Community Booster 10-02-03
Just Vote!
By Jeff Gill
Mary Jo Long and Jean Weisert remember when a coin toss decided an election.
“You have to declare a winner before a recount can be requested,” Long said, “and the vote was even on the first round.” So a George Washington quarter was found and thrown for heads or tails.
One vote. Your vote. Can it be that important?
After the last presidential election, which repeated a national drama seen in Nixon versus Kennedy (one voter per precinct could have swung the result to the Republicans) or in Tilden vs. Ohio’s own Hayes (ditto for the Democrats), can anyone really doubt the importance of one vote, even on Tuesday, Nov. 4?
A recent visit to the Licking County Board of Elections, in the County Administration Building across from the Courthouse, showed a steady stream of absentee voters weeks ahead of county Election Day.
“Now when you press next to your choice, push through that chad so it pops out the back,” one elections clerk reminded folks at the counter. Americans know about chads nowadays, hanging, pregnant, and otherwise. Electronic methods may be on their way, but director Long (a Republican) and deputy director Weisert (a Democrat, as one of the checks and balances found in every electoral step from top to bottom of the process) are both certain that the old punch cards can give Licking County a reliable result, with a little help from the human factors.
“We’re expecting 100% turnout; we always want to see that,” declares Long. “We are preparing for about 45% in this non-federal election year. There are 99,119 total registered voters in the county, and we plan on seeing about 44,500 of them.”
Turnout is around 75 to 80% in presidential election years, which makes little sense to Long and Weisert. “These are the elections where you’re picking the people who really affect your day-to-day lives,” Long says. “And your vote counts very directly in local races for mayors, council members, township trustees, and school boards.” Weisert notes, “This should be the 80-plus percent election.”
From 6:30 am to 7:30 pm, voting locations will open all over the county, and over 488 pollworkers will put in fourteen hours days and more. By statute, there must be four pollworkers for each of the 122 precincts, working out of 69 locations. Paired Democrats and Republicans oversee each step in the process, ensuring fairness and impartiality.
These workers for democracy make $85 for their before sunrise and after sunset day, along with occasionally dealing with a citizen who is disgruntled to discover that they aren’t registered.
“According to the 1995 National Voting Rights Act, if someone does not vote in two subsequent federal elections, or in four years, we send that voter a card notifying them that their status may change,” explains Long. “Either that card needs to be sent back indicating that they wish to remain a registered voter, or if they take any action as a voter – signing a petition, voting in a primary, or voting in the next election – then we know they are still living at that address and are renewed as a registered voter.”
“It takes, in practice, at least eight years of inactivity for someone to lose their registered voter status,” Weisert adds.
Moving also requires a new registration, but if you were registered somewhere within Ohio, you can still vote as a “walk-in” voter, which will require a bit more paperwork and proof of identity.
The “Motor Voter” legislation, opening up the registration process, has made it easier to get registered as a voter, but has also led to some thinking they’re registered simply by getting their driver’s license or signing up for local services. “If you’ve never filled out a voter registration form, you’re not a registered voter,” explains Weisert.
And if you last voted for Ronald Reagan, you may not be registered any longer.
If you aren’t registered or have lapsed, it actually isn’t too early to start thinking about the next election. Long and Weisert were quick to point out that the next electoral event is the Presidential primary for Ohio on March 2, which makes the deadline for registration February 2. . .just three months away.
In fact, the Licking County Board of Elections (with two Democratic and two Republican members, of course) and the staff are constantly thinking about the next election. There can be as many as four cycles each year, with local school district levies, bond issues, charter amendments, and state issues to tally along with the usual slates of officials and representatives.
Will your one vote count? Absentee voting can be done until 5 pm in the Board offices on Monday, Nov. 3, and about 2,000 have done so already. Those citizens probably already know about Gore v. Bush, and some may remember that even the late, well-known Gov. James Rhodes had some “one vote per precinct” squeakers.
Some other notable ONE vote elections found on the internet:
In 1645, ONE vote gave Oliver Cromwell control of England
In 1649, ONE vote caused Charles I of England to be executed
In 1845, ONE vote brought Texas into the Union
In 1868, ONE vote saved President Andrew Johnson from impeachment
In 1876, ONE vote gave Rutherford B. Hayes the United States presidency
A slightly more technical site on-line from a statistician says that for elections of less than 100,000 voters, there should be a tie result in 1 out of every 30,000 races. The Board of Elections doesn’t keep track of such things, but they’re sure Licking County is well ahead of that prediction.
