Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

Alert! That old adage, April showers bring May flowers is HAPPENING this weekend. The forecast is sunny and 70s. GO OUTSIDE!

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Top picks to-go/delivery

Boneshire Brew Works  4-packs and growler sales 4-7 p.m. Thursday and Friday; 12-4 p.m Saturday Order online Tattered Flag Brewery & Still Works  Food, to-go beer, spirits, canned cocktails – 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Order online Appalachian Brewing Co. – Mechanicsburg Food take-out only 4-8 p.m Monday-Thursday; 12-8 p.m. Friday-Sunday Beer + spirits take-out only – 12-8 p.m. Daily at the Mechanicsburg location Call 717-221-1080 to order View menu Ploughman Cider  Take-out cider a the Taproom 12-5 p.m. Friday and Saturday Online cider sales now available. HOLLA Spirits  Spirits available to order online 20% of all sales go to U.S. Bartenders’ Guild COVID-19 Relief Program and other virus relief funds – Read more MoMo BBQ Co.  Open for take-out and limited delivery, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Family meals available. View menus on Facebook. Call 717-550-7995 R.G. Hummer Meats & Cheese  OPEN during Broad Street Market Hours (See more below) Shop in-person or Call-ahead pre-orders 717-232-4150 Fresa Bistro Open for take-out and limited call-in delivery Call 717-216-8754 or use GrubHub Broad Street Market Open mostly normal hours; limited customer entry; some vendors closed – BUT – many offering online delivery Cornerstone Coffeehouse 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily for carryout Limited food menu available There are more and more restaurants doing pick-up/delivery — check-in with your favorites.

Culture + Chill

Check out our Culture Vulture series – ways to experience life outside while, ahem, inside. Midtown Scholar Bookstore Shop online here, plus SAVE 10% on used books with code SCHOLARSALE Shop new books through affiliate BookShop Enjoy virtual author events Midtown Cinema Purchase a gift card or renew your membership now to keep them going, then reap the benefits of your purchase once they reopen! Secure a future movie night for two – with two tickets, two small popcorns, two small sodas, and two bags of candy! Stash Vintage Shop online via Etsy All local orders free pickup or free delivery (over $35) Save 25% off your purchase of 2 or more items online, plus look for flash sales
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Depression Reflections: Area residents share memories that parallel today’s unprecedented times.

John Wolfe was 5 years old, riding in the front seat of the family car with his sister, his mother at the wheel. All of a sudden, a runaway trolley car from the Spring Grove-to-Hanover line barreled toward them.

His mother’s instincts kicked in. She instructed him to jump into the backseat.

He did—and it likely saved his life. Tragically, his mother was killed upon impact, and his sister died days later.

“I go to bed with that memory every night,” said Wolfe of York, now 94. “I tried to live a life my mother would be proud of.”

To Wolfe, that accident, in 1930, is synonymous with the country’s spiral into the Great Depression.

“My dad and I moved in with my grandmother—we had nine people in the same house, on West Market Street in York,” he recalled. “It was a little crowded.”

The fact that his father was a Packard mechanic meant he was employed despite the Depression.

“All the lawyers and doctors in York drove Packards,” said Wolfe. “In effect, all three adults in our household pooled their money together so that we could survive.”

 

Really Shaky

In the midst of today’s COVID-19 pandemic, record unemployment figures, and economic uncertainties, are there comparisons to the Depression era?

“The Great Depression was the only time in the last century we’ve experienced a huge economic downturn,” said Scott Hancock, chair of Gettysburg College’s history department.

We spoke just as a record-breaking 3.3 million Americans filed for unemployment in late March.

“That 3.3 million figure is Depression-era type numbers, though the difference is the incredible jump—it appears unemployment claims jumped by about 3 million in one week,” Hancock said. “Nothing that sudden has ever happened before. So, even though comparisons with the Great Depression are in some ways limited, I think that kind of one-week jump in unemployment also shows we are in uncharted waters.”

He’s quick to point out that he’s a historian—not an economist—but he makes a few observations.

“Part of what leads to the Depression is poor business practices—a lot of economic growth in the ‘20s was built on credit, which is what we saw in 2008—really shaky,” Hancock said. “The question I would be asking: Is our economic growth from 2008 to now built on things that are more stable than the early ‘90s into 2000s? If so, maybe the economy will recover from the hit we’re about to take.”

Hancock points to the Depression’s effects on society. It was a time when America’s middle class developed a stronger empathy for the poor.

“It’s an odd side effect of the Great Depression, and it will be interesting to see whether that happens today [as a result of the pandemic],” said Hancock. “I was glad to see that Harrisburg has halted evictions—a judge here in Adams County did likewise. So, at least there’s some humanity being demonstrated by our political and judicial leaders. I hope that continues to grow.”

Bill Blando, 85, of New Cumberland, remembers the tight-knit community bonds that evolved from the Depression era in his Lower East Side, New York neighborhood.

“There would be rent parties,” Blando recalled. “Neighbors would gather together, play the accordion, and contribute food and treats. People would drop money into a pot, and it would be enough to help that neighbor pay their rent.”

He also has a standout memory of a time when no neighbors lent a hand.

It was around 1940. His father needed $14 to pay the monthly furniture bill from Hecht’s Department Store. He was $7 short.

“The sheriff came and hauled all of our furniture down from the fifth floor where we lived. My mother was devastated. She was crying in the street,” Blando said. “Everything sat on the curb, including a little pedal car of mine. But there were a couple things the sheriff allowed us to keep—my sister’s crib and a youth bed for me.”

Blando was 5 years old, and the memory is still imprinted in his mind. He can visualize and describe the scene.

“My dad subsequently got a job with the WPA [Works Progress Administration], building sidewalks,” he said. “We were able to buy some basic furniture after that.”

