Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Volunteers Needed During Holiday Season

Thursday, December 6th, 2007

December 2007 - Over 250 volunteers are needed this holiday season to donate a few hours helping to support people with HIV/AIDS. Help Fight AIDS Through Books and Music, an all-volunteer project for the AIDS Council of Northeastern New York, is looking for individuals, family members, work, school and community groups and organizations to help wrap gifts and sell books at the Book House of Stuyvesant Plaza, Crossgates Mall and Colonie Center during the holiday season. Many shifts are available. The holiday project will run from December 1 through December 24. For more information or to volunteer, call Steve Kozlowski at 518.482.5602, email steve@helpfightaids.com or visit www.helpfightaids.com.

Help Fight AIDS Through Books and Music helps fight AIDS by raising money to help meet the special needs of people and families impacted by HIV/AIDS and by spreading knowledge about HIV/AIDS.

Help Fight AIDS Through Books and Music

Council to Celebrate World AIDS Day 2007

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

Saturday, December 1, 2007 is World AIDS Day. Join the greater Glens Falls Community and local volunteers from the AIDS Council of Northeastern New York with support from the HIV/AIDS Coalition of the Saratoga Region for a World AIDS Day Memorial.

The memorial program will begin at 3:00 pm at the Bandstand in Glens Falls City Park. Mayor Le Roy B. Akins, Jr. will read the World AIDS Day Proclamation, followed by a candlelight walk to The Hyde Collection. Those who do not wish to walk can meet in the Hyde Collection’s Helen Froehlich Auditorium at 4:00 pm, where a musical performance and program in memory of those in our community who have died from AIDS and those who are living with the disease will begin.

The Hyde Collection will display a local panel from the AIDS Memorial Quilt. The AIDS Quilt began in 1987 as a memorial to those who died of AIDS. The AIDS Quilt has grown to a 54-ton tapestry that includes more than 45,000 panels dedicated to more than 88,000 individuals. It is the largest piece of community art in the world.

The guest speaker is photographer and activist, Dona Ann McAdams. McAdams will present a slide show and discuss her experiences at the onset of the AIDS epidemic in New York City, as well as her link to the nonprofit group Visual AIDS, that came up with the idea to create a Red Ribbon as what is now the global symbol in the fight against AIDS. Maria Zemantauski, one of the world’s few heralded female flamenco guitarists, and one of even fewer female flamenco composers will perform. Mezzo-Soprano Gisella Montanez-Case, will provide vocal entertainment. NYSMA Soloist Kelsey Finley, a 16 year old Fort Ann High School Junior will also perform. The evening will close with a selection played on bagpipes by Allan Clugston, a member of the Galloway Gaelic Pipes and Drums.

Donations of personal toiletry items will be accepted at The Hyde Collection for distribution by the AIDS Council to those affected by HIV and AIDS in our community. Light refreshments will be served during the meet and greet reception after the program.

The AIDS Council of Northeastern New York’s mission is to reduce the risk, fear, and incidence of HIV infection, encourage the independence of people living with or affected by HIV/AIDS and promote understanding of their Established in 1988, World AIDS Day raises awareness and focuses attention on the global AIDS epidemic. The red ribbon is an international symbol of AIDS awareness that is worn on World AIDS Day and all year round to demonstrate care and concern about HIV/AIDS, and to remind others of the need for their support and commitment. The ultimate goals are to prevent the spread of HIV and improve the lives of people living with the disease. Nearly 40 million people throughout the world are living with HIV, including 2.3 million children. 4.3 million people were infected with HIV in 2006 – the highest ever in one year.

Gov’t to Report Alarming HIV Spike

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

November 16, 2007 - The U.S. Centers for Disease Control & Prevention is mulling over when to release alarming new statistics showing that as many as 50 percent more people are being infected with HIV each year in the United States than originally reported by the government.

According to AIDS advocacy groups familiar with the CDC, middle level officials at the disease prevention agency have quietly confided in colleagues in professional and scientific circles that the number of new HIV infections now appears to be as high as 58,000 to 63,000 cases in the most recent 12-month period.

On its web site this week, the CDC left unchanged its longstanding estimate that about 40,000 Americans per year become infected with HIV, a figure it says has remained “relatively stable” for most of the past decade.

