Delhi Press 03/03/21

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DELHI PRESS

Your Community Press newspaper serving Delhi Township and other West Cincinnati neighborhoods

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 2021 | BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS | PART OF THE USA TODAY NETWORK

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On Friday, the National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum unveiled bobbleheads of 18 United States Presidents. NATIONAL BOBBLEHEAD HALL OF FAME

Presidents with Ohio ties are now available as bobbleheads Briana Rice Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Brothers Bill and George Ahlrichs, co-owners of Ahlrichs Bar and Grill, which was on the corner of Eighth and Baymiller streets i the West End in the 9150s. PHOTOS BY PROVIDED/GEORGE AHLRICHS

Snapshots of life in West End during the 1950s Jeff Suess |Cincinnati Enquirer | USA TODAY NETWORK

In the 1950s, brothers George and Bill Ahlrichs ran a bar and grill at Eighth and Baymiller streets in the old West End. George, now 99 years old, shared with The Enquirer some of the photos he snapped of the patrons, Black and white, who came in for a cold beer or a cup of coff ee.

He’s forgotten most of their names. A woman named Roxie made pies every day. Mrs. West was her helper. They served brats and metts, hamburgers and chili. “Joe Louis was boxing champ of the world,” George Ahlrichs recalled. “Not many people had TVs but we had a small one. When Joe fought, our café was packed with wild customers. It was overwhelming. It was the place to be.” Then the highway came through in 1959. Whole sections of West End were razed, thousands of people relocated. Baymiller Street was cut to a stump, replaced by an expressway and a commercial/industrial complex. The old neighborhood is gone, has been gone for years. Just black-and-white snapshots of a neighborhood bar in a lost neighborhood.

Peanut JIm Shelton dines at Ahlrichs Bar and Grill, Eighth and Baymiller streets in the 1950s.

These U.S. presidents are fi nally getting a nod. On Feb. 19, the National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum unveiled bobbleheads of 18 United States Presidents including three with Cincinnati area connections — William Howard Taft, Rutherford B. Hayes and Benjamin Harrison. The three presidents are among 18 new “neglected presidents” bobbleheads that are for sale at the National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum in Milwaukee. Taft was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, and graduated from Yale and the University of Cincinnati before becoming President. Hayes, the 19th president, was born in Delaware, Ohio. Harrison was born in North Bend, Ohio, and graduated from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, before moving to Indianapolis, Indiana. The bobbleheads are $30 each, plus a fl at-rate shipping charge of $8 per order. A set of 18 is also available for a discounted price of $500. The bobbleheads are available at the National Bobblehead Hall of Fame online store. The “Neglected Presidents” Bobblehead Collection features John Quincy Adams, Chester Arthur, James Buchanan, Grover Cleveland, Calvin Coolidge, Millard Fillmore, James Garfi eld, Warren G. Harding, Benjamin Harrison, Rutherford B. Hayes, Andrew Johnson, William McKinley, Franklin Pierce, William Howard Taft, Zachary Taylor, John Tyler, Martin Van Buren and Woodrow Wilson.

Green Township’s Zip Dip will open on March 5 Briana Rice Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Patrons enjoy their time at Ahlrichs Bar and Grill, Eighth and Baymiller streets, in the 1950s.

Contact The Press

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It is not Opening Day or budding fl owers that announce a new season in Greater Cincinnati. Spring is coming. Or at least, ice cream season is upon us. After 70 summers, Green Township’s Zip Dip has announced an opening date. The creamy whip plans to open on March 5 at 11 a.m. “Need something to help get you out of this polar vortex funk? How about a sign of spring to look forward to...the 2021 Zip Dip season begins just TWO weeks from today,” Zip Dip said in a Facebook post. Zip Dip is located at 4050 Drew Ave. in Green Township.

Vol. 94 No. 11 © 2021 The Community Recorder ALL RIGHTS RESERVED $1.00

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Parents of child killed in fi re are devastated

3-year-old Amari Campbell died Monday in a fi re in his grandmother's West End apartment. FOX19 Joanna Bouras and Jared Goffinet FOX19

Editor’s note: Information included refl ects this article’s original publication date – Feb. 24. Visit Cincinnati.com for possible updates. CINCINNATI (FOX19) - A mother and father are going through the unimaginable right now - the death of their son. Amari Campbell, 3, died on Feb. 22 in a fi re at his grandmother’s West End apartment. Since his death, a memorial outside the apartment has grown with balloons, fl owers, and notes from the heartbroken family. Angela Campbell, Amari’s mom, has gone down to the memorial to pray. She said there are no words to

Family members have left flowers and balloons at the apartment where 3-year-old Amari Campbell died in a fi re Monday. FOX19

describe how she feels about the loss of her son. “A mother losing her toddler child, I can’t tell you how I feel right now,” Angela said. “That was my one and only baby. I just got three years with him. I can’t continue my journey of what I wanted to do with him and for him because he’s gone.” Amari died in the apartment fi re around 2:30 p.m. Feb. 22, according to the Cincinnati Fire Department. Firefi ghters say neighbors helped Amari’s grandmother get out, but they didn’t know the 3-year-old was still inside. Amari’s father, Robert Eubanks, said the death of his special boy has left him devastated. “Devastated, devastated, devastated,” Eubanks says. “He was really special man, kind, sweet-hearted young boy, man, smart.”

Cincinnati’s St. Patrick’s Parade is canceled for second year Sarah Brookbank Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Cincinnati’s St. Patrick’s Parade is canceled once again. The annual parade was one of the fi rst big cancellations for the coronavirus pandemic in 2020 and has been called off again in 2021. “While this decision is diffi cult to make for the second year in a row, we appreciate and respect the times we all are living in now,” Cincinnati St. Patrick’s Parade Committee Chairman Chris

Schulte said in a statement. The event was scheduled for March 13 at The Banks. Offi cials thanked businesses and restaurants of The Banks for “their continued support over the years and look forward to making next year one to remember.” “We encourage all those in our Tristate to celebrate the patron saint of Ireland in a safe manner and support those local restaurants & businesses who are struggling through these times,” Schulte said.

Amari was found under a bed and taken to the hospital, but he died less than an hour later from severe burns, according to fi refi ghters. Angela said Amari was an outgoing, adventurous little guy with a lot of personality. “He was just a grateful happy child,” Angela says. “He has his little attitude. He was a Gemini. He had his little stubborn ways, but he was so loved. You couldn’t help but to still give him the love and attention even if he said ‘no, no leave me alone.’” Firefi ghters think Amari was lighting incense when the couch caught on fi re, but the cause remains under investigation. The family says Amari’s grandmother is okay and healing. Enquirer media partner FOX19 provided this report.

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Police: Man arrested in connection to fatal East Price Hill shooting Quinlan Bentley

Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Cincinnati police say a man has been arrested in connection to a fatal shooting in East Price Hill last month. David White, 29, was arrested Thursday on charges related to the Jan. 24 shooting of Dontez Hollis, 25, according to a news release. Offi cials said Hollis was pronounced dead at the scene after offi cers responded around 11:30 a.m. to a report of a person shot outside an apartment building at the 1700 block of Grand Avenue. White is being detained at the Hamilton County Justice Center, according to jail records. Police say the investigation into Hollis' death is ongoing and anyone with information is urged to call the Cincinnati Po-

Cincinnati police investigate a homicide in the 1700 block of Grand Avenue in the East Price Hill neighborhood of Cincinnati on Jan. 24.