Blando’s father, Nunzio, had the mentality of a survivor. In fact, he survived the 1918 flu pandemic, considered by the Centers for Disease Control to be the most severe pandemic in modern history.

“He was 7 to 8 years old,” Blando said. “His mother and two aunts took care of him, wrapping him up in blankets, applying hot rags so that he would sweat it out, for two, three, four days. Somebody went over to the local church and summoned the priest to administer last rites, and my aunts shooed him out. He lived for the next 70 years.”

 

The Script

The current COVID-19 sheltering-in-place reminds Marge Farrell of her childhood, when she had the chicken pox and was quarantined. She heard family stories about her mother and brother who battled diphtheria before she was born. Her father was quarantined with them until they recovered.

Farrell, of York, was born in 1928 and will turn 92 this month. The stock market crash on October 29, 1929, plunged the country into the Depression when she was just a year old.

“I grew up in the coal region, in Mt. Carmel, where it was depressed most of the time,” Farrell said. “I still had a very happy childhood. I knew we didn’t have much money, but I didn’t really know anybody that did, so I didn’t know any different.”

Thinking back on that time, she said there was a paradox at play.

“During the Depression, we weren’t necessarily confined to our homes,” she said. “You just didn’t have the money to go anywhere.”

Indeed, traffic deaths dropped during the Depression because people weren’t driving as much. Other silver linings during this time included the birth of popular board games like Monopoly and Scrabble, radio shows and kitchen gardens. Hollywood transitioned from silent films into classic movies like 1939’s “The Wizard of Oz” and “Gone with the Wind.”

Hollywood, however, isn’t writing the script for today’s pandemic.

“My family would tell you I like to avoid happy endings,” said Hancock. “There’s a part of me that loves that about Americans. That American optimism is a stereotype, but the academic in me sees the problems in that. It papers over some brutal reality.”

“Not to minimize the coronavirus—it’s life threatening—but I hope what can come out of it is more of a desire to address the inequity [in society], because this is going to affect more of the people who have the least ability to deal with it,” Hancock predicted.

Our communities, as well as government agencies, will play starring roles in the pandemic’s solutions.

“This is having a real tangible effect, and like the Depression, it can create networks of community where people can figure out ways to help each other,” Hancock said. “That’s not the cure-all. We need the government to play a role, too. Dealing with this will hopefully force us to figure out ways to make society a bit more equitable.”

 

Sidebar 1: Words of Wisdom

All of the older folks interviewed for this story offered advice, gleaned from their life experiences, on how to survive challenging times such as the COVID-19 pandemic.

John Wolfe said the secret to weathering life’s storms is “staying busy.” He was working on a 1,000-piece puzzle featuring 37 different World War II airplanes, a gift from his granddaughter, when I spoke to him.

“It might take me a month or two,” he said.

But he knows a thing or two about tests of time. During his lifetime, he built 14 grandfather clocks. He also wrote a book about the history of the York Airport, where he devoted nearly his entire career as an airplane mechanic and co-pilot. Over the years, he also authored books on West Manchester Township’s 200th anniversary and his church’s 250th anniversary.

Marge Farrell said the two most important things that have helped her through life’s ups and downs are patience and faith.

“I don’t know how people get through without it,” she said.

And when I spoke to Bill Blando, he mentioned he’d be calling the daughter of one of his neighbors next. She had tested positive for COVID-19. All of his neighbors were regularly checking in on each other.

Blando, a retired newspaper reporter, summarized today’s pandemic with the long view of a lifetime of journalism.

“There will be a time when we look back on this,” he said. “We will remember these times for the rest of our lives—even our Pennsylvanians who are mostly German and so stoic but kindhearted to help their neighbors.”

 

Sidebar 2: Family Soundtracks

If you’ve been fortunate enough to spend time with your grandparents or great-grandparents, you’ve probably heard some great family stories. And chances are, many of those stories are about survival, especially of hard times like the Great Depression, much like the ones included here.

A Depression-era story was passed down in my family, as well, with the proof standing in my home office, within sight as I write this very story. It’s a mahogany piano my first generation American great-grandfather Paul called his “Depression piano.”

Paul, a musician like his father before him in Czechoslovakia, owned a baby grand piano prior to the Depression. But he swapped it for a player piano when the Depression hit to keep family and friends’ spirits up, buoyed by its entertaining rolls of music happily spinning out tunes. Music can soothe the soul through troubled times, and the player piano worked its magic—like a giant music box, the rolls of music programmed the keys to magically play.

My great-grandfather always intended to return the “Depression piano” for his beloved baby grand once the Depression lifted. But the player piano became beloved too, and like a good story, was passed down to my mother, and then to me.

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Pets & Pandemic: Animals, like their humans, are suffering from this crisis.

Kristen Zellner got $50 from a customer asking her to put it toward pet food for households in need. Annette Reiff started a pet-food bank. Animal rescues are fielding calls from pet-foster aspirants.

“It’s pretty wild how much people just want to help each other and animals,” said Zellner, owner of Abrams & Weakley General Store for Animals in Susquehanna Township.

In the COVID-19 crisis, humans are hurting, and when humans hurt, their pets are not far behind. Throughout the midstate, pet stores and animal rescues are going about their business as usual, even as they step up their pet lifelines.

At Abrams & Weakley, Zellner began offering curbside pickup in mid-March. She also spread the word that her store can deliver to the homebound and offer donations or discounts to those in need.

“It’s beautiful,” she said. “We have had people call us and send money for their friends to buy food.”

The Humane Society of Harrisburg Area’s pet food bank has seen a “significant increase” in use since the crisis began, said Director of Marketing and Outreach Amanda Brunish.

