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(Airs 05/03/24 @ 10 p.m.) The Legislative Gazette is a weekly program about New York State Government and politics. On this week’s Gazette: Governor Hochul highlights changes in New York’s reading curriculum, Republican Assembly Minority Leader Will Barclay shares his thoughts on what he considers too much spending in the state budget, and we’ll take you to the newly recognized 150 year old Hudson-Athens light house.
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Pro-Palestine demonstrators at Vassar College continued discussions with administrators Friday as an encampment slowly grows on campus.
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Thousands of people are expected in Northampton, Massachusetts this weekend, celebrating the LGBTQ+ community with the Hampshire Pride parade and more.
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The five finalists for Albany's Tulip Court were introduced Friday.
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Imagine for a moment that instead of daily reports from a New York Courtroom where Donald Trump is on trial for falsifying business records to describe a payoff to a woman with whom he had a brief affair in 2006, we would be getting daily reports from a Washington, DC courtroom where the US government is presenting chapter and verse about how Donald Trump encouraged and enabled an attempt to overthrow the will of the voters and deny Joe Biden the Presidency on January 6, 2021.
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Meteorologist Garett Argianas delivers the evening weather forecast for Friday, May 3, 2024.
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(Airs 05/03/24 @ 3 p.m. & 05/05/24 @ 6 p.m.) The Media Project is an inside look at media coverage of current events with former Times Union Editor, current Upstate American, Substack columnist Rex Smith, Judy Patrick, former Editor of the Daily Gazette and Vice President for Editorial Development for the New York Press Association, WAMC News Director Ian Pickus, and Media Project Producer David Guistina. On this week’s Media Project, Rex, Judy, Ian and David talk about coverage of the campus protests and House Speaker Mike Johnson’s visit to Columbia University, when physical barriers get in the way of the news, and much more.
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The Schenectady County Historical Society on Saturday will premiere a new short film that tells the story of three enslaved people who lived in Rotterdam in the 18th Century.
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WAMC News has learned that a fifth alumna from a private all-girls boarding school in Pittsfield, Massachusetts has come forward with allegations of sexual abuse at the hands of a former teacher.
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Today we'll find out what artificial intelligence can do in the kitchen! We’re joined by Dr. Jim Hendler of RPI and Chef Gail Sokol. Here’s how it works. Listeners call or email with a list of ingredients in the fridge or cupboard. Jim will input the data into his A.I. interface which will spit out a recipe. Chef Gail Sokol will then take a look at the recipe and see if the computer intelligence knows what it is talking about! Ray Graf hosts