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New Cincinnati charter school to off er classical education Madeline Mitchell Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

A new Cincinnati charter school focused on classical education is set to open in the fall of 2022. Cincinnati Classical Academy will open as a K-6 tuition-free public school, and another grade will be added each year until it covers K-12, according to founding board chairman Jed Hartings. The school will be open to any Ohio resident for enrollment. “We believe that a classical liberal arts curriculum is the best means to achieve the purpose of public education, which is to develop a citizenry capable of personal and political self-governance,” Hartings said. “Nearly all education was classical until recent generations, and it served our nation well. We want to off er an option that restores education to its original purpose, methods, and subject matters, and believe that Cincinnatians will embrace it.” The founding board has not yet settled on a site for the academy, but hopes to locate the school along the Interstate

71 or Interstate 75 corridor, according to a news release. The school received approval to open under the sponsorship of St. Aloysius, a Bond Hill nonprofi t focused on mental health and specialized education solutions, and through a partnership with the Barney Charter School Initiative of Hillsdale College. According to its website, Hillsdale supports charter schools that off er a rigorous, classical education in the liberal arts and sciences, "with instruction in the principles of moral character and civic virtue." St. Aloysius already sponsors Northwest Ohio Classical Academy, a Hillsdale-affi liated charter in Toledo. Hartings says Cincinnati Classical Academy will use Hillsdale's K-12 classical education curriculum, and will also use the college as a resource in providing further support in teacher training and development. “Hillsdale’s classical curriculum has already been implemented at more than 20 charter schools throughout the country, with remarkable success,"

Hartings said. "Most have long waitlists.” This curriculum covers language, math, science, history, literature and philosophy. The Cincinnati Classical Academy will also put an emphasis on music and art, and begin implementing Latin courses in the sixth grade, the news release states. “The Barney Charter School Initiative stemmed from the realization that there are many schooling options for families, but few public ones that are built on a foundation of classical liberal arts learning,” Phil Kilgore, director of Hillsdale College’s Barney Charter School Initiative, said. “Hillsdale College has created an excellent academic program, and we’re excited to help to bring that off ering to Cincinnati.” Enrollment will open next winter. Hartings said the academy will likely start with around 350 students in grades K-6, and around 20 teachers and staff . The school is currently searching to fi ll the headmaster position.

The Root Beer Stand picks opening day Sarah Brookbank Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

The Root Beer Stand in Sharonville has picked its opening day for 2021. The season will begin on Monday, March 8 at 11 a.m., ushering in the fi rst signs of spring. The Stand originally opened as an A & W Root Beer Stand in 1957. “In 1982, the A & W franchise expired. The name was changed to ‘The Root Beer Stand’ and business didn’t miss a beat, thanks to those loyal customers of the previous 25 years,” offi cials said. It operates seasonally and is known for its root beer fl oats (obviously) and footlong cheese coneys. The Root Beer Stand is located at 11566 Reading Road in Sharonville.

The Root Beer Stand in Sharonville will open for the season on March 8. KELLY MCBRIDE/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 2021

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Creamalicious, a Cincinnati ice cream brand, will be available for sale online and in stores at select Meijers. COURTESY

Black-owned brand ice cream now available at Meijer Briana Rice Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

A Black-owned Cincinnati ice cream brand is now available at Meijer. Creamalicious, from local business owner Liz Rogers, is now available online and in certain Meijer locations. The fl avors include Right as Rain Red Velvet Cheesecake, Thick as Thieves Pecan Pie, Slap Yo Mama Banana Pudding, Aunt Poonies Caramel Pound Cake and Granma Gigi’s Sweet Potato Pie. “We pride ourselves on being innovative with our whimsical desserts that pair fresh baked pastries with homemade ice creams that are delicious and made with the freshest ingredients,” the Creamalicious website says. There are Meijer locations in Oakley, Dent, Northgate, Fairfi eld, Eastgate, Loveland, West Chester and Milford. There are also stores in Cold Spring and Florence, Kentucky. Rogers opened Mahogany’s at the Banks in 2012 until it was shuttered in 2014. The eatery shut down after failing to pay state sales tax. Rogers was told to pay back $100,000 in $800 monthly installments. The city forgave $183,391.

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‘FILTHY, NASTY, OBSCENE’

Personal ads riled 19th-century Cincinnati Jeff Suess Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Think dating is hard these days? Try the 1800s. Singles looking for love nowadays have a wealth of online dating apps to make connections. Social media allows people to share their life stories – and then some – before they even meet. And all they have to do is swipe right. It was a little harder to meet new people when dating was not yet a common practice, and men and women didn’t attend work or school together. So, the 19th-century version of Tinder or Bumble was the personal ad. In the 1880s, The Enquirer ran a popular, if scandalous, “Personal” column in its classifi ed advertising section. People could post a few lines, at no cost, for missed connections, arranging appointments to meet, or seeking a lady or gentleman correspondent. The ads were usually anonymous and signed with initials or a phrase. Replies could be sent to letterboxes at the Enquirer offi ce. Local historian Greg Hand, who writes the blog “Cincinnati Curiosities,” stumbled upon The Enquirer’s column while researching newspaper archives. “The more I got looking at it the more I realized the other papers weren’t running ads like this. It was strictly a practice of The Enquirer,” Hand said. Hand wrote that the personals column had drawn the ire of the local clergy and the competing Cincinnati newspapers, who raised moral objections. The Cincinnati Post wrote editorials decrying the column as “a terrible evil.” The Commercial-Gazette called for readers to boycott The Enquirer. The Post also published a quote from Archbishop William Henry Elder saying The Enquirer was “unfi t to be read by any human being, much less a Christian. Every day it is fi lled with reading matter that is fi lthy, nasty, obscene and abominable.” l l l “The acquaintance desired of gent with sandy beard who noticed lady in Vine st. car as it passed down Walnut st. Thursday at 8.30. Address ZETTA, Enquirer offi ce.”

A flirtation card from the Victorian era, published in Columbus, Ohio. FILE

A cartoon in the Cincinnati Post, August 24, 1885, shows a father kicking out a “masher” calling on his daughter, then handing her The Cincinnati Enquirer, where the man has sent her a personal. Scanned from microfi lm. THE CINCINNATI POST

“A refi ned lady wishes to form the acquaintance of a respectable gentleman, aged 50; one out of the city preferred. Address VASHTIE, Enquirer offi ce.” “CW: Meet me at same place as usual to-morrow night. M.” l l l Some of the ads seem harmless enough. But in the rigid, repressed Victorian era, such casual fl irtations and personal interactions between the sexes were fl agrant assaults on the social morals of the day. In the mid-19th century, couples got to

know one another through courtship. A woman would meet prospective marriage partners at social events or through friends, then the gentleman caller would visit her at home for a prearranged meeting. In the 1880s, men and women began going out together to public places to have fun – outrageous behavior that challenged the conventions of courtship and marriage. “Changes in women’s gender expectations and industrialization provided a bulk of the movement behind this shift.

