING SHAKESPEARE: Join us at the Troy Public Library on Thursdays, February 18th – March 18th from 6:30 – 7:30PM for our Understanding Shakespeare workshop. This will be a five-session program on how to understand Shakespeare s plays. We will start our discussion with Act 1 of Shakespeare’s tragedy “Hamlet.” Then in the following four weeks we will discuss the play one act at a time. This program will allow the participants to put the play in a variety of contexts, such as its relationship to his other works and to the modern existential world. Tom Bulger, Shakespeare Scholar and retired professor from Siena College, will lead this workshop. Please have Act One read for the February 18th discussi
EDITOR S NOTE: This calendar is being regularly updated to reflect all event cancellations and postponements. However, it is recommended that readers contact event organizers before they attend. For the most updated version of the calendar, please visit or troyrecord.com.
LENTEN FISH FRY DINNERS: The Latham-Colonie Knights of Columbus located at 328 Troy-Schenectady Road, Latham, 12110, will be hosting Lenten Fish Fry Dinners every Friday from February 19th 2021 through and including Good Friday April 2nd 2021. The “Take Out” dinner includes; Fish Fry or Clam Roll served with French Fries or Onion Rings and Coleslaw. All Dinners are $10 each. Please call 518 892 3750 for reservations, please indicate pick up time requested. Social distancing and masks are required per CDC guidelines. www.lathamcoloniekofc.com/events.
Cohoes High remains remote for week as coronavirus impacts staffing
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Students walk home from Cohoes High School on Monday, March 27, 2017 in Cohoes, N.Y. For the first time in Cohoes history, students may soon be riding the bus to school. All students in the district walk or depend on rides from family and friends to get to school but the district is weighing the possibility of giving out bus passes that would let students take CDTA buses to school. ( Lori Van Buren / Times Union)Lori Van Buren
COHOES – Cohoes High School will remain on remote learning for the rest of the week as a result of staffing shortages caused by the the coronavirus pandemic.
Coronavirus causes Cohoes High to switch to remote learning
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Students walk home from Cohoes High School on Monday, March 27, 2017 in Cohoes, N.Y. For the first time in Cohoes history, students may soon be riding the bus to school. All students in the district walk or depend on rides from family and friends to get to school but the district is weighing the possibility of giving out bus passes that would let students take CDTA buses to school. ( Lori Van Buren / Times Union)Lori Van Buren
COHOES – Cohoes High School switched to remote learning for Monday as a result of staffing shortages caused by the coronavirus pandemic, the Cohoes City School District said on its website.