“We’re always prepared for that outcome, just in case,” said Long. Sounds like they’re prepared for everything: are you prepared to vote on Nov. 4?
On Election Day, Tuesday, November 4, the polls will open at 6:30 am and close at 7:30 pm, in 69 locations serving 122 precincts all across Licking County. Absentee voting can be done until 5 pm on Monday, Nov. 3, only at the Licking County Board of Election Offices on the first floor of the Hill County Administration Building across from the Courthouse in Newark.
Wednesday, October 29, 2003
Monday, October 27, 2003
* * * * * * *
The Church Window – November 2003 Hebron Christian Church newsletter
Notes From My Knapsack
One of the best pieces of news at the Charlotte 2003 General Assembly was that, for the two years since the last GA, the Disciples of Christ have started the most new churches and welcomed the most new members since the 1920’s. Can I hear a “Hallelujah!”
Of course, a thoughtful observer might ask “But aren’t our total numbers, both congregational and membership, still declining?”
Yep. They sure are. No point in sugar coating the hard news, which is that years of what I’d call “deferred maintenance” in not starting new church plants in growing areas, while existing churches in rust-belt downtowns and grain belt rural areas are quite naturally aging and shrinking.
But that does not in any way erase the good news that a) the Disciples of Christ are fulfilling the Great Commandment (see end of Matthew’s Gospel), b) we’re doing it well enough to measure. If we keep doing both, the decline in membership will reverse, and is already leveling off. In areas of growth in the South and Southwest, we Disciples are being fruitful by multiplying.
What does this have to say to Christ’s Disciples here at Hebron Christian? Well, in another good news/bad news twist, a speaker at the pre-Assembly Evangelism Workshops handed around a demographic curve that shows the life cycle of established congregations. According to it, we should be, well, dead. . .congregationally speaking, that is.
Now, his point wasn’t that some places can’t break the curve: his point was, only about 5% of mainline congregations make it past 125 years. It is, all the data show, a natural lifecycle. Nothing personal, he says, but when a church he consults with says “that won’t be us,” he has to find a way to courteously ask “Why not? It could be, but you have to tell me why you belong in the 5% when the odds favor a bet on 95%.”
So here we are at 137 years and counting. That’s data right there. Another reason for optimism is that your elders, and the Program Planning Retreat, and trustees, are all looking at how prepared we are for coming challenges. We aren’t assuming that the past will look like the future, and this church is prioritizing both long-term maintenance and mission outreach in 2004 and beyond.
That times are tough fiscally is no surprise; that we continue to “praise God, share Christ, and grow in the Spirit” may be more surprising than we realize, and is quite possibly a sign that Jesus has some work for this congregation to do in the Hebron that is and is to come.
Let us give thanks!
In Grace & Peace,
Pastor Jeff
* * * * * * *
Christian Church in Ohio Updates
At Charlotte, the Assembly welcomed and celebrated more than 140 new church starts since two years ago in Kansas City. Church Extension says that our success rate continues above 80%, which is exceptional.
In Ohio, we’ve had two: North Lima has “The Saturday Church at Glenellen,” which is exactly what it sounds like, meeting the needs of shift workers and others for whom Sunday morning is rarely time off. While the figure is well known that 65% of the US population is not within driving distance of a Disciples congregation, there’s access and then there’s access. This new option has brought many unchurched families into a new worship experience, supported by existing Disciples churches in the area.
And at Mentor, where their Campbellite roots go back before 1830, Mentor Christian Church hosts “Mision Cristiana Emanuel (DC),” a Latino congregation with Spanish-language services. This well-established Disciples congregation has found new vitality with the excitement of the young families and activities of this “daughter” church.
If you get National Geographic, look at the most recent (Nov.) issue in the Geographica section towards the front, which tells the story we heard in Charlotte very well.
* * * * * * *
Youth News
Officers for the Hebron Christian Youth in 2003-4
Girl-Co’s: Julie McNichols & Whitney Mason
Boy-Co’s: David Cable & Josh Halter
Jr. Ldrs.: Jessica McNichols & Tracy Wildermuth
Communicators: Michael Scheidegger & Josh Walters
Treasurer: David Scheidegger
The youth are collecting “Coats For Kids (and Adults)” through Nov. 16, and they will offer the poinsettia sale, whose proceeds go to their “Adopt A Family For Christmas” plan.