Higher education, service sector work and other opportunities allowed women to develop identities apart from being wives and mothers,” Erica Hunter wrote in “Encyclopedia of Gender and Society.” Yet, personal ads seeking a meeting with complete strangers they had seen on the street – as many of them written by women as by men – were shockingly brazen, if you read between the lines. l l l “LCP: Be at the corner of Court and Race at 8 P.M. STRICTLY PRIVATE.” “VENUS: Letter in the Enquirer offi ce for you. RAG BABY.” “BUTTONS: I would like to see you, same place, to-morrow evening. HOLES.” l l l “The Personal column of the Enquirer, which is designedly maintained as a mere assignation column, is a crime against society,” the Cincinnati Post editorialized in August 1885. “It is not only a daily proclamation that Cincinnati swarms with women of loose morals, and with men of lascivious desires, but it furnished the medium through which inexperienced girls are in the fi rst instance enticed from their homes, and taught to underrate parental advice and set parental authority at defi ance.” Hand noted that the term “assignation column” was used to refer to assignation houses, which were places that rented rooms by the hour for prostitutes and clandestine meetings for couples having aff airs. The Post basically called the women who read or posted in the personals prostitutes, Hand said. l l l After all the editorials and letters denouncing The Enquirer, the personals column did not stop, but the complaints did. Pam Epstein, whose blog “Advertising for Love” shares Victorian personal ads from the New York Herald, wrote in a 2010 New York times op-ed, “Though the ads … are certainly less racy than what readers might fi nd in publications today, they also feel surprisingly familiar, reminding us, perhaps, that we are not so diff erent from our 19th-century counterparts – at least when it comes to looking for love.”

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Don’t pitch romaine core – grow more salad greens Greek salad Sub any salad green for the romaine, or leave greens out altogether. Ingredients Salad Romaine lettuce, cut up (as much as you like) 3 tomatoes, chunked up small 1 cucumber, diced ⁄ 4 red onion, chopped

1

Handful Italian parsley, minced Kalamata olives (as many as you like, optional) Feta cheese Sprinkle of dried oregano, scant teaspoon or so Dressing Go to taste on this. Makes more than you need but keeps well in refrigerator. 6 tablespoons olive oil 4 tablespoons red wine vinegar

Greek salad. PHOTOS BY RITA HEIKENFELD FOR THE ENQUIRER

4 tablespoons fresh lemon juice Salt and pepper to taste Instructions

Rita’s Kitchen

Except for feta and oregano, mix salad ingredients together.

Rita Heikenfeld

Whisk dressing ingredients together.

Guest columnist

Well, I learned some things about myself yesterday when granddaughter Eva and I went sledding here on my little patch of heaven. First, that even at this mature stage in my life as Sitti/Grandma, I still had it in me to go sledding. Second, at this mature stage in my life I should have been more careful. Sledding down the hill on a small circular sled with my legs out in front instead of tucked in was not smart. I thought I’d have time to get tucked in, but that sled went real fast down a real slick hill. Anyway, I wound up airborne for a bit and landed hard, yet safely. That was early afternoon. Thinking about supper l didn’t bring a craving for the grilled cheese sandwiches I had planned to accompany my pot of chicken noodle soup bubbling on the stove. I was hungry for, of all things, salad. Chilled, crispy salad with a base of romaine. So instead of sandwiches, salad was the side. The salad, with Greek fl avors, was good enough to

Pour enough over salad to dress, but don’t drown it. Toss and then sprinkle with feta, olives and oregano.

Romaine lettuce core before, and after, growing in water.

Don Deimling’s delicious salad dressing

share with you. You know me, though. I can’t stop with just one super salad. I’ll also share a cult favorite, from Don Deimling, a friend of blessed memory. Don’s dressing is similar to the yummy sweet, yet tangy “French”/Catalina dressings. One young reader liked it so much she made batches to give, and then to sell.

Make by hand or in blender. The blender results in an ultra creamy dressing. The range of sugar is broad; you add what you like. I’ve changed this up a bit from his original recipe.

Tip:

Ingredients 1 cup vegetable oil

Don’s delicious salad dressing photo taken in summer with vegetable garden in background.

⁄ 3to2⁄ 3 cup sugar

1

⁄ 3 cup catsup or more to taste (I usually add a bit more)

1

Don’t pitch romaine core – grow more salad greens! Put the core in a bit of water. Place in bright spot. Change water daily. Soon you’ll see leaves poking through the core. Cut and come again!

⁄ 4 cup clear or cider vinegar or bit more to taste

Salt and pepper to taste

Worcestershire to taste

Just whisk or blend everything together.

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1-2 tablespoons minced onion

Instructions

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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 2021

Nick DeFilippo, Mita’s beverage director and bar tender, stands at Mita's bar in Downtown Cincinnati on Feb. 17. ALBERT CESARE / THE ENQUIRER

How to behave in a restaurant during the COVID-19 pandemic spending at a restaurant or bar. “Minimize your time there if it’s a busy night,” she said. While the curfew is lifted, restaurants and bars are still operating at limited capacities, so try and make room for others. And, if you choose to linger at your table or barstool for a while, please make sure you spend some money while doing so.

Keith Pandolfi Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

We have a problem, Greater Cincinnati. As lucky as we are to have our restaurants and bars open (without so much as a curfew anymore), we sometimes take advantage of our good fortune. What I mean to say is that some of us haven’t been showing our appreciation to the restaurant workers who are continuing to put their health, and, potentially, their lives on the line to make all of this possible. We aren’t wearing our masks properly; we’re not treating our servers with respect; we’re not tipping enough (especially for takeout); we’re not being patient, and we’re using those gift cards we bought back in March of last year way too soon. Here are a few things all of us can do to make our hosts, servers, bartenders, cooks, bussers, and dishwashers feel at least a little bit more at ease.

Masks 101 (or over the nose is how it goes) We know by now that we’re required to wear our masks whenever we enter, exit, or get up from our table at a restaurant. But it doesn’t stop there. We should also put them back on whenever we’re interacting with anyone on the restaurant staff . Wear it when you pay for your food at the delivery window, too. And for God’s sake, wear it over your nose! I can’t tell you how many times I’ve walked into a restaurant and seen customers walking around with their masks drooping. One restaurant manager I talked to said she notices that when she seats guests, “they strip their masks off right away as soon as they sit down.” This occurs while she is still handing out menus, which puts her and her coworkers at unnecessary risk. Nick DeFilippo, a bartender and server at Mita’s restaurant, Downtown, gets where the confusion comes from. “The majority of people are courteous,” he says. “As soon as they sit down, they can take their masks off , that’s the rule, so it’s hard to get mad at them for that.” Still, he always appreciates it when customers leave them on until the host has walked away, and put them back on when they are being served, especially at a tapas place like Mita’s. “I know it’s hard to constantly be taking it on and off ,” he says. “But since we serve tapas, everything comes out in waves, so we are very appreciative when the server comes to your table and you put the masks back on.” Also, for those of you who are lucky enough to be fully vaccinated, please keep wearing your masks. DeFillippo tells me about a recent customer who, after getting his second vaccine shot, burst into Mita’s without a mask and tried to order the entire restaurant drinks. “He was happy to be out,” he said, “But there is no evidence that you can’t still pass (the virus) around. We aren’t sure. We don’t know.” So until everyone is vaccinated, keep wearing those masks.

