With the calendar now showing the month of February, we’re into the final weeks of the winter high school sports season. For some schools, February is going to be a very busy month, thanks to the persistence of the COVID-19 pandemic. Leland & Gray’s situation is a good example. .
It’s been an up-and-down season for the Brattleboro Colonels girls’ basketball team, but they have one thing going for them as they head into the final quarter of the regular season — they have played more games than any other team in Division I. COVID-19 has made a total .
BRATTLEBORO—It’s a “happy coincidence of opportunity, needs, and values,” as School for International Training (SIT) President Sophia Howlett called it. SIT has a mostly empty campus these days. Meanwhile, the people who are helping to resettle Afghan evacuees in southern Vermont needed a short-term place for them to stay .
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic didn’t disrupt the high school sports schedule in Windham County as much as feared last week. However, for some schools, the surge in COVID cases left them barely able to field a team. The Twin Valley boys’ basketball team has been hit hard by the .
After four straight losses, including a 56-25 defeat on Jan. 4 against Northampton, Mass., the Brattleboro Colonels girls’ basketball team needed something good to happen. Beating an undefeated team definitely qualifies as something good. Despite coming to the BUHS gym on Jan. 6 with only six of their .