* * * * * * *
Community Thanksgiving Service
Lakewood Area Churches will come together at Lakewood High School’s auditorium on Sunday evening, Nov. 23, at 7 pm. Area youth and their advisors will provide the music and message, with an offering taken for the LEADS Buckeye Lake Food Pantry.
Come join us!
* * * * * * *
Here’s what I read before the prayer time last Sunday (10-26). What I *didn’t* read at first is in parentheses, otherwise it’s verbatim.
(From LIFE Magazine, Jan. 7, 1946, by John DosPassos:)
The troops returning home are worried. "We've lost the peace," men tell you. "We can't make it stick." A tour of the beaten-up cities (of Europe) six months after victory is a mighty sobering experience for anyone. (Europeans,) friend and foe alike, look you accusingly in the face and tell you how bitterly they are disappointed in you as an American. They cite the evolution of the word "liberation." Before (the Normandy landings) it meant to be freed from the tyranny of the Nazis. Now it stands in the minds of the civilians for one thing, looting. . . .
When the British and American came the Viennese felt that at last they were in the hands of civilized people. But instead of coming in with a bold plan of relief and reconstruction
we came in full of evasions and apologies. . . .
We have swept away Hitlerism, but a great many Europeans feel that the cure has been worse than the disease.
[Good thing we didn’t give up on Europe and come home, isn’t it?]
The Church Window – November 2003 Hebron Christian Church newsletter
Notes From My Knapsack
One of the best pieces of news at the Charlotte 2003 General Assembly was that, for the two years since the last GA, the Disciples of Christ have started the most new churches and welcomed the most new members since the 1920’s. Can I hear a “Hallelujah!”
Of course, a thoughtful observer might ask “But aren’t our total numbers, both congregational and membership, still declining?”
Yep. They sure are. No point in sugar coating the hard news, which is that years of what I’d call “deferred maintenance” in not starting new church plants in growing areas, while existing churches in rust-belt downtowns and grain belt rural areas are quite naturally aging and shrinking.
But that does not in any way erase the good news that a) the Disciples of Christ are fulfilling the Great Commandment (see end of Matthew’s Gospel), b) we’re doing it well enough to measure. If we keep doing both, the decline in membership will reverse, and is already leveling off. In areas of growth in the South and Southwest, we Disciples are being fruitful by multiplying.
What does this have to say to Christ’s Disciples here at Hebron Christian? Well, in another good news/bad news twist, a speaker at the pre-Assembly Evangelism Workshops handed around a demographic curve that shows the life cycle of established congregations. According to it, we should be, well, dead. . .congregationally speaking, that is.
Now, his point wasn’t that some places can’t break the curve: his point was, only about 5% of mainline congregations make it past 125 years. It is, all the data show, a natural lifecycle. Nothing personal, he says, but when a church he consults with says “that won’t be us,” he has to find a way to courteously ask “Why not? It could be, but you have to tell me why you belong in the 5% when the odds favor a bet on 95%.”
So here we are at 137 years and counting. That’s data right there. Another reason for optimism is that your elders, and the Program Planning Retreat, and trustees, are all looking at how prepared we are for coming challenges. We aren’t assuming that the past will look like the future, and this church is prioritizing both long-term maintenance and mission outreach in 2004 and beyond.
That times are tough fiscally is no surprise; that we continue to “praise God, share Christ, and grow in the Spirit” may be more surprising than we realize, and is quite possibly a sign that Jesus has some work for this congregation to do in the Hebron that is and is to come.
Let us give thanks!
In Grace & Peace,
Pastor Jeff
* * * * * * *
Christian Church in Ohio Updates
At Charlotte, the Assembly welcomed and celebrated more than 140 new church starts since two years ago in Kansas City. Church Extension says that our success rate continues above 80%, which is exceptional.
In Ohio, we’ve had two: North Lima has “The Saturday Church at Glenellen,” which is exactly what it sounds like, meeting the needs of shift workers and others for whom Sunday morning is rarely time off. While the figure is well known that 65% of the US population is not within driving distance of a Disciples congregation, there’s access and then there’s access. This new option has brought many unchurched families into a new worship experience, supported by existing Disciples churches in the area.
And at Mentor, where their Campbellite roots go back before 1830, Mentor Christian Church hosts “Mision Cristiana Emanuel (DC),” a Latino congregation with Spanish-language services. This well-established Disciples congregation has found new vitality with the excitement of the young families and activities of this “daughter” church.
