Vice President Kamala Harris will come to Cincinnati Friday, touting President Biden s plans outlined in his speech Wednesday night.
The White House hasn t yet released specific details of the visit but confirmed Sen. Sherrod Brown, a Democrat from Cleveland, will moderate a roundtable discussion about public transit.
The roundtable will be held at the University of Cincinnati 1819 Innovation Hub from noon to 1 p.m., according to a release sent from Brown s office.
Officials with Cincinnati Metro confirmed that at least part of the itinerary will include a discussion about the sales tax levy voters approved in May to pay for better bus service and infrastructure improvements throughout the county.
After late-night rain and thunderstorms, storms moved out of Cincinnati Friday morning. But it won t be long before the rain returns. Expect improvements throughout the day Friday. LIVE RADAR // LATEST WEATHER ALERTSFriday morning showers were concentrated in southern zones but came to an end around 10 or 11 a.m. It will be slightly cooler with highs in the mid-to-upper-50s. It will be colder tonight with lows in the middle 30s.The weekend will be a split with partly cloudy skies Saturday, and off and on showers Sunday. It will be cooler with highs in the mid-50s Saturday, then upper 40s Sunday due to clouds and the shower threat. Lows over the weekend will be in the 30s.Next week is likely to start off chilly and wet before temperatures climb Tuesday. Highs will climb to around 50 late Monday and then into the upper 60s by Tuesday. Steadier rain Monday will transition to rain with scattered showers possible Tuesday.Additional showers are expected later in the week, too.Don t fo
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The exhibit features Fritzie Fritzshall, a Holocaust survivor who worked as a slave laborer for nearly a year before being sent on a death march to Germany. Her story is now immortalized in the Holocaust & Humanity Center. The exhibit uses artificial intelligence technology to allow visitors to ask Holocaust survivors questions and receive responses in real time. Even though there were times when we said nobody will survive, there s hope maybe somebody will survive, Fritzhall said through her virtual conversation with WVXU.
HHC CEO Sarah Weiss says the technology was introduced to her five years ago and believes more exhibits like this could be seen in museums in the future.