“There are a lot of people who are losing income and need a helping hand, and that’s why we’re here,” she said. “Our mission is to build a better community for pets and people, and it’s not just about the homeless animals here. It’s about ensuring that pets stay in the homes they’re in now.”

Castaway Critters volunteer Annette Reiff, of Harrisburg, put out calls for donations for a pick-up pet food bank outside Tri-County OIC in Midtown. A large donation from Purina, via a York warehouse storing grocery overstocks, supplied enough dog food. More cat food donations are needed.

“I’ve been checking every day,” said Reiff. “The bins have been mostly empty. I fill them up again and check the next day.”

As the economy plummets, animal rescues are more concerned than ever that people unable to care for their pets will surrender them to shelters—already groaning—or abandon them, said Reiff.

That fear is driving much of the pet-itarian effort.

“I wouldn’t want anyone to have to get rid of a pet because they can’t afford food or basic things,” said Zellner. “I’m happy to go into our donation box and deliver to somebody who needs it.”

At HSHA, applications for a ramped-up fostering campaign—coincidentally, launched just before the crisis broke—have tripled since March. Even people who can only foster while they’re working from home or are laid off are welcome.

“People have really embraced fostering,” said Brunish. “We don’t know how long this is going to last, and we don’t know what kind of circumstances we’re going to run into. It’s nice that people want to give a helping hand.”

 

Ready to Roar

HSHA especially hopes for kitten fosters and is eager for kitten-related donations—kitten replacement milk, kitten wet and dry food.

The reason? Seems that animal shelters are a necessity that remains open. Pet adoptions, too, although they continue in virtual and no-touch form. Spay-neuter is not, and veterinarians are withholding non-elective surgeries, like their people-doctor counterparts.

The pandemic hit just as kitten season was accelerating. As young as 4 months old, those early kittens will become kitten mamas.

At trap-neuter-return program Steelton Community Cats, a lack of supplies is hindering the monthly surgical clinic conducted by Dr. Diane Ford of Vetting Zoo, Palmyra.

“Everybody, every rescue, every humane society, every TNR program is just doing the best we can with what we have,” said longtime volunteer Rosemary Loncar.

March and April clinics were canceled, but Steelton Community Cats is ready to roar as soon as possible.

“Each month, we will be doing 80 cats,” said Loncar. “We really are behind the 8-ball right now, because all of those cats we were supposed to do in March—most of the females are probably pregnant.”

Taking care of people is top priority, she added, but “we’re biting at the bit. We really do want to get started.”

 

Like a Flood

Boiling Springs-based Furry Friends Network has seen “a huge amount of interest in helping, both adoption and foster,” said co-founder Robin Scherer.

However, Scherer must hope that those potential pet foster parents can wait. Southern shelters that normally send dogs up north for adoption are not transporting.

“We’re in a holding pattern for new dogs,” said Scherer. “We’d love to have more foster help in normal times, and I hope that the people who are offering to help will offer to help after the pandemic is over.”

She does “fear what is coming down the tracks,” especially with more than 150 cats still remaining from last year.

“These poor kittens,” she said. “I know what I can handle here, and that capacity is going to be filled up quickly. It’s like a flood. The kittens are a pandemic of their own.”

Although the donations that help Furry Friends Network pay for medical care have virtually stopped, Scherer is “totally against putting pleas for help out right now.”

“Everybody is in the same boat,” she said. “Businesses are struggling. People are struggling. It’s real for everybody.”

She does hope, though, that people consider adopting, including older cats and dogs.

“The animals need us, but I think people need the animals as much during this period of time,” Scherer said. “They can bring a lot of joy into your life. As long as you go into it realizing that they’re going to need you after the pandemic is over. A wonderful thing to do would be to keep helping them.”

Author’s note: Sweeney the tabby cat contributed keyboard strokes to this story.

 

Lending a Paw

Want to help? Contact these pet organizations and others.

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You Gotta Have Art: Sidelined by the pandemic, Harrisburg area artists wait, worry, wonder.

A scene from Open Stage’s “Angels in America Online. Photo by Dan McGregor

Help wanted for pandemic endurance. Must be resourceful, creative, resilient and thrifty. Artists, actors and musicians encouraged to apply.

Since a shutdown descended on the midstate, artsy people have unleashed their unique skills sets to deliver hope while, not insignificantly, shifting themselves into survival mode.

“When your business model is built around bringing people together, how does the organization survive in a world where people can’t be together?” said Stuart Landon, a force behind two of Harrisburg’s cultural cornerstones, Open Stage and Midtown Cinema.

In this climate, Harrisburg-area artists are putting performances online, soliciting donations and ticket sales, and generating new initiatives. It’s all meant to keep audiences connected until regathering time.

 

Makes Us Tick

Reina “76 Artist” Wooden waited 10 years to see her works hanging on the walls of the Art Association of Harrisburg. And maybe she still can see it—if she stands on tiptoe and peers through a window. Her joint exhibition with partner Charlie “Bootleg” Feathers, “Bootleg Meets R76,” opened not long before the gallery went dark.

“We achieved our goal,” sculptor Feathers said with a laugh.

The pair can no longer show and sell their work through galleries, but after all, most artists “are accustomed to working on shoestring budgets,” said Reina. “In times of trauma, the artists are the new army. We have the emotionality to heal.”

Still, artists gotta art. Reina and Feathers are making how-to videos on turning things at hand—dried-out clay, stacks of egg cartons—into art, posted under #togetherathome.

“I’m hoping this will slow us down and help us recognize the things we have and be grateful for that,” Reina said. The connection among humans “is art in itself.”

“The world is sowing its beauty,” she said. “It’s our calling to inspire people right now.”