CDC officials have told leaders of AIDS advocacy groups that the new figures are being withheld while they are subjected to a rigorous peer review process by an unidentified scientific journal, which is expected to publish the findings within the next few months. Others familiar with the CDC have said CDC would likely publish the new data in its own journal, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

“It seems to be a poorly kept secret,” said Michael Weinstein, president of the Los Angeles-based AIDS Healthcare Foundation. “Everybody who has dealings with the CDC is talking about it.”

CDC spokesperson Jennifer Ruth said CDC “is currently working to develop new estimates of HIV incidence, based on a new system that distinguishes recent infections from longstanding infections.”

There is no timeline for release of that data, she said, adding that it would not be available before World AIDS Day.

The other set of data in the works is next year’s HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report, which includes data on HIV and AIDS diagnoses, she said. The 2006 HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report also will not be available before World AIDS Day but will likely be released in the coming months.

The U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, of which the CDC is a part, announced earlier this week that top HHS officials would discuss the current “state of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the United States” on a live webcast on Friday, Nov. 16. Among those scheduled to participate in the webcast were Dr. Anthony Fauci, top AIDS researcher for the National Institutes of Health; and Kevin Fenton, director of HHS’s National Center for HIV/AIDS. The event was set to take place between 2 and 3 p.m. EST.

Christopher Bates, the gay acting director of the HHS Office of HIV/AIDS Policy, was to be the moderator of the webcast, and potential viewers were invited to send in questions in advance by e-mail. Bates could not be reached for comment for this story.

It could not be determined by Wednesday whether any of the officials participating in the webcast would disclose information about reports of the higher CDC numbers for new HIV cases.

Reasons for the Increase

Two sources familiar with the CDC, who spoke on condition that they not be identified, said CDC officials have said privately that the higher numbers of HIV cases appear to be driven by more rigorous and accurate HIV reporting by the states of existing cases rather than by an actual increase in the number of new cases.

New federal rules requiring states to keep track of the names of everyone who tests positive for HIV took effect in most states in January. The new rules came at the same time the CDC announced an initiative calling for widespread HIV testing of most adults in the United States during routine doctor visits as well as hospital emergency room visits.

Although mandatory reporting rules have been in place for AIDS cases since the beginning of the epidemic in the early 1980s, mandatory reporting for HIV cases did not begin until recently. In past years, CDC officials have said they based their estimate on the number of new HIV infections on projections and extrapolations from the number of full blown AIDS cases as well as HIV cases obtained by a sampling of hospitals, clinics, and anonymous testing sites, among other places.

During the past two years, AIDS activists have criticized the Bush administration for expanding a large portion of its AIDS prevention budget on HIV testing while declining to provide more funds for HIV prevention and education programs targeting groups at high risk for HIV infection.

Gay and AIDS activists have complained that the administration appears to have acquiesced to demands by conservative religious groups for higher funding levels for abstinence-only until marriage prevention efforts. The activists say the administration has not been aggressive enough in funding prevention programs that specifically target men who have sex with men, the group that CDC data show accounts for the highest number of HIV cases in the U.S.

“My view is it’s both better data collection and increased testing as well as a higher rate of [HIV] conversion that is causing the spike in the CDC numbers,” said David Reznik, the head of an HIV dental clinic in Atlanta, Ga., and former member of the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS.

“However, our prevention messages aren’t reaching those at most risk,” Reznik said. “And I believe it’s time to rethink our prevention strategy.”

Carl Schmid, federal affairs director for the Tampa, Fla. based AIDS Institute, which lobbies for expanded AIDS programs, said reports about the higher CDC numbers of new HIV infections have been circulating in Washington for the past six months.

“I’m hearing rumors of figures higher than 60,000 new cases,” Schmid said. “I hear they are talking about this with state health departments.”

Schmid and Weinstein said behind-the-scenes talk about the new CDC figures for HIV cases appeared to be a popular topic among many of the 4,000 participants in last week’s U.S. Conference on AIDS in Palm Springs, Calif. The National Minority AIDS Coalition organizes the conference each year.