If you get National Geographic, look at the most recent (Nov.) issue in the Geographica section towards the front, which tells the story we heard in Charlotte very well.
* * * * * * *
Youth News
Officers for the Hebron Christian Youth in 2003-4
Girl-Co’s: Julie McNichols & Whitney Mason
Boy-Co’s: David Cable & Josh Halter
Jr. Ldrs.: Jessica McNichols & Tracy Wildermuth
Communicators: Michael Scheidegger & Josh Walters
Treasurer: David Scheidegger
The youth are collecting “Coats For Kids (and Adults)” through Nov. 16, and they will offer the poinsettia sale, whose proceeds go to their “Adopt A Family For Christmas” plan.
* * * * * * *
Community Thanksgiving Service
Lakewood Area Churches will come together at Lakewood High School’s auditorium on Sunday evening, Nov. 23, at 7 pm. Area youth and their advisors will provide the music and message, with an offering taken for the LEADS Buckeye Lake Food Pantry.
Come join us!
* * * * * * *
Here’s what I read before the prayer time last Sunday (10-26). What I *didn’t* read at first is in parentheses, otherwise it’s verbatim.
(From LIFE Magazine, Jan. 7, 1946, by John DosPassos:)
The troops returning home are worried. "We've lost the peace," men tell you. "We can't make it stick." A tour of the beaten-up cities (of Europe) six months after victory is a mighty sobering experience for anyone. (Europeans,) friend and foe alike, look you accusingly in the face and tell you how bitterly they are disappointed in you as an American. They cite the evolution of the word "liberation." Before (the Normandy landings) it meant to be freed from the tyranny of the Nazis. Now it stands in the minds of the civilians for one thing, looting. . . .
When the British and American came the Viennese felt that at last they were in the hands of civilized people. But instead of coming in with a bold plan of relief and reconstruction
we came in full of evasions and apologies. . . .
We have swept away Hitlerism, but a great many Europeans feel that the cure has been worse than the disease.
[Good thing we didn’t give up on Europe and come home, isn’t it?]
Hebron Crossroads 10-02-03
By Jeff Gill
Lots to share about activities ‘round the Hebron Crossroads in the week past and coming weeks, so read this column down to the end!
Beggar’s Night and the Lakewood Band Fall wrap-up concert are just past us, and Autumn is starting to hint at winter; seven Sundays to Christmas and counting down. . .
Monday night, Nov. 3, the Hebron Historical Society is meeting at 7:30 pm at the United Methodist Church of Hebron. Their program, in keeping with the slogan for our village of “Historic Crossroads of Ohio,” will add to the traffic of the National Road and the Ohio Canal with a presentation on “The Great Hopewell Road,” a two thousand year old construction from Newark to Chillicothe that passes through the boundaries of Hebron itself (just west of Evans Athletic Complex and the Municipal Building).
Oh, and I’m the presenter. Actually, you’ll get a good overview of the work of Dr. Brad Lepper of the Ohio Historical Society; or maybe an underview as I’ve been a regular spear-carrier for Brad through his many years of research in this area. But come and learn about the millennia of history that makes up the Hebron story.
And the next morning, bright and early at 6:30 am (OK, not so very bright then), the polls will open for Election Day. The faithful poll workers, those laborers for democracy who are your friends and neighbors, will put in more than thirteen hours in many cases to let you use your democratic rights to select leadership. Do your part, and show up to make your informed choice part of the results of this exercise in freedom.
Would you like some endorsements or recommendations? Keep on reading, but first. . .
On Veteran’s Day, Tuesday Nov. 11, at 1 pm, a grand gathering will be held at Evans Park on Refugee Road to dedicate a memorial to those out of the Hebron school who have served their nation. Many, many veterans names are on the plaques across the front of this monument, with three flagpoles standing behind. If anyone out of the Hebron schools who have served from WWI to the present have been missed, it’s not because the committee hasn’t tried to find them.
If you can join us for a program and ceremony that hallowed day, please come on out; you’ll read more on the cover of this paper next week.