Open Stage is also going virtual, having received approval from licensing house Broadway Play Publishing to revamp its planned “Angels in America” production into “Angels in America Online.” The Zoom broadcasts began in April and continue this month, with actors reading their lines from separate locations. Donors get a link to view the live or archived presentations of Tony Kushner’s epic of the AIDS crisis.

The play about a past “medical, spiritual and political crisis” remains pertinent, said Landon. “It’s very strange and very sobering—or haunting, rather—to hear how a lot of these words are just so relevant.”

In March, Gamut Theatre Group had to halt its presentation of “Enemy of the People,” Henrik Ibsen’s classic about the scorn heaped on a man warning townspeople about infection at a local spa.

Artistic Director Clark Nicholson said that he seeks inspiration in the age of the “Restoration,” when the British theater recreated itself after three decades of banishment. In those times “more dire” than ours, people were “being smart and being tenacious.” For 2020 and beyond, that means figuring out how to remain interesting and relevant without overloading the internet.

“What’s the sweet spot of a very imperfect product right now?” he said. “Because theater is not theater unless people are together in a room.”

Executive Director Melissa Nicholson added that artists are “a little bit better positioned to be openminded.” (Gamut, she noted, has offered state and county government officials use of its building if needed.)

Musicians are adapting, too. The Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra offered online master classes for its youth orchestra musicians. HSO is also streaming a previously taped Masterworks concert to its database. Its “Music in the Key of We” community celebration and Beethoven birthday bash, scrubbed from its original April date, has been rescheduled to Nov. 14.

“The orchestra’s strong,” said Executive Director Jeffrey Woodruff. “It’s been around for 90 years. It has its rightful place in the community and has been through many crises and will come out of this one just fine, sooner or later.”

Veteran jazz pianist Steve Rudolph’s busy 2020 itinerary used to include a fully booked JazZenJourney, the annual trip to Italy he leads with his wife, Andrea Minick Rudolph, and a recording session at the studio of filmmaker George Lucas.

“This was looking like one of the best years I’d have had,” he said. “Sometimes, you just have to laugh.”

For the duration, Rudolph is composing and, like the rest of us, reorganizing his office. He is Skyping with his ensemble, hoping to announce an online matinee or happy hour to “have some fun for a half hour and give some people a little relief.” He hopes to solicit donations to charities supporting musicians until, he joked, “in about a month and a half, I’ll be having people donate to me.”

On the pop scene, artists and audiences are missing out on the touring that has become their financial lifeblood. Country music artist Ben Gallaher, a Camp Hill native now based in Nashville, postponed a midstate stop and a tour to Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and Indianapolis, as the opener for country legend Joe Diffie, now lost to COVID-19.

“All my friends just came to a halt,” said Gallaher. “For the music industry, it’s not just artists that are affected. It’s band and crew members, business managers, agents, labels, venues, venue promoters, merchandise companies. There’s quite a trail there.”

Amid the Facebook Live and Instagram performances, hometown support is helping to sustain Gallaher. A show planned for early April at the Ned Smith Center for the Performing Arts in Millersburg was originally an indoor acoustic performance. The rescheduled June 20 show will move to the center’s amphitheater.

“So it’ll be full-band,” he said. “We’ll be rocking in June.”

Woodruff calls the arts “an essential part of life.”

“It gives sustenance,” he said. “We’re all so preoccupied with money, but it gives things other than money. It can be inspirational. It can give us solace. It can enlighten us. All these art forms give us a glimpse into our humanity and what makes us tick.”

 

Squeezing Dimes

At Gamut’s theater in downtown Harrisburg, the ghost lights are on. The heat is not.

“If you walked into Gamut right now, it is freezing,” said Melissa Nicholson.

As business manager, she is cutting expenses, talking to the bank, and—for the first time—exploring the world of Small Business Administration loans.

“Our number-one priority is keeping our people working,” she said.

Clark Nicholson agreed.

“I can talk a lot about artistic motivations,” he said. “But the fact of the matter is, we’ve got a lovely theater that’s got a big old mortgage.”

Months of no ticket sales, gallery exposures or school classes are eroding one-third to one-half of artistic budgets. Artists are putting their faith in their loyal patrons, issuing emergency appeals and selling unconventional products, such as Open Stage’s discounted “Rainy Day” tickets.

“It’s important for us to say out loud that we need help getting to the other side so we can tell the stories that you need to hear,” said Landon.

The Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra is urging patrons to buy 2020-21 season tickets, “because the lifeblood of any organization is their subscriber base,” said Woodruff.

With a decent endowment and the net from a recent capital campaign, the orchestra had the wherewithal to pay its musicians.

“The board has the ultimate fiduciary responsibility to do what is best for the organization,” Woodruff said. “We had enough resources on hand to at least pay the players who were hired through the end of the season. We felt it was a very, very important thing to do.”

 

A Rebirth

So, what comes next?

In the fall of 2019, before the world turned upside down, Reina 76 Artist and Charlie Feathers invited friends to an open house, a sort of pop-up gallery from their art-filled home. When this is over, they swear, there will be another.

Rudolph worries about outcomes. Will jazz-friendly venues survive? Will an older-skewing audience fear coming out?

“I’m going to keep doing it whether it gets out there or not,” he said. “Jazz in itself is an introverted art. You’re playing for the music, but when there’s a great audience, it makes a difference in how you play.”

Arts organizations are planning upcoming seasons through a new lens. What can they afford? Is the topic timely? In Woodruff’s words, groups are honestly scrutinizing “what is possible, what is practical.”

Costs will probably loom larger than ever in selecting seasons, said Melissa Nicholson. As life returns to normal, maybe Gamut will sell fewer tickets and space the seats farther apart, she said. (Open Stage, too, is rethinking arrangement of newly ordered seating). In the meantime, artistic minds keep churning.

“When this is over and organizations have survived, the amount of stuff you’re going to see will be incredible,” said Clark Nicholson. “It’s like thoroughbred racehorses being held in the starting gate.”