Schmid said the AIDS Institute has joined other AIDS advocacy groups in calling on the CDC and the Bush administration to boost funding for HIV prevention programs.
“There has been a de-emphasis of anything gay by the administration,” he said. “They have focused mostly on testing, which is fine. But you still need education and prevention programs, and you have not seen an increase in funding for that.”

Jim Driscoll, a Washington adviser to the AIDS Healthcare Foundation and another former member of the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS, known as PACHA, said he has heard from people familiar with the CDC that officials were considering releasing the new figures on World AIDS Day, Dec. 1.

“But the word we’re hearing now is they’re leaning against releasing such bad news on World AIDS Day,” said Driscoll. “There’s some talk of them releasing the new figures during the week between Christmas and New Year’s, when the fewest possible people will be paying attention.”

Information about how to view the HHS webcast can be obtained through this site: http://www.aids.gov/webcast_information.html.

By Lou Chibbaro Jr.
2007 The Washington Blade | A Window Media Publication

Beaujolais Nouveau Raises over $65,000 for Council

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

November 2007 - On Thursday, November 15 over 700 guests gathered at the historic Franklin Plaza in Troy for the annual Beaujolais Nouveau Wine Celebration to benefit the AIDS Council of Northeastern New York. Recognized as one of the most popular charity events in the Capital Region, participants helped raise over $65,000 to support cutting-edge HIV prevention programs and those living with HIV/AIDS in the community.

Based on one of the world’s great wine tasting traditions, this annual November event celebrates the first tasting of this year’s Beaujolais Nouveau wine harvest and is a kick-off to the holiday season. Participants enjoyed live entertainment and dancing, gourmet cuisine from over 20 area restaurants, silent auction, martini bar and a selection of fine wines, including the featured Beaujolais Nouveau.

The AIDS Council is very grateful to the sponsors, restaurants, volunteers, valued donors and participants that made this event a wonderful success.

Sponsors of the event included Time Warner Cable, Barefoot Wines, FLY 92.3, Oberlander Group, River Street Club, CapitalCare Medical Group, Jaeger & Flynn Associates, KeyBank, Metroland, Prime Care Physicians, Romeo’s Gifts, Oh Bar, Town Total Health, The Desmond Hotel & Conference Center, Stewart’s Shops, Wojeski & Company, CPAs, The Mooradian Lofts and Trustco Bank.

Participating restaurants included American Hotel, BFS Restaurant and Catering, Cheesecake Machismo, Century House Restaurant, Daisy Baker’s, Dakota Restaurant, DiviniTea, El Loco Mexican Café, The Epicurian, Flavour Café and Lounge, George Weston Bakeries/Friehofer’s, Glen Sanders Mansion, Honest Weight Food Co-op, Magnolias on the Park, Michael’s Catering, Old Daley Inn Catering, Professor Java’s Coffee Sanctuary, Tosca, Queen of Tarts and Vermont Pure Springs/Crystal Rock Bottled Water.

The AIDS Council is also appreciative of the generous support from DJ Chrome, Jon LeRoy, Live Sound Inc., Photos by Joan Heffler, A&U Magazine, Chronogram, Seagroatt Riccardi, Surroundings Floral Studio, Sherman Furniture, Southern Wine & Spirits of Upstate NY, Wine & Sprits of Slingerlands, Tablecloths for Granted, Tremont Ace Hardware and Rentals, Capital District Gay & Lesbian Community Council and the Troy Police Department.

Council Receives Grant from Until There’s A Cure

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

October 2007 - Until There’s A Cure, is an organization that is committed to funding innovative programs which promote AIDS awareness, support AIDS vaccine development, and provide financial support for care and services for those living with AIDS. They raise awareness and funds through the sale of the Bracelet, and then pass the funds along to organizations such as the AIDS Council. They congratulated the AIDS Council for their work and success in HIV/AIDS client and prevention services. The AIDS Council is grateful for their grant of $6,000. For more information on how you can purchase a bracelet, go to www.until.org.

AIDS Council Receives Grant from AIDS Institute

Friday, October 19th, 2007

October 18, 2007 - The AIDS Council of Northeastern New York received $150,000 from the NYS Department of Health AIDS Institute to provide prevention services to communities of color in Albany, Schenectady and Rensselaer Counties. This grant supports the Given The Chance program and will provide funding for group HIV prevention activities in Albany, Schenectady and Rensselaer county jails, substance abuse treatment facilities and HIV prevention sessions with HIV positive persons and their partners. It will also support HIV testing and counseling, STD screening, an testing for Hepatitis C.