Tip big (especially for takeout) Cincinnati recently made national headlines

Use the apps

Andrea and Scott Robbins, owners of Urban Stead Cheese in Walnut Hills. The cheese makers opened in February. In addition to making a variety of cheeses for sale, they have a full bar and a menu that includes cheese plates. LIZ DUFOUR/THE ENQUIRER

for its Crosstown tip-off , in which alums from Xavier and the University of Cincinnati duked it out to see who could leave the most exorbitant tip. But you don’t have to complete (or spend thousands of dollars) to be a winner. Always keep in mind that many of the servers and bartenders who are waiting on you are putting their own health on the line to give you the best experience possible. Personally, I tend to tip as high as I can whenever I order in or out. But tip whatever you can reasonably aff ord (but never, ever go below 20%). DeFillippo says a lot of customers aren’t aware that they should tip on takeout. While, in the Before Times, many of us left smaller tips when ordering takeout, or didn’t tip at all, these days it’s important to tip as much as you would if you were dining in. If possible 30%, if not more. Realize that, for most restaurants, takeout constitutes up to 90% of their sales right now.

Buy gift cards, but don’t use them. (Not yet.) When the pandemic started in March, I purchased hundreds of dollars in gift certifi cates, just so I could give the restaurants some quick cash. But when will it be OK for me to use them? Even if they were gifts? Several restaurant owners I spoke to said they wish customers would hold off on using gift cards until things are relatively back to normal. “Now might not be the best time to call a small business/restaurant and try to use your two-year-old gift card,” Andrea Siefring-Robbins, owner of Urban Stead Cheese in Evanston, posted on Facebook last month. “And if you are cashing in those gift cards, please think in advance on how you plan to tip.”

Keep it clean (and quick) Kathy O’Connell, a co-owner of Copper & Flame in Over-the-Rhine, recommends customers try and use hand sanitizer whenever opening bathroom doors or signing receipts. She also wants guests to distance themselves while waiting in line to be seated, and be mindful of how much time (and money) they’re

Being the Luddite that I am, I had a diffi cult time fi guring out those little barcodes that were taped on restaurant tables, or outside, when restaurants reopened. But once I downloaded my QR scanner app, it was easy as pie (or in Japp’s case, a perfect Old Fashioned). Molly Wellman, owner of Japp’s in OTR, asks customers to open their minds to ordering on apps from their phones, or any other “contactless” ways to order drinks. “And tip on carry out.”

Try not to use third-party delivery services Nothing beats the convenience of using an app like Uber Eats or GrubHub to order food delivery. I do it, too. But I try, whenever I can to do a pickup or use a restaurant’s own delivery service (if available). That’s because delivery services often charge up to 30% of each order, cutting deep into a restaurant’s profi ts. Thanks to Cincinnati City Council, that amount is currently capped at 15%, but it’s still better to make sure all of your money goes directly to restaurants so they can cover additional costs (including all those takeout containers they’re using right now).

Be mindful of your drinking I know; I know. After a few drinks, we tend to let our guard down. And I’m as guilty as anyone. At MadTree brewery, in Oakley, last month, I got up to order another beer and forgot to put my mask on before my wife alerted me to my mistake. If you notice yourself forgetting your mask or, worse, sidling up to someone else’s table or barstool and speaking at an aerosol-emitting pitch about how much all of this sucks, it might be best to switch to water, or fi nd a way to get safely home.

Be patient Given the smaller staff s, and limited ingredients many restaurant are working with now, it’s important for diners to be more patient than ever, even if the service is a little off . Kate Hagner, a Cincinnati native who now works at a restaurant in Florida has simple advice: “Most restaurants are running on a skeleton crew to cut down on labor costs,” she told me on Facebook. “Please be extra patient with both FOH [front of house] and BOH [back of house]. Trust us, we’re doing our absolute best.” And please, folks, lay off the negative Yelp reviews. Unless you literally see someone spitting in your soup, assume that everyone is trying the best that they can. Know they are living in fear, and be kind. “We are risking our health and safety to provide everyone with a little relaxation,” DeFillippo said. “Even with all that going on.”

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SPORTS

Harrison’s Chloe Dearwester pins Bellefontaine’s Chelsea Horsley to claim the 106-pound girls state wrestling championship at the OHSWCA Girls State Wrestling Tournament on Feb. 20 at Hilliard Davidson High School in Hilliard. PHOTOS BY SHANE FLANIGAN,/THISWEEK

Cincinnati has 2 state champs in girls wrestling meet Alex Harrison Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Harrison wrestler Chloe Dearwester didn't need to watch the scoreboard to advance through the bracket of the Ohio High School Wrestling Coaches Association (OHSWCA) state girls wrestling tournament. Dearwester, a nationally-ranked freshman, pinned her way through the tournament to win the 106-pound title, becoming the fi rst Cincinnati state champion in the tournament. Dearwester opened with a quick win, pinning Meagan Justice of Watkins Memorial in 25 seconds and then advanced to the semifi nal with a 29-second pin over Morgan Powell from Mechanicsburg. The state semifi nal was more challenging for Dearwester, who needed one whole minute to pin Marysville's Emma Swart. In the state championship round, Dearwester met Chelsea Horsley, the Bellefontaine wrestler who was the defending state champion in the weight class. It was no problem for Dearwester who pinned the defending winner in 1:21 for the title. In total, Dearwester spent just 3:15 on the mat for the entire tournament, proving she was no doubt a champion, but that the tournament will have to run through her for the next three years as well. In total, 15 local wrestlers placed by securing sixth-place or better fi nishes. The 143-pound weight class put two Cincinnati wrestlers, Norwood's Liz-

Badin's Rachel Nusky prepares to grapple with Miami East's Sarah Root in their 121-pound match during the OHSWCA Girls State Wrestling Tournament on Feb. 20.

Harrison's Chloe Dearwester, center, smiles on the podium after receiving her championship medal in the 106-pound weight class at the OHSWCA Girls State Wrestling Tournament.Dearwester is flanked by Bellefontaine's Chelsea Horsley, left, and Marysville's Emma Swart.

beth Banderas and Fairfi eld's Marissa Meyer, on course to meet for the title. Meyer pinned her fi rst three opponents to clinch a spot in the title match while Banderas, the fourth-place fi nisher in the 126-pound class last year, needed two decisions and a pin to reach the fi nals. After a scoreless fi rst period, Banderas scored on a reversal and a take-

down to take a 4-2 lead into the fi nal period. Meyer tied the match at 4-4, but Banderas scored a takedown with seven seconds left to take a 6-4 lead and win the weight class. Two locals picked up runner-up spots on the podium. Badin's Rachel Nusky advanced to the fi nals where she fell in a 9-2 decision to Josie Davis of Sidney. Werbrich was pinned near the

end of the second period by Allyssa Pirro, the champion from Lutheran West. For the 111-pound class, Rachel Elizondo defeated Bethel-Tate's Alexa Donahue in the third-place match. Western Brown's Lacie Reese of the 137pound class also scored a third-place fi nish as did her teammate Abi Miller for the 170-pound class. Reese fi nished in the same position in last year's tournament while Miller improved on her sixth-place fi nish. As for team results, Marysville was the team champion with 131.5 points, besting runner-up Miami East by 28.5 points. Harrison fi nished in fi fth place as a team with 58 points and Western Brown was just behind in a tie for sixth with 57 points. Fairfi eld's 41 points were good for 11th and Taylor rounded out the top 15 teams with its 35 points.