Artistic types “have a particular skills set we can offer to the universe,” said Landon. “I feel very blessed to have this position and to be surrounded by such wonderful artists, able to create such beautiful pieces. This is a job at the end of the day, and it’s my job to lead this organization, to make sure this organization is going to be around for your children and your children’s children.”

Or as HSO’s Woodruff put it, “It’s springtime. Let’s be optimistic that we’re going to have a rebirth.”

Numerous arts groups were mentioned in this story. If you’re able, please donate generously to them.

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Wishing Well: Thoughts from an empty city.

Illustration by Rich Hauck.

Some 35 years ago, a Don Henley song called “Boys of Summer” was an inescapable earworm on top-40 radio. Part of the song goes:

“Empty lake
Empty streets,
The sun goes down alone”

Walking around eerily quiet Harrisburg over the past month-plus, those lyrics have become fixed in my brain. I’ve thought of them maybe a hundred times jogging around Italian Lake, strolling through the downtown.

I sometimes wonder what I’ll remember most from this bizarre period in our shared history. More than anything, I may recall a feeling of isolation mixed with a sense of helplessness.

It’s like that with memories—you often feel them more than truly remember them.

As I run around the empty lake and stroll the empty streets, I wonder what Harrisburg will look like at the end of this.

Will my sick, elderly friend survive the pandemic? Will the local diner still be around? Will my neighbors be able to keep their restaurant going? Will TheBurg make it? Right now, I can’t guarantee any of these.

A few years ago, I wrote a column that I called, “FutureBurg,” in which I imagined a prosperous future for this little city on the river. That vision now seems as distant to me as what we once called “normal” life—the one in which we didn’t wonder about the health of the person who just passed us on the street or about what lays, unseen, on the countertop or currency we touched.

It’s certainly possible that, six months from now, we’ll return to our routines. The streets will get crowded again, the bars busy with customers, folks out of their houses, enjoying each other’s company. But it seems equally likely that this won’t happen at all. Even after the contagion eases and the “stay-at-home” orders are lifted, I fear that people will be slow to engage publicly again.

Will we become a nation of glove- and mask-wearers? Will we see danger on every door handle and drinking glass? And, if we do, you can be certain that the usual collection of crass capitalists and amoral politicians will be right there to exploit our fears, further dividing us for power and profit.

Recently, someone asked me if I thought society would change at all from this experience—and, by that, I think she meant change for the better. Clearly, I have my doubts about this. But to cheer myself up (because I obviously need cheering), I made a wish list.

So, here’s what I wish for, collectively, for the Harrisburg area. I don’t actually expect these things to happen, but, hey, I’ve had a lot of alone time to ponder the meaning of life.

I wish we could heal the east/west, city/suburb rift. Believe it or not, there are plenty of wonderful, well-intentioned people on both sides of the great, fake divide.

I wish that the zero-sum, us vs. them mentality would end. I believe this mindset holds us back from imagining and realizing a better, more prosperous future.

I wish the commonwealth would take greater responsibility for its overwhelming presence here, becoming an active partner with the city for the benefit of all.

I wish we would become less reliant on cars. Slimming down Forster and State streets and putting in bike lanes and bump-outs would be a great start.

I wish that people with means—money, time, whatever resource you have in abundance—would make a greater commitment to helping their community.

I also wish for such things as less poverty, crime and racism, but that applies throughout our entire society, challenges certainly not unique to the Harrisburg area.

I suppose that all of these fall under the umbrella of being nicer to one another—kinder, more patient, more understanding, more giving, less willing to jump to conclusions, expect ill intent or demonize one another.

I do have one solid idea that goes beyond just a wish.

Last month, I wrote a blog post in which I implored people—those who can—to dedicate half of their federal stimulus checks to local businesses and organizations. So, I would like to repeat that suggestion here.

Of course, I realize that many people need every cent to pay their rent or purchase food and other essentials. But, if you’re fortunate enough to have resources to spare, please don’t lock them all away—spread them around to others.

Do you have a favorite restaurant, shop, sandwich joint, nonprofit or arts group? Spend it there: donate, buy a gift card, tip generously, make a purchase. These pillars of our community need our help now, and we desperately need them to remain here with and for us.

One day, this crisis will be over. Countering Henley’s lyrics, the streets won’t be empty, nor will the lake. People will gather again to watch the sun go down over the Susquehanna. And then someone will say, “Hey, let’s meet up for a burger and a beer,” and perhaps we’ll think for a moment about how lucky we are to be doing something so simple.

Lawrance Binda is co-publisher/editor-in-chief of TheBurg.

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Editor’s Note: Muddling into May

Harrisburg, you made it.

Take a deep bow. You successfully muddled through April 2020, and, I hope, in reasonably good condition.

In this column, I usually strike an optimistic tone. But there’s simply no denying the gravity, anxiety and even dread of the past couple of months. So here’s to a much better May ahead. Things have to begin to improve, right?

Since the crisis struck, many people have asked me about TheBurg. They want to know how we’re faring. First of all, thank you so much for all the kind words and wishes from the community. Your support is greatly appreciated.

In general, we’re doing well. But, like all small businesses, we’re concerned about the future and, as a news publication, even more so. This industry, as you may know, is in dire shape, now made only more critical by the general economic collapse.

To help get us through this time, we decided to launch—a little earlier than we had expected—our new membership program, Friends of TheBurg.

We started this program for several reasons: to integrate further into the community, to offer a framework for more events, to meet our biggest fans.

We also hoped for a new source of revenue, as, over the years, many people have asked how they could help support us, since all of our products and services are free to readers.

We never expected to make much money from the program, but we thought, best case, it might pay part of the salary of a new reporter. Then, we could serve this community even better.