What Happened to the Vaccine?

Friday, August 24th, 2007

August, 2007 - ACRIA Update
from: AIDS Community Research of America - www.acria.org
Summer 2007 - Vol.16 No. 3

What Happened to the Vaccine?
by Richard Jefferys

When HIV was first discovered in the early 1980s, scientists were optimistic that a vaccine to prevent infection could be developed in a matter of years. Unfortunately, that optimism was misplaced, and HIV has turned out to be a tricky foe for vaccine researchers.

The Antibody Approach Hits a Snag
At the time of HIV’s discovery, it was thought that most vaccines worked by triggering a type of immune response called an antibody response (we now know that T cells and other parts of the immune system also play a role). Antibodies are tiny Y-shaped molecules made by a type of immune system cell called a B cell. The job of antibodies is to float around the bloodstream and glom onto pathogens, disabling them and marking them for destruction. Initial experiments in the laboratory showed that HIV grown in a lab dish could be effectively blocked by antibodies that would attach to HIV’s outer protein, called the envelope protein. Scientists designed vaccines based on a molecule on HIV’s envelope called gp120 in the hopes that these vaccines would trigger the development of similar antibodies in people, thereby protecting them if they were exposed to HIV.

But before these vaccines could be tested in clinical trials, researchers realized that HIV adapts itself to life in a lab dish in a way that makes it more vulnerable to antibodies than it is in the human body. HIV taken directly from people could not be blocked by the anti-gp120 antibodies that worked against HIV grown in the lab. One company, VaxGen, that was developing a gp120 vaccine decided to respond to this new information essentially by behaving like a child - covering its ears and singing “la, la, la” in the hopes of not hearing bad news.

VaxGen took its vaccine, named AIDSVAX, all the way to two huge clinical trials designed to test whether it worked. One trial was conducted mainly in North America and most of the participants were gay men. The second trial took place in Thailand among people at risk for HIV infection because of intravenous drug use.

When the results finally became available in 2003, it turned out that the laboratory studies had been right. There were no differences in the number of people that became HIV infected in the trials whether they received AIDSVAX or a placebo (dummy) vaccination. Shamefully, VaxGen attempted to sift through the results of the North American study and suggest that AIDSVAX had shown some protective effect in people of color; this turned out to be a false claim based on a very small number of nonwhite individuals that had enrolled in the trial.

T cell Responses Take a Turn
While this may sound disastrous, all was not lost because many other scientists continued to work on different vaccine approaches. Over the past decade or so, it has been found that there is another type of immune response against HIV that might be protective. These immune responses are called T cell responses.

T cells come in two main flavors: CD4 cells (which are monitored in people with HIV as a marker of disease progression) and CD8 cells. CD4 cells act like quarterbacks calling the plays for CD8 cells and B cells. CD8 cells have a vitally important function: They can recognize virus-infected cells in the body and zap them with destructive proteins in order to eliminate them. For this reason, they are also sometimes called cytotoxic T cells (cyto comes from the Greek word for cell) or cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (CTL).

Several lines of evidence suggest that CD4 and CD8 cells targeting HIV can play an important role. In monkeys infected with a close relative of HIV called SIV (simian immunodeficiency virus), viral load increases dramatically if researchers artificially deplete the animals of their CD8 cells. People with HIV who do not develop immune deficiency - long-term nonprogressors - have been shown to have highly functional CD4 and CD8 cells that target the virus, and their CD8 cells can rapidly kill HIV-infected cells in a lab dish. People with HIV that progresses in the usual way also have CD4 and CD8 cells targeting HIV - sometimes very large numbers of them - but when looked at to see how well they work, it turns out they do a poor job of killing infected cells.

Additionally, CD4 and CD8 cells targeting HIV have been found in individuals - such as sex workers and the uninfected partners of HIV-positive people - who have been repeatedly exposed to the virus, but remain uninfected (although it is not yet known if these T cell responses are protecting these individuals, or if they just indicate that exposure to HIV has occurred).