Mason names Dinkelacker as girls VB coach Scott Springer Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

MASON - Mason High School has announced that Lindsey Dinkelacker will be its new girls head volleyball coach, pending board of education approval, according to a release from Dan Hilen at Mason. Dinkelacker comes to Mason after guiding the Colerain program for the past two years. This past season her Cardinal team fi nished with an overall record of 15-7 and a 4-5 mark in the competitive GMC. For her eff orts, she was

named Co-GMC Coach of the Year for 2020. Dinkelacker is a 2012 graduate of Mother of Mercy High School, where she was a fourDinkelacker year letter winner in volleyball, a fi rst-team allstate selection as a senior, and a second-team all-state selection as a sophomore. Dinkelacker, who also has been the head coach for the Elevation Volleyball Club, went on to play Division I volleyball at Saint Louis University before

transferring to the University of Cincinnati. She led the Bearcats to 58 wins over her three-year tenure in Clifton. “My goal is to continue to grow as a coach and share my knowledge with other young players looking to pursue the game of volleyball,” said Dinkelacker. Dinkelacker inherits a Mason girl’s program that has dominated the GMC for almost a decade. The Comets have gone fi ve seasons without a league loss. Former Comet head coach, Tiann Myer moved to Georgia after the 2020 fall season. Myer concluded her Mason career

as the all-time winningest head girls coach with an overall record of 268 wins and 90 losses since assuming the program in 2006. Myer won seven (of the last eight) GMC titles while at Mason including fi ve straight from 2016-2020 and fi nished with a career record of 355 wins and 128 losses. The Comets were District Champions in 2009, 2014, and 2017. Dinkelacker takes over the Comets next fall. Editor’s note: Information included refl ects this article’s original publication date – Feb. 19.


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Video of Chris Mack, Eric Wood gets attention of Kentucky Wildcats fans Dave Clark Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Former Elder High School standout Eric Wood appeared in a video with former St. Xavier High School standout Chris Mack shared on Twitter Feb. 20, and it got the attention of many University of Kentucky fans on social media. Mack is Louisville basketball’s head coach and the former head coach of the Xavier Musketeers. Wood played football at UofL before starring as an NFL center for the Buff alo Bills from 2009 to 2017. Mack recently addressed the video of him celebrating the Cardinals’ Dec. 26 win against UK, calling his mask-less appearance “not a good look” and add-

ing that he reached out to Wildcats head coach John Calipari to explain the video’s context, per courier-journal.com’s Shannon Russell. Kenny Payne, currently an assistant coach for the New York Knicks, played at Louisville and was a member of the Cardinals’ 1986 NCAA championship team. He was an assistant coach at UK from 2010 to 2014 and the Wildcats’ associate head coach from 2014 to 2020. Payne told WDRB’s Rick Bozich that the video “was a joke” and insisted that Wood is a friend of Payne’s who “was just having fun.” Last September, Mack spiced up the UK-UofL rivalry with a video he sent via social media to Wildcats head coach John Calipari.

Louisville Cardinals head coach Chris Mack talks to his team during a break in the action as they take on the Boston College Eagles in the second half Jan. 2 at Conte Forum. DAVID BUTLER II, DAVID BUTLER II-USA TODAY SPORTS

Briana Wuebbling, from Oak Hills High School, competes in the City High School Gymnastics Championships at Cincinnati Country Day in Indian Hill Feb. 13. Sam Curless, from Oak Hills High School, competes in the City High School Gymnastics Championships at Cincinnati Country Day in Indian Hill.

Gymnastics Championships City gymnastics meet at Cincinnati Country Day

Clockwise from above, Riley Meier, Jenna Sullivan and Sam Curless, all from Oak Hills High School, competes in the City High School Gymnastics Championships at Cincinnati Country Day in Indian HIll on Feb. 13.

Jenna Sullivan, from Oak Hills High School, competes in the City High School Gymnastics Championships at Cincinnati Country Day.


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REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Information provided by Hamilton County Auditor Dusty Rhodes

941 Villa View Ct: Gabelman Jennifer R to Cordell Imani Ciara; $103,000

Camp Washington

East Price Hill

2952 Burlington Pl: Miller Kenneth G to Schertz Matthew Richard & Deborah Rochelle; $80,000

1041 Wells St: Pay It Forward Enterprises LLC to Carrillo Jessica Garcia & Rafael Hernandez; $8,000 1600 Elberon Ave: Sandoval Investments LLC to Aguilar Susely Teresa Reynosa; $70,000 1628 Minion Ave: Moore Felix & Tracey to Riley James; $48,000 1819 Wyoming Ave: Causby Bennie O & Julie A Broxterman to Geise Lucas; $100,000 401 Crestline Ave: Donaldson Dennise @ 4 to Loren Real Estate LLC; $37,000 723 Mt Hope Ave: Mathis Stacy C to Rouff Alex C & Jamie L Rouff; $184,900

Cheviot 3236 Wardall Ave: A & R House 2 Home LLC to Santos Sharissa V & Ana Paloma Santos-maddox; $185,000 3632 Westwood Northern Bv: Bizaillon Aaron to Judy Property Group LLC; $32,000 3736 Wilmar Dr: Metro One Properties LLC to Carter Katoria C & Abu Mahamudu; $169,000 3902 Washington Ave: Sawadeh Kamel to Cincifi LLC; $110,000 3939 Carrie Ave: Cramer Christopher C to Luo Kaylee J; $120,000 3995 Washington Ave: Square One Properties LLC to Vb One LLC; $95,200

Cleves 43 Pontius Ave: Knose Julie R to Winterfell Holdings LLC; $62,000 527 Laurelwood Dr: Wright Jodie & Jason A to Causby Bennie O & Julie; $289,900

East Westwood 2270 Westwood Northern Bv: Morgan Morgan Properties LLC to Morgan & Morgan Properties & Highfields Investment; $60,000 2353 Brokaw Ave: Parham Brenda D to Citibank Na Tr; $53,167

Green Township

Crosby Township 10540 Brigade Ct: Nvr Inc to Silber Andrew N & Emily Ann; $384,310 10555 Brigade Ct: Fort Scott Project I LLC C/o Ddc Mgmt to Nvr Inc; $60,266 10845 Park Dr: Villas At Sedona LLC to Nvr Inc; $45,161 10865 Park Dr: Villas At Sedona LLC to Nvr Inc; $45,161 7296 Villa Ln: Fishburn Robert A to Mckeever Megan & Cheryl; $184,500

Delhi Township 1249 Balmoral Dr: Hartinger Lynne A Tr to Jones Trevor & Alexandra; $156,000 250 Francisridge Dr: Macht Tina Lynn to Bsfr Ii Owner I LLC; $186,500 250 Francisridge Dr: Bsfr Ii Owner I LLC to Payne Brian R & Tara J Eagle Tr; $165,000 351 Glen Oaks Dr: Votaw Joseph to Palmer Amy; $180,000 5381 Pembina Dr: Pelley Nathaniel D & Mary to Rose Jason A; $105,000 6053 Cleves Warsaw Pk: Paeth Cheryl J Tr & Kenneth Jackson Tr to Duebber Marc A; $285,000