That financial component has now become more critical. Starting in mid-March, as businesses closed and events cancelled, our ad revenue cratered, which is why we launched the program early.

So, if you can, I hope you’ll consider becoming a “Friend of TheBurg.” There are some nice benefits, as well, including a tote bag, free and discounted tickets and your name listed as a supporter in every issue of TheBurg magazine.

Please visit our website today and sign up. It’s very affordable!

Lastly, I make you this promise. When this crisis is finally over, when we successfully come out the other end, we plan to throw one fantastic party for our members and supporters. It will be a celebration of perseverance, endurance and community. We will all deserve it!

Lawrance Binda is co-publisher/editor-in-chief of TheBurg.

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Quarantine Cuisine: A simple meal, until we meet again.

This is a strange and dark time for all of us. I suspect we all have our own ways of coping with anxiety and fear during the long hours at home.

I once read a quote from someone who said that she “inherited worry along with the family silver.” Well, that is me. But I have found solace in my kitchen, the place I retreat to for most of my waking hours. I putter around, read favorite cookbooks over and over, and recall happy times with family and friends.

We have gotten some “takeout” from our favorite Harrisburg restaurants, hoping that it helps them just a little bit. We will continue to do so. But mostly I have been cooking, often with a combination of what I have stashed in the freezer and what I snatched off the shelves at the grocery store. We have also made brief trips to the farmers market late on Friday afternoons. But my obsessive-compulsive meal planning has gone out the window.

I have been looking for recipes that call for simple ingredients, fewer ingredients and those that result in leftovers for lunch. I found a pasta recipe from chef and cookbook author, Lidia Bastianich, that seemed perfect. It is called “farfalle della bisnonna” or bowties with cabbage and meat sauce.

I had most of the ingredients on hand but liked it because so many substitutions are possible. Any type of sausage or ground meat will work, as will dried thyme instead of fresh, and regular cabbage instead of Savoy cabbage, which the recipe calls for. It was delicious for dinner and for several lunches, as well.

 

Bowties with Cabbage and Meat Sauce 

Ingredients

  • 6 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  • 8 ounces sweet Italian sausage, removed from the casing
  • 1 small onion, cut into chunks
  • 1 medium carrot, cut into chunks
  • 1 celery stalk, cut into chunks
  • 2 teaspoons fresh thyme leaves or 1 teaspoon dried thyme
  • ¼ teaspoon red pepper flakes
  • 2 tablespoons tomato paste
  • ½ cup dry white wine
  • ½ head Savoy (or any) cabbage, cored and shredded
  • 3 cups low sodium chicken or vegetable broth
  • 1 pound bowtie pasta (farfalle)
  • ½ cup grated Parmesan or grana Padano cheese

 

Directions

  • Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil for the pasta.
  • Add 4 tablespoons of the olive oil to a large deep skillet and heat gently over medium heat. When the oil is hot, add the sausage. Cook, crumbling with a wooden spoon until browned, about 3 minutes.
  • Meanwhile, combine the onion, carrot, celery and thyme in a food processor and pulse to make a chunky paste. (You could use a blender or an immersion blender with the chopping attachment. Or you could even chop the vegetables finely by hand.)
  • Once the sausage is browned, add the vegetable paste to the skillet and cook until all the liquid has evaporated. Sprinkle with the dried pepper flakes. (Add a lot if you like it hot and spicy.)
  • Make an empty spot in the pan with a spoon and add the tomato paste. Let it “toast” for a minute or two and then stir it into the vegetables.
  • Pour in the white wine and let it simmer until almost reduced, about 3 minutes.
  • Add the shredded cabbage and the broth and cook, covered, until the cabbage is wilted, about 20 minutes.
  • Uncover to thicken the sauce until the cabbage is wilted, about 10 more minutes. Taste and add more salt if needed.
  • When the bowtie noodles are cooked, remove them with a slotted spoon or “spider” and add them directly to the sausage mixture.
  • Drizzle with the remaining 2 tablespoons of olive oil and toss to coat the pasta with the sauce, adding a little extra broth if necessary.
  • Remove the pan from the heat, sprinkle with the cheese, and serve.

This is a healthy and comforting dish. You can use it as a “template” of sorts to change it, using cubed chicken or pork instead of sausage. If there is no cabbage stashed in the fridge, maybe you have some broccoli. The “process” will be the same.

I will continue to cook in these sad times. But many days I dream of our “date nights” in Harrisburg: dinner at Note Bistro and Wine Bar with Daniel making the most beautiful martinis in town; eating Qui Qui Musarra’s wonderful fish soup at Mangia Qui; and chatting with Tyler at Café Fresco’s crowded bar. I miss afternoon coffee at Little Amp’s outdoor tables at 2nd and State streets on warm days. These, and many others, are the places that make Harrisburg so special. I am praying for all of them that we see them “on the other side.”

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The Online Life: Social distancing has created virtual communities, opportunities.

Social distancing. It is a term we have become all too familiar with. Stay six feet apart, wash your hands, wear a mask if you go out, but don’t go out unless necessary.

While we are physically more isolated now than any of us probably have been before, what I’ve found is that we are hardly socially distant. Being told to stay away from people has made us crave human interaction so much more, and, the fact is, we need it. We can stay physically distant, but not socially.

As our virtual world swells during this crisis, growing to accommodate our communication needs, local organizations are figuring out how they fit.

Businesses are taking services like yoga and exercise classes online, and schools and churches are teaching through a screen. This is how some local organizations are doing it.

 

Well-Positioned

Downward-facing dog. Warrior II. Tree pose.

A Zoom screen full of about 20 people shift and move with each instruction. They aren’t physically together, but they are in sync—at least until the occasional dog or toddler photo-bombs in the background.