The ALVAC Vaccine
As a result of this evidence, and because of the difficulty of blocking HIV with antibodies, a major focus of vaccine researchers has been on designing vaccines that can induce production of CD4 and CD8 cells targeting HIV. While CD4 cell responses can be triggered quite easily, it turned out to be tough to trigger the development of CD8 cell responses.

For most of the 1990s, the best that researchers could do was induce CD8 cell responses targeting HIV in around 20% of HIV-negative people who received an experimental vaccine called ALVAC. ALVAC is a type of vaccine called a viral vector. It is a harmless version of a bird virus called canarypox that has been altered so that it makes several different HIV proteins when injected into people (the proteins cannot form infectious HIV).

Although most researchers think it’ll be necessary to trigger CD8 cell responses in more than 20% of recipients for a vaccine to have any chance of working, ALVAC is now being tested in a large trial in Thailand to see if it can offer any protection against HIV infection. Anyone in the trial who becomes infected will also be monitored to see if receiving the vaccine improves his or her chances of becoming a long-term nonprogressor.

Merck Makes a Breakthrough
The big breakthrough for vaccines aiming to trigger CD8 cell responses came just after the turn of the millennium. Merck & Co. developed a different kind of viral vector vaccine, based on a weakened form of a virus called adenovirus (which in its natural form causes bad colds). This vaccine has been shown to trigger CD4 and CD8 cell responses targeting HIV in the majority (50-70%) of people who receive it. The HIV proteins that the vaccine makes are called gag, pol, and nef. Merck’s vaccine is now being tested in a trial involving 3,000 HIV-negative people at risk for HIV infection. The trial got under way in January 2005, and results are expected by 2010 at the latest. As with the ALVAC trial, this study will also evaluate whether the vaccine can completely protect against infection or improve a person’s chances of becoming a long-term nonprogressor.

The VRC Weighs In
A very similar vaccine has been designed by government researchers at the Vaccine Research Center (VRC) in Bethesda, which is part of the National Institutes of Health. The VRC approach uses a two-pronged strategy called “prime-boost” vaccination. The first vaccine that is given consists of just of a piece of DNA that can make certain HIV proteins when injected into the muscle. This DNA vaccine can induce anti-HIV CD4 and CD8 cells, but only at very low levels. The VRC then uses an adenovirus-based vaccine like Merck’s to boost these CD4 and CD8 cells to much higher levels.

The VRC’s vaccine includes more HIV proteins: It has gag, pol, and nef, but also includes envelope proteins from three different HIV subtypes from different parts of the world: subtypes A, B, and C. A trial to test the effectiveness of this vaccine involving 8,500 people is just getting under way; preliminary results may be available by 2011.

Therapeutic Vaccines
All of the T cell-based vaccines mentioned in this article (and several others) are also being studied as potential therapies. The goal of therapeutic vaccination is to improve the effectiveness of anti-HIV immune responses in people that are already infected with the virus. Studies typically vaccinate people while they are receiving antiretroviral drugs, so that anti-HIV T cell responses can develop while viral load is suppressed. ART is then interrupted to figure out if these new immune responses can control HIV better than it was being controlled before.

To date, some studies using ALVAC have shown a limited impact of therapeutic vaccination, while others have shown no effect (or even a detrimental effect in one case). Results from studies using the Merck and VRC vaccines have not yet been presented.

Conclusion
Results from these ongoing trials of T cell-based HIV vaccines will be critical for the future of HIV vaccine research. If some significant evidence of protection - against either infection or disease progression - is seen, researchers will be able to try to improve on those results and, depending on the degree of success, submit the results to the FDA for approval of the vaccine.

A vaccine that reduced viral load levels could have a beneficial impact on the spread of HIV infection because people with lower viral loads are less likely to transmit the virus. It would be a challenge, however, to develop educational materials about such partially effective vaccines because recipients would need to be informed that they were not fully protected against HIV. If no hint of an effect emerges from the trials of T cell-based vaccines, vaccine researchers will have to ratchet up efforts to develop antibody-based vaccines or alternative approaches (if any can be discovered).

There is no way of knowing what the outcome of these trials may be; most optimistically, many researchers do feel - based on results in animal models - that the vaccines may improve the chance that a vaccine recipient who becomes infected with HIV will become a long-term nonprogressor. More pessimistically, few scientists think that these T cell-based vaccines will offer complete protection against HIV infection, since antibodies are thought to be necessary for this to occur.