Pattys Pl: Forest Cove LLC to Dennis Ott Builders Inc; $126,470 1794 Linneman Rd: Hartinger Lynne A Tr to Jones Trevor & Alexandra; $156,000 2965 Chardale Ct: Schweizer John R & Richard A Schweizer Co-trustees to Overman Lindsey M & Zachary S; $159,000 3323 Cresentview Ln: Richter Rachel to Noell Ryan; $167,500 3391 Diehl Rd: Resnick Kathleen L Tr to Kelley Daniel G; $124,000 3482 Fiddlers Green Rd: Shahbabian Set Tr to Anderson Barry L; $1,000,000 4212 Victorian Green Dr: Krummen Richard H Tr to Dt Scholten LLC; $70,000 4801 Kleeman Green Dr: Gildea Kevin & Tiffany L to Parker Amy J; $290,000 5134 Rybolt Rd: Wichman Joshua R to Darnell Lexia Kai & Antonio Baltazar Ledesma; $125,500 5148 Ralph Ave: Jeannet Frederick M & Teri M to Bell Bryson D; $152,000 5153 Halifax Dr: Reupert Joseph E & Jennifer M to Herzog Nancy, Joseph Franzese & Jane Mcdonald; $465,000 5419 Clover Leaf Ln: Beckelhymer Wayne L & Tabitha A to Carlotta Deb-

orah S &; $70,535 5419 Clover Leaf Ln: Beckelhymer Wayne L & Tabitha A to Carlotta Deborah S &; $70,535 5440 Asbury Lake Dr: Jovanov Dean to Crice Cory E; $128,000 5469 North Glen Rd: Roth Donald C to Roth Donald C; $149,900 5560 Westwood Northern Bv: Gerdes Scott to Greer Olivia; $79,680 7049 Boulder Path Dr: Meade Robert E to Bible Dana John Tr & Nancy Kay Tr; $310,000

Harrison 1089 South Branch: Nvr Inc to Lyall Thomas & Judith; $338,505 1618 Whitewater Trails Blvd: Nvr Inc to Warren Joseph Walter & Angela; $289,615 1650 Garden Springs Ct: Nvr Inc to Raney Kathleen; $456,975 380 Legacy Wy: Tenhundfeld Victoria G to Davidson Becky Sue; $74,202 9645 Forest Hill Dr: Welsh Development Company Inc to Nvr Inc; $53,844

Harrison Township Deer Trace Ln: Stecher Kenneth W & Carol L to Thompson Michael W & Lisanne; $65,000 9762 Baughman Rd: Hartmann Stephen A to Fields Brady B; $175,000

Lower Price Hill 2701 Lehman Rd: Kessler Places LLC The to Hartland Management Inc; $33,000

Miami Township 3230 Citation Ln: Berding William J & Teresa M to Clark Christopher Michael & Alyssa Marie; $325,000 4163 Locustridge Dr: Loch Michael G & Ann R to Zoellner Lloyd R Iii & Megan J Zoellner; $196,605 7227 Bridgetown Rd: Thompson Lorraine M C O Sandra A Ford Executor to Copenhaver James; $185,000 9824 Brower Rd: Redding Steven Marshall @4 to Baumgartner Steven; $45,500

North Fairmount 1812 Carll St: Foster Tajuana to K&m Housing LLC; $7,700

Riverside 4584 River Rd: Dexter Group Trust The

to Hammelmyer Investment Group; $10,575

Sayler Park River Rd: Hudson Sheila L to Pmt Properties LLC; $48,000 78 Laura Ln: Hudson Sheila L to Pmt Properties LLC; $48,000

Sedamsville 655 Steiner Ave: King Courier Services LLC to Kalsha Realty LLC; $15,000

South Cumminsville 3703 Cass Ave: Oz Property Management LLC to Silverstream Investors LLC; $125,900

South Fairmount 2177 Selim Ave: Decades Management to Halsell David K; $25,000

West Price Hill 4114 Vinedale Ave: Sunderman Vincent to Tinsley Kristen; $52,900 4135 Talbert Ave: Bed & Breakfast Property Management Inc to Mcelroy Janice D; $116,900 5014 Relleum Ave: Spies Mary L to Hartt Emily & Trevor; $155,694 578 Trenton Ave: Practical Property Solutions LLC to Vb One LLC; $56,000 580 Rosemont Ave: Shap Investments LLC to Gilmore Leslie F; $154,000 834 Academy Ave: Kena Properties Inc to Private Equity Partners Inc; $107,500 835 Hermosa Ave: 1562 Ruth Avenue LLC to Wright Rakeem Franklin; $166,000 937 Seton Ave: Lamtechi Group LLC The to 1451 Sutton Ave LLC; $73,500

Westwood 2321 Dautel Ave: Robinson Alexandria to Glover Nathaniel; $5,000 2407 Ferguson Rd: Gunther Investments LLC to Dewalt Kevin Jerome Jr; $105,000 2521 Mustang Dr: Neupane Lachhu & Chandra to Nesbitt Victoria; $210,000 3088 Queen City Ave: Mz Capital LLC to Vb One LLC; $88,800 3144 Sunshine Ave: Irvin Laron to Wilkins Darrien; $24,590

Whitewater Township 109 Jackson St: Stafford Larry & Sandra K Wilburn to Whitt William B; $79,000

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Crosby Twp. - 7294 Villa Ln. 2 Bdrm/2 ba Dir: 1-275 or Rte. 128 to Blue Rock to st. $170,000 H-1644 Sylvia Kalker

Bridgetown - Gorgeous 2 bd 2 full bath, 2nd flr end unit! New ss appl! Stone gas FP! W/O to deck from study or GR RM! 1 car gar w/direct access to unit. The Lisa $144,900 H-1659 Ibold Team

Bridgetown - Rare find in Oak Hills School District, Green Township. 3.9 acres of total privacy. Minutes to highway, shopping & restaurants.Choose your own builder. Doug Rolfes $104,900 H-1629

Bridgetown - 2-Family, Oak Hills Schools, 2 bdrm + 1 bd. Brick + Vinyl exterior. Replacement windows, near Schools. $129,900 H-1652 Mike Wright

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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 2021

PENDING

PENDING

Bridgetown - Ever so popular 7 rm, 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath Quad Level. 2 car garage, fenced rear yd. Eat-in kit, Spacious LR/DR! New garage door. $179,900 H-1651

Bridgetown - Sharp, 1,600+sf 6 rm, 2 bdr+study condo, att gar, direct access to unit! Stunning remod kit/ baths! Spacious LR w/o to deck. $149,900 H-1649

The Jeanne Rieder Team

PENDING

The Jeanne Rieder Team

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5B

Bridgetown - Situated on 10 private wooded acres, this 4 bd, 3 full baths Quad Level is perfect for privacy & entertaining. Large GR RM w/wbfp & wet bar. $449,900 H-1660 Steve Florian

PENDING

Cleves - Attractive 10 rm,4 bd.2 full/2 half bath 2 sty. FR w/gas FP! Open kit/brkfst rm/ granite! Fin’d LL! 1st fl study/LR! 1st fl laundry. $315,000 H-1655 The Jeanne Rieder Team