Since my colleague Jimmy is taking a break, your Hebron correspondent snuck over the line into Buckeye Lake last week for the Buckeye Lake Youth Association Hallowe’en Party. They had hoped to have celebrity judges, but settled for who they could grab at the door. You don’t care about the judges, you want to know who won, right? Here they are:
For 13 and over, Breanna Jordan as HulaGirl; in the 10 to 12 category, Steven Hunt’s Mummy and Neal Sayatovich’s Lizoman won; among many 7 to 9 year olds, Victoria Diehl was a fine Cat Lady, and Darby Lasure had hand-made an amazing SpongeBob costume (yes, we sang the song).
For the 4 to 6 age group, Kelsey Atkins was an Angel (mom was silent on this point), and Zack Marlo was truly Zombie-like; in the youngest bracket, Amelia O’Neall was a convincing Dora the Explorer and Britanny at 6 months was a very quiet Kitty.
Over 100 kids got a great evening of fun, food, and activity out of the work of the Buckeye Lake Youth Association: congrats to all!
Hebron Elementary School’s PTO concluded their Fall Fundraiser with $10, 424 made for the activities and extras they support. At a pre-schoolday assembly, the top sellers were honored: Joshua Eastwood, Joshua Ricket, and Devin Chafin, with Mrs. Wagner’s class as the top selling room. Also winning recognition for their participation were Andrew Bransfield, Cassie Evans, Cameron Norman, and Jared Treadway. Good job to all involved!
Looking at the Hebron Gym and taking pictures for the PTO yearbook, I couldn’t help noticing that, even with quite a few students not at school yet, the stands were filled, end to end. I remembered that, in Donna Braig’s history of our area schools, she tells the story of how the School Board that built the Hebron School in 1914 was almost entirely voted out of office the next year for building too big and too nice a structure. Many of the same names were on the board when discussions began ten years later of how Hebron would expand the already cramped facility.
Did they regret their words in 1915? Had the irony occurred to them as they worked to build additions in the 20’s and the permanent structure they built in 1937, now that same gym?
I can’t help but wonder about those stories from our past as we prepare to make another chapter in Hebron’s history on Nov. 4. Some folks have chosen to run for village office claiming they can “stop growth.” For whatever your correspondent’s experience and knowledge is worth: anyone telling you that village officials can stop growth and freeze time in and around Hebron is either kidding themselves or not telling you the truth.
We do have a choice right now. The choice is between healthy growth, or unhealthy growth. We can have high-density, poorly-built housing, along with high-turnover marginal businesses as our future, or we can have a mix of housing types and designs for all income levels and putting a solid base under our property taxes, along with a diversity of industrial, distribution, and service-related businesses. That’s the choice. No growth presumes that the many purchases of frontage on US 40, the options and easements and proposals far to the east and west of Hebron’s village limits, let alone the already approved plans in Heath just north of Beaver Run and in Buckeye Lake just south of I-70, can be stopped by mayor and council.
Not gonna happen. We can’t stop the wave washing out of the maelstrom that is the Columbus metro area, but we can prepare, negotiate, and redirect developers and investors in the best interests of the Hebron that is and the Hebron that will be.
So this citizen, veteran, parent, and voter will be casting a ballot for Clifford Mason as mayor, and for Mike Halter on council. Jan Yocum has shown some awareness of these realities and issues, and I believe she can be an asset to council in the next term as well, but Cliff and Mike have shown a clear track record of controlling and managing growth, and have a clear picture of the challenges ahead.
Along with two choices for council, you can vote for two of three on Lakewood School Board, and the good news is that we can’t go wrong: pick two and promise to help the ones that win, and our students will benefit regardless. Good, clean, fair campaigning from Pam, Tim, and Forrest is appreciated by all of us in the district.
Our other village candidates have a “go back” agenda which I quite candidly think would be swamped and overturned by the coming wave, a surge that they seem to quietly imagine will pass us by. If you wonder at my endorsement, just consider driving around Pickerington, Reynoldsburg, Groveport, or Hilliard, and you’ll see my point. Will we stay ahead of the game, or just let it happen to us?
Or you can call me at 928-4066, or e-mail disciple@voyager.net, and let the Hebron Crossroads know what you think!
By Jeff Gill
Lots to share about activities ‘round the Hebron Crossroads in the week past and coming weeks, so read this column down to the end!
Beggar’s Night and the Lakewood Band Fall wrap-up concert are just past us, and Autumn is starting to hint at winter; seven Sundays to Christmas and counting down. . .