If these scientists are correct - and current evidence strongly suggests they are - then it is extremely unlikely that a completely protective HIV vaccine will become available in our lifetime. We’ll only find out for sure in a few years time, when the results of these trials are in.

For more information, visit the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition at: avac.org. Their AIDS Vaccine Handbook: Global Perspectives (2nd edition) contains a wealth of detail on all aspects of the search for a vaccine, from the ethics of clinical trials to the need for community activism.

Richard Jefferys is Coordinator of the Michael Palm Basic Science, Vaccines & Prevention Project at the Treatment Action Group.

AIDSWalk 2007 to be held on September 30th

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

August 2, 2007 - On September 30th, the AIDSWalk 2007, sponsored by the Community AIDS Partnership of the Capital Region wil bring together over 2,000 Capital Region Residents to remind our community that the AIDS epidemic is far from over. Please join us in celebrating the lives of persons living with HIV/AIDS in our community and help raise funds for needed local HIV/AIDS services. Visit our website at http://aidscouncil.org/help/volunteer. Funds raised will support the efforts of Capital Region AIDS organizations that provide needed services for AIDS and prevention and care Prizes will be given to participatnts who raise the most money. Refreshments and entertainment will follow the walk.  Registration Form

Thank You

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

August 2, 2007 - Special Thanks to those who supported the 17th Annual Benefit in Saratoga on July 29th. Nearly 200 guests, including Honorary Chairs, Sheryl & Barry K. Schwartz and very special guests, Marylou Whitney and John Hendrickson enjoyed the evening festivities among fabulous automobiles at the Saratoga Auto Museum. The event raised over $72,000 and will support the programs and services of the AIDS Council.

Don’t Forget Our 17th Annual Benefit in Saratoga

Friday, July 27th, 2007

SARATOGA SPRINGS - July 27, 2007 - The AIDS Council of Northeastern New York’s Annual Benefit in Saratoga will take place on Sunday, July 29th at the Saratoga Automobile Museum, in Saratoga Springs, New York. We know that Saratoga in August can be a parade of the latest fashion trends, but those attending this event will show some real style as they support this important cause. This year’s event, “Diamonds InThe Rust” will feature gourmet cuisine by Classé Catering, cocktails and music by the Bennington Wind Trio, as well as the popular silent auction and other surprises. Sixteen years after the first Saratoga Benefit, the needs for those living with HIV/AIDS continue. Despite medical advances that prolong and improve the quality of life, there is still much progress to be made. The AIDS Council works tirelessly to increase the independence of those living with HIV/AIDS, reduce the stigma attached to the virus, and most of all, provide education to prevent further spread of this public health epidemic. Event Co-Chair and longtime supporter of the ADS Council, Sheryl Schwartz adds, “Barry and I value the work of the Council so highly that we have continued to support its stellar efforts for over 11 years. We are proud to invest in the work of the committed men and women of the AIDS Council.”

Presenting sponsor for the event is the MAC AIDS Fund. The event is also sponsored by Rueckert Advertising & Public Relations, LLC; Abacus Information Systems, Inc, Brigar X-Press Solutions, CDPHP, CapitalCare Medical Group, Capital Region Living, Casswood Insurance Agency, LTD, the Desmond Hotel & Conference Center, Jaeger & Flynn Associates, Inc., Queen of Tarts, The Sandy Hill Foundation, Stewart’s Shops and Trustco.

The theme of this year’s event comes from the exhibit at the Auto Museum, Barn Finds, inspired by Tom Cotter’s book, The Cobra In The Barn which includes stories of automobile archeology. The show features his father’s 1939 Ford Woodie that was recovered in Puerto Rico as well as many unique automobiles restored to their former glory. Executive Director of the AIDS Council, Michele McClave says “Many of our clients lives echo the stories of the cars in this exhibit because despite the rust of the disease within, they are people of value - someone’s mother, brother, or partner, and deserve every opportunity to shine.”

Tickets can be purchased online at www.aidscouncil.org, or by calling (518) 434-4686 x 2424. Tickets can also be purchased at the door.