Covedale - 3 bdrm 1 ½ bath 2 story in Covedale! Completely rehabbed top to bottom! New roof 2020, New HVAC 2021.New kitchen and bath. $174,900 H-1654

Covedale - Quite the charmer! 3-4 bdrm, 2 full bath Tudor style Cape! Finished LL, desirable street! Great fenced yard. $154,900 H-1658

The Jeanne Rieder Team

HoetingWissel Team

Dillsboro, Indiana - Approx 15,500 SF warehouse/office/ manufact.Loading dock, gar drs, office space. Rt. 50 highway access.Near Cincy, IN, Greensburgh, Louisville. Rick Hoeting $649,900 H-1646

PENDING Groesbeck - Original Model! Freshly painted 2 bd 2 full bath 2nd fl unit! All appl stay + washer & dryer! Screened in porch overlooking woods! Cats Allowed. The Jeanne $89,900 H-1640 Rieder Team

Miami Twp. - 4 AC! Approved 22,500 sq ft dev w/120 parking spaces & outdr seating! Abuts Miami Twp park & comm center! 3 single fam homes on property. $650,000 H-1616

Independence, Kentucky Outstanding Brick 3 bd, 2 ba Ranch on culdesac. Beautiful setting w/brand new 20x17 trex deck overlooking stream & woods. Fin LL, 2 car gar! Tina Rieder $229,900 H-1656

The Jeanne Rieder Team

Monfort Hgts. - Fantastic 3 bd 3 full bath brick ranch. Professionally fin LL with wet bar, multiple TV mounts! 2 car oversized gar! Park like yd! Well appointed & updated. Hoeting$239,900 H-1657 Wissel Team

PENDING Price Hill - $44k annual net! 4- 2 bedroom units,1 efficiency and 1-2 bedroom brick house on same deed! Completely rehabbed 15 years ago! $350,000 H-1475 The Jeanne Rieder Team

Price Hill - Great Money maker! Over $2500 montly income! Low expenses! Full brick1531 3 family! 2 one bd units and 1- 3 bd unit! Subsidized rent = guaranteed rent! The Jeanne $244,900 H-1531

Price Hill - Incline district! Great Condo! 5 rm, 2 bd, assigned parking, low HOA fees! Pets allowed! Walk to parks, restaurants. $69,900 H-1633 HoetingWissel Team

Rieder Team

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Sedamsville - 3 River view lots to be sold together. 75’ total frontage. Area of potential redevelopment. $30,000 H-1329 Mike Wright


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COMMUNITY NEWS Former Cincinnati artist Frederic Pissarro opens in new art show in Las Vegas Four years ago, internationally-known artist Frédéric Bonin Pissarro drove cross country from Morehead, Kentucky to Las Vegas, marveling at the “prehistoric landscape of lava, limestone, and iron-rich rocks” he encountered. Pissarro was traveling west to join the dynamic art and design faculty at University of Nevada-Las Vegas as a full-time lecturer. If the name Pissarro sounds familiar, it’s because Frédéric Pissarro is the great-grandson of Camille Pissarro, the 19th-century French Impressionist painter. Frédéric Pissarro is a highly accomplished artist in his own right, recognized for his fi gurative expressive paintings he describes as positive images dealing with spirituality, family, friendship, connectivity, and togetherness. “The desire to communicate, to remind all of us of our commonality rather than our diff erences,” he explains, “is at the very center of my work.” Having had many successful years of selling to galleries and collectors throughout the United States, Europe, and Asia, Pissarro is now featured in an upcoming show, Life Lines, at the Priscilla Fowler Fine Art Gallery, a contemporary exhibition space at 1300 South Main Street in the center of the Las Vegas Arts District. The show runs from Friday, March 5, with an opening from 6-10 p.m., through Saturday, May 1. Over 20 pieces of art by Pissarro will be featured in the main gallery, with new abstract mixed media work by owner/artist Priscilla Fowler hung on the walls of the adjoining Showroom. Prior to living in Kentucky, for sixteen years Pissarro

Here’s the 2021 plan for concerts

taught and plied his art in Cincinnati, Ohio, where he was sponsored by billionaire businessman Carl Lindner Jr., who purchased over 20 of his artworks and displayed them in prominent hotels and restaurants. Pissarro Pissarro trained at l’ l’École Nationale Superieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris and earned a B.A. and M.A. from Morehead State University. Amid the vibrant art scene in Las Vegas, Pissarro enthusiastically follows his longtime passion: to create art that brings people together by focusing on what unites them, a direct counterpoint to the violent and dividing times in today’s society. “There is so much anger in the world today that we forget how magical and beautiful the universe we live in really is,” Pissarro writes. The desert is his refuge. “When I work, I empty my head of thoughts and let my heart be fi lled by the stories carried by the wind,” Pissarro explains. “I believe the role of an artist is to be a shaman, a wizard, a link to the invisible.” Pissarro immediately felt at home in his Southwest surroundings. “I soon realized that Las Vegas is not only a place of endless creativity but also at the center of amazing natural beauty,” he recalls. His new work has started to include textures of the landscape in which he spends so much time, echoing the observation of his prominent great-grandfather, Camille Pissarro: “Blessed are they who see beautiful things in humble places where other people see nothing.” Connie Springer, Springer Publicity for the Arts

Chosen Words is one of the artworks by former Cincinnatian Frederic Pissarro appearing in a new show at Priscilla Fowler Gallery in Las Vegas. PROVIDED

SCHOOL NEWS

Briana Rice | Cincinnati Enquirer | USA TODAY NETWORK

Summer 2021 is shaping up to have a new lineup of live music options (yet unoffi cial, you know, cause it’s a pandemic). Greater Cincinnati will have several options for outdoor, open-air and socially distant shows in 2021, some new and some rescheduled.

Riverbend concert lineup h Luke Bryan: June 10 h Dave Matthews Band: June 16 h Thomas Rhett: June 19 h Steely Dan with Steve Winwood: June 23 h Santana and Earth, Wind and Fire: July 10 h Wheels of Soul: July 11 h Disturbed: July 12 h Jimmy Buff et: July 13 h Megadeth and Lamb of God: July 14 h Rod Stewart: July 15 h Blackberry Smoke: July 18 h Primus: July 19 h Barenaked Ladies: July 20 h KidzBop Live: July 30 h Chicago: Aug. 1 h The Black Crowes: Aug. 3 h Lindsay Stirling: Aug. 6 h Alicia Keys: Aug. 20 h Daryl Hall and John Oates: Aug. 23 h Matchbox Twenty: Aug. 24 h Maroon 5: Aug. 28 h The Doobie Brothers: Sept. 28 h Alanis Morissette: Sept. 15

Taft Theatre concert lineup h Scribble Showdown: March 9 h Home Free: March 23 h Tab Benoit: March 25 h Colin Hay: March 30 h Tommy Emmanuel: April 29 h Whose Live Anyway: May 9 h Lucky Chops: May 13 h Maks & Val: June 17 h Whiskey Myers: July 29 h Brit Floyd: Aug. 7-8 h Dermot Kennedy: Aug. 17 h Boney James: Oct. 1 h David Foster: Oct. 20 h I Mom So Hard: Oct. 23 h Jeanne Robertson: Oct. 28 h Bill Maher: Nov. 7 h Tobymac: Nov. 9 h Iliza: Nov. 20

Students load trucks fi lled with boxes of food donations to be delivered to fi ve local charities. PROVIDED

St. Ursula students support fi ve local charities with Food D.R.I.V.E.