“It’s a sense of community,” said Brittany Holtz, owner of Studio B Power Yoga. “You can see everyone. It’s all the people you would see if you were coming into the studio. That’s been the bright light in all of this.”

All three of the studio’s locations—Hershey, Lebanon and Mechanicsburg—have merged into one online program in the midst of the COVID-19 crisis.

Seven days a week, Studio B offers classes such as “Vinyasa Flow” and “Mindful Flow,” taught by a range of instructors.

Holtz explained the importance of yoga, especially in a time like this when stress and anxiety can be crippling. Through this experience, she said that she sees the studio continuing to offer online classes even when the crisis is over.

“Yoga teaches us to be in each moment as it comes,” she said. “That is such a tough lesson right now, but it has really helped strengthen that lesson.”

 

Hope, Community

 “The church is not a building; it’s people,” said Executive Pastor Scott Ball of Christian Life Assembly. “Just because we can’t meet doesn’t mean we stop being the church.”

With around 2,500 people attending the Camp Hill campus each Sunday and about double as many calling CLA their home church, the leadership team needed to find creative ways to stay connected.

Despite not being able to meet physically, CLA has continued many of its regular services and programs. Sunday services are live-streamed, daily devotionals are posted, and Zoom has become a meeting place for Bible study groups.

“There is nothing that beats being face-to-face with people, but I feel like we are doing the next best thing,” Ball said.

In addition to resources for the congregation, CLA has volunteers distributing food to people in need in the community through a partnership with Cumberland County Food Bank.

“People need hope, people need community,” Ball said. “We have the greatest opportunity to share that.”

 

 Outdoors Indoors

As a science- and technology-based school, Harrisburg University may have had a leg up when moving learning online. But for programs that require a lot of hands-on work, faculty members needed to find creative ways to adapt classroom material.

How do you hold a field trip when you can’t leave home? Professors in the environmental science and geospatial technology programs have found a way.

“The students don’t have to completely give up the experience of going out,” said Christine Proctor, assistant professor of biology and ecology.

Proctor’s “Ecosystem Restoration” class usually spends half of the semester conducting fieldwork, observing and exploring nature. When the university switched to all online courses, she decided not to cancel the fieldwork, but offer it virtually.

Michael Meyer, assistant professor of earth systems science, and Albert Sarvis, director of HU’s Geospatial Technology Center, had been working to find a way to use a 360-degree camera and an online virtual reality tool to bring outdoor scenes indoors to students. Now was the perfect time to test it out on a class.

The three professors travelled to Michaux State Forest to capture video and still images of a restored stream. Students now can view the content and get a glimpse of what the area looks like.

“Instead of me just describing it, they can be looking at it,” Proctor said. “It allows us to recreate the field trip.”

 

Safe Spaces

When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, it wasn’t a matter of if the YMCA would help, it was how.

The Harrisburg Area YMCA was used to serving community members in need, but, with the crisis hitting, they became among the most vulnerable. The Y needed to continue its programming, now more than ever.

“Our focus has been—how do we treat our employees fairly and ensure our members are treated fairly, as well,” said Rosie Turner, director of marketing and communications.

Many of the Y’s classes moved online, including the “Livestrong” class for cancer survivors, “Healthy Weight and Your Child,” and tobacco cessation and diabetes prevention programs. Turner explained how important this was to reduce feelings of isolation and continue promoting healthy lifestyles.

To make sure youth in the community stay connected, they moved their Camp Curtin mentoring programs online.

“A lot of kids would come every day, and it’s their safe space,” Turner said. “We are trying to bring that safe space to their home.”

Knowing that, for many, the Y is their community gym, they also started offering workout tutorial videos online for people of all ages.

“Letting people know we are here and we are thinking of them is important to us,” Turner said.

For more information on the organizations mentioned in this story, visit www.studiobpoweryoga.com, www.clacamphill.com, www.harrisburgu.edu, and www.ymcaharrisburg.org.

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Silent City: A Photostory

This story feels like a melancholy flaneur.

I found myself photographing a lot of what’s not there—no people in the restaurants or coffee shops or churches. There are no politicians, staffers, state workers or tours at the Capitol building, no children on the playgrounds. There are no folks gathered at the market. The city is eerily quiet.

But we’re still here. We’re just tucked into our respective homes, trying to stay safe.

The rest of these images are portraits. They’re snippets of how our lives have changed over the last few weeks during the COVID-19 pandemic. They display our resilience, our worries and anxiety, the ways in which we’re filling our time, trying to stay afloat, and the ways we’re attempting to check on and care for our neighbors and families in unprecedented times.

I hope you are being gentle with yourself. I hope you and your family are safe and healthy. And I hope to see you on the other side of these COVID-19 times, whenever that may be.

www.danifresh.com

——–

Qui Qui Musarra, chef and an owner at Rubicon, Mangia Qui, & Suba, was taking a quick break. It was almost a completely familiar scene, seeing Qui out in front of the restaurant with her chef coat and apron on, but today she is wearing a mask to prepare Easter dinner for about 200 take out covers.

The Broad Street Market on a Saturday afternoon is usually busy and filled with folks socializing with friends and neighbors, but today it’s silent.

Hair salons and barbershops are closed so Hanniel Sindelar gave their partner, Lindsay Kirkwood, a haircut on the back porch of their house in Midtown. “It’s been a long time since you’ve had to cut my hair. Makes me think of our first apartment together,” Lindsay says to them.

Amine “Mo” Amamli has been laid off from his position at Habitat for Humanity so he’s been spending his time doing a ton of yard work and helping out with deliveries at Rubicon where his partner, Ashlyn, works.

Lauren Duff & Lissa Richards make sure to sit at least six feet apart on Lissa’s front porch. They’re catching up and checking in with each other. It’s Lauren’s first time out of the house in a few weeks.