PUZZLE ANSWERS A P P E L I O T F L U T F R U H E S O R O L E M M I D E A S W P I U S A N G S C A L T H R O I W O N M O N E E R M M E A C D A N C I N A R T A T A

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Five local charities got a boost from the students of Saint Ursula Academy who helped fi ll community food pantry shelves with an all-school food D.R.I.V.E. Saint Ursula’s annual COMMUNITY D.R.I.V.E. stands for Donate – Respond – Invest –Value – Educate. The theme this year was SUNSHINE and they girls were asked to support the DRIVE and bring sunshine into the lives of others. As part of the process from Jan. 18 – Feb. 4, the students were not only asked to donate nutritious shelf-stable items, they also learned about the need in our area and about the people and organizations they are helping to support. This year, the need is greater than ever as more families fi nd themselves needing food assistance as a result of COVID-19 job impact. Many students collected food donations in their own communities. Others called upon friends and family members to support the eff ort. Monetary donations assisted with purchasing fresh food items. The SUA food collection D.R.I.V.E will support those in need in the Cincinnati area through: Mercy Neighborhood Ministries, Queen City Kitchen and Open Door Ministry in Walnut Hills, St. George Food Pantry and Little Sisters of the Poor in Clifton. Each grade level competed in weekly challenges based on the greatest quantity of donations, with an overall prize of a class donut breakfast at the end. Overall, the student donations fi lled 178 packing boxes with food. The Class of 2022 juniors stepped up and won every weekly challenge as well as the overall contest, bringing in the most food and donations. h Juniors 54 boxes

h Sophomores 48 boxes h Freshmen 40 boxes h Seniors 23 boxes The annual DRIVE cannot be successful without the leadership of the SUA Community Service Learning Department and the SUA D.R.I.V.E. student organizers. Special thanks to: h Eleanore Bender h Lillian Bien h Caroline Endres h Madeline Gillock h Molly Gruber h Madeline Guggenberger h Madeline Hines h Katie Hoog h Brooke Hunstad h Olivia Jenkins h Marie Kaine h Mrs. Rachel Kemper h Grace Kessler h Gloria Knight h Elizabeth Knight h Maria Meinhardt h Isabela Mitchell h Sophia Mock h Tessa Nappi h Katelyn Neeb h Leah Oeder h Mrs. Peggy Platz h Christine Reinhart h Gracie Reisman h Cate Rothring h Courtney Ruesink h Molly Sprong h Kiran Vrishabhendra h Kaley Worthley h Kayleigh Zimmer Jill Cahill, Saint Ursula Academy


COMMUNITY PRESS WEST

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE

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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 2021

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ANSWERS ON PAGE 6B

No. 0228 KARAOKE BARS

BY MATTHEW STOCK / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ Matthew Stock, 24, who is originally from Dallas, now lives in St. Louis, where he teaches ninth-grade algebra through an AmeriCorpsaffiliated tutoring program. He started constructing puzzles several years ago after he attended a crossword tournament in Boston and ‘‘had a great time chatting with puzzlemakers throughout the afternoon.’’ This is his third crossword (and first Sunday) for The Times. – W.S.

ACROSS

RELEASE DATE: 3/7/2021

1 Prayer, e.g. 7 Market index, for short 13 And so on and so forth 19 Actor Ray of ‘‘Field of Dreams’’ 20 Like a certain complex 22 Relative of the mambo 23 High winds 24 Space bars? [Frank Sinatra] 26 Healthful dessert options 28 Overhauled, in a way 29 ‘‘____ making a list . . . ’’ 30 Offering in china . . . or from China 31 ‘‘Top Chef’’ chef ____ Hall 32 Geographical name that comes from the Sioux for ‘‘sleepy ones’’ 35 First prize at the Juegos Olímpicos 36 Sink holes 40 Biting 42 Bird whose males incubate the eggs 44 Mathematical proposition 47 Wet bars? [Gene Kelly] Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).

51 Things many people lose as they grow older 53 Big Five studio of Hollywood’s Golden Age 54 ‘‘Thus . . . ’’ 55 St. Louis symbol 56 Strongly endorse 58 Hot place to chill 59 ____ Adlon, Emmy winner for ‘‘King of the Hill’’ 61 Papal name last taken in 1939 63 Smallest state in India 64 Options for outdoor wedding receptions 67 Like some bread and cereal 68 Director Lee 69 Prison bars? [Elvis Presley] 73 Bamboozled 74 Weight right here! 76 ____ Austin, Biden defense secretary 77 Misidentify something, e.g. 78 For the lady 79 Center of a court 81 They’re often parked in parks 82 Relevant 84 Excited cry after scratching a lottery ticket 85 Move a cursor (over) 88 Pride : lions :: ____ : dolphins 89 Hip 92 Cash bars? [Abba]

96 ‘‘Same here’’ 97 ‘‘I mean . . . ’’ 98 What goes right to the bottom? 99 Got around 101 ‘‘Hoo-boy!’’ 102 Gist 104 Last option in a list, maybe 107 ‘‘That feels goo-ooood!’’ 109 Practice 110 Brainy? 112 A+ earner 116 Singles bars? [Robyn] 120 First House speaker from California 122 Not going anywhere 123 Was snoopy 124 Made square 125 Japanese mat 126 ‘‘We got permission!’’ 127 Makes insulting jokes about

11 Where trills provide thrills 12 Something that’s wellkept? 13 Comeback 14 It’s turned, in a phrase 15 It’s a relief! 16 Prefix with conscious 17 Poetic shortening 18 Food-pantry donation 21 Broad valley 25 Large expanses 27 2006 film with the tagline ‘‘Keep it wheel’’ 29 Hindu festival of colors 31 Most-watched TV show of 2002-05 33 Gold bars? [Queen] 34 ‘‘Do you understand me?’’ 37 Disappointing court result 38 Black 39 Habitat for Humanity is one, for short DOWN 41 Sister restaurant of Applebee’s 1 Sitcom extraterrestrial 43 Lets go of 2 Did a little lifting 45 Gaping holes 3 Candy bars? [Def Leppard] 46 Weizenbock or Berliner Weisse 4 ‘‘You, too?!’’ 48 Scruffs 5 Wiped out 6 Stood the test of time 49 Ridiculous 50 Seventh avatar of 7 Mapo ____ (spicy Vishnu Sichuan dish) 52 It’s a long story 8 A leg up 57 Muddy 9 Häagen-Dazs 58 Beefcakes competitor 60 Thumbs-up 10 Low-wattage

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108 Egg: Sp. 111 2016 No. 1 album for Rihanna 112 Pop 113 Really thin type 114 ____ Domini 115 ‘‘I beg of you,’’ e.g. 116 Bit of Morse code 117 Actress de Armas 118 D.C. pro 119 ‘‘Of course!’’ 121 They’re checked at check-ins

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61 Solving crosswords, e.g. 62 Insect named for the way it moves, not for its length 65 Got hot on Twitter, say 66 Kind 69 ____ Psaki, Biden press secretary 70 Gymnastics apparatus 71 Oral equivalent of a facepalm

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