Signs in the windows of this Penn Street house read, “WE WILL GET THROUGH” with brightly colored hearts.

Bri Rhoad works at PHEAA and does some freelance marketing work for the Governor but she’s more worried about her mom who has asthma. Bri goes to the store for her so she doesn’t have to leave the house.

Playgrounds all over the city are vacant and quiet.

A rainbow displayed in the window of a house in Midtown is part of a scavenger hunt that has spread throughout multiple towns and cities. It’s an activity for parents and children that they can do outside while still maintaining social distancing guidelines. There’s also a sign that reads, “Be gentle with yourself. This is new to all of us. Smile.”

Pat & Alan Edwards are playing rummy and having beers outside their house in Midtown. “What else are we going to do?” Pat laughs. They’re doing fine but they’re especially worried about friends who work in the service industry. Pat works from home. Alan has had a busy couple of weeks traveling to take care of a family member and goes to work during the week. He has a manufacturing job that is considered essential.

Carey Campbell and Diane Farrell Walker are out walking their dogs along the riverfront. They just walked to a friend’s house to wave at them from the sidewalk for their birthday since they can’t spend time together.

Shatara Parsons and Madison Hatcher were out for a bike ride down at the riverfront. Madison works at Foose Elementary and Shatara is a teacher at the Nativity School in Harrisburg. She says she misses the kids, they’re usually the liveliest part of her days.

Leah Mull sips wine on her front stoop while her husband, Steve, draws decorative eggs on the sidewalk for a social distancing friendly kids’ Easter egg hunt the next day. He says a lot of folks decided to put them in their windows, but this seems like more fun.

Loretta Barbee-Dare already works from home, so the stay at home order hasn’t affected her work. She’s worried about her neighbors though, most of whom are older folks at higher risk. She took boxes of food to some of them a little over a week ago and tries to check in often. And she’s irritated that the liquor stores are closed.

The sign in the window of Christ Lutheran Church on 13th street says, “All church services & meetings canceled until further notice. May God bless you,” and “We’re sorry. No dental services until further notice. Lo sentimos. No hay servicios dentales.”

Rikkie Shellhamer came out on her balcony. It feels a little safer talking with folks down in the courtyard behind her apartment from up there. She is laid off, but says she’s doing okay–some good days and some bad. She’s doing a lot of reading and recording music with her partner, Andy.

Self portrait in the window by Harrisburg University. It was my first day out of the house in eleven days. I have one mask and two bandanas for the days I go out to shoot, taking care to wash them after each use and I have strange new rituals for when I get home from shooting. I keep tripping over my feet.

The only somewhat busy spot on Second Street is Hornungs True Value. They have shelves of spring flowers and hanging baskets lining the street along with the usual sidewalk wares. A man loads his vehicle with a box of purchases from the store.

Lewis Walker is getting fresh air outside where he lives at the Presbyterian Apartments on Second Street. His building is all older folks in closely adjacent apartments. They’re worried that if one person gets sick, it will spread easily to other residents in the building.

 

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We, Together: Local children’s author tells story of friendship amidst hard times.

Lauren Castillo. Photos courtesy of Justin Douglas.

Lauren Castillo always loved her home in New York City.

Her apartment in Brooklyn was small, but all her friends were nearby. It was where she had attended art school and her career as an illustrator and author had taken off.

But eventually the big city life began to wear her out more than it inspired her.

“I was burnt out from living in that city,” Castillo said. “It was hard because I had to leave friends behind.”

She headed west with her brother in search of a new start, but relocated soon after, when artist friend Jonathan Bean told her about an open apartment in Midtown Harrisburg.

With a new studio space, Castillo was ready to pick up her brushes and pencils to start a book that had already been swirling in her mind.

“Shortly after I moved to Harrisburg is when the story started unfolding,” she said.

Usually, when Castillo writes a book, she begins with a story idea and the rest unfolds from there. That’s what happened with her previous books like “Nana in the City,” which won her a Caldecott honor in 2015.

This time was different though.

Throughout her journey from New York to California to Harrisburg, a little hedgehog kept appearing in her doodles on napkins and corners of paper. She felt a connection with this character that journeyed with her through seasons of losing and making friends and feelings of isolation and uncertainty.

It was only fitting her next book, with the cute but prickly hero at the center, would follow a similar narrative.

“It paralleled losing my community of friends and having to find new community,” Castillo said.

The author’s new book, “Our Friend Hedgehog: The Story of Us,tells of Hedgehog’s journey to find her best friend, Mutty, the stuffed dog who was carried away by a storm. While looking for her friend, Hedgehog meets an array of friendly woodland creatures and a young girl, Annika May, who help her along the way.

“The story is about friendship, bravery and making our way,” Castillo said. “I hope [readers] can relate to what it’s like to really find those people that hold you up and sustain you.”

The story of Hedgehog is formatted in a chapter book style while still heavily incorporating Castillo’s playful illustrations, giving the story life.

She said this was her first time writing a chapter book, but hopes it serves at a gateway for children growing out of picture books and moving into chapter books.

“That was a piece of the book market that was missing,” Castillo said. “Illustration and picture books taught me how to read—picture books were really precious to me.”

With a story that anyone can relate to, Castillo hopes readers of all ages will find a way to identify with Hedgehog and his lesson in the value of friendships.

Although the COVID-19 crisis has forced the author to cancel book tours and rethink the book launch, she’s just happy to be putting out another story for children to enjoy.

“The themes in this book are really fitting for the situation right now,” she said.

Midtown Scholar Bookstore is hosting Lauren Castillo for a virtual reading on May 3. Visit https://www.midtownscholar.com/events for more information. To learn more about Castillo and her work, visit www.laurencastillo.com.

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