Monday night, Nov. 3, the Hebron Historical Society is meeting at 7:30 pm at the United Methodist Church of Hebron. Their program, in keeping with the slogan for our village of “Historic Crossroads of Ohio,” will add to the traffic of the National Road and the Ohio Canal with a presentation on “The Great Hopewell Road,” a two thousand year old construction from Newark to Chillicothe that passes through the boundaries of Hebron itself (just west of Evans Athletic Complex and the Municipal Building).
Oh, and I’m the presenter. Actually, you’ll get a good overview of the work of Dr. Brad Lepper of the Ohio Historical Society; or maybe an underview as I’ve been a regular spear-carrier for Brad through his many years of research in this area. But come and learn about the millennia of history that makes up the Hebron story.
And the next morning, bright and early at 6:30 am (OK, not so very bright then), the polls will open for Election Day. The faithful poll workers, those laborers for democracy who are your friends and neighbors, will put in more than thirteen hours in many cases to let you use your democratic rights to select leadership. Do your part, and show up to make your informed choice part of the results of this exercise in freedom.
Would you like some endorsements or recommendations? Keep on reading, but first. . .
On Veteran’s Day, Tuesday Nov. 11, at 1 pm, a grand gathering will be held at Evans Park on Refugee Road to dedicate a memorial to those out of the Hebron school who have served their nation. Many, many veterans names are on the plaques across the front of this monument, with three flagpoles standing behind. If anyone out of the Hebron schools who have served from WWI to the present have been missed, it’s not because the committee hasn’t tried to find them.
If you can join us for a program and ceremony that hallowed day, please come on out; you’ll read more on the cover of this paper next week.
Since my colleague Jimmy is taking a break, your Hebron correspondent snuck over the line into Buckeye Lake last week for the Buckeye Lake Youth Association Hallowe’en Party. They had hoped to have celebrity judges, but settled for who they could grab at the door. You don’t care about the judges, you want to know who won, right? Here they are:
For 13 and over, Breanna Jordan as HulaGirl; in the 10 to 12 category, Steven Hunt’s Mummy and Neal Sayatovich’s Lizoman won; among many 7 to 9 year olds, Victoria Diehl was a fine Cat Lady, and Darby Lasure had hand-made an amazing SpongeBob costume (yes, we sang the song).
For the 4 to 6 age group, Kelsey Atkins was an Angel (mom was silent on this point), and Zack Marlo was truly Zombie-like; in the youngest bracket, Amelia O’Neall was a convincing Dora the Explorer and Britanny at 6 months was a very quiet Kitty.
Over 100 kids got a great evening of fun, food, and activity out of the work of the Buckeye Lake Youth Association: congrats to all!
Hebron Elementary School’s PTO concluded their Fall Fundraiser with $10, 424 made for the activities and extras they support. At a pre-schoolday assembly, the top sellers were honored: Joshua Eastwood, Joshua Ricket, and Devin Chafin, with Mrs. Wagner’s class as the top selling room. Also winning recognition for their participation were Andrew Bransfield, Cassie Evans, Cameron Norman, and Jared Treadway. Good job to all involved!
Looking at the Hebron Gym and taking pictures for the PTO yearbook, I couldn’t help noticing that, even with quite a few students not at school yet, the stands were filled, end to end. I remembered that, in Donna Braig’s history of our area schools, she tells the story of how the School Board that built the Hebron School in 1914 was almost entirely voted out of office the next year for building too big and too nice a structure. Many of the same names were on the board when discussions began ten years later of how Hebron would expand the already cramped facility.
Did they regret their words in 1915? Had the irony occurred to them as they worked to build additions in the 20’s and the permanent structure they built in 1937, now that same gym?
I can’t help but wonder about those stories from our past as we prepare to make another chapter in Hebron’s history on Nov. 4. Some folks have chosen to run for village office claiming they can “stop growth.” For whatever your correspondent’s experience and knowledge is worth: anyone telling you that village officials can stop growth and freeze time in and around Hebron is either kidding themselves or not telling you the truth.
We do have a choice right now. The choice is between healthy growth, or unhealthy growth. We can have high-density, poorly-built housing, along with high-turnover marginal businesses as our future, or we can have a mix of housing types and designs for all income levels and putting a solid base under our property taxes, along with a diversity of industrial, distribution, and service-related businesses. That’s the choice. No growth presumes that the many purchases of frontage on US 40, the options and easements and proposals far to the east and west of Hebron’s village limits, let alone the already approved plans in Heath just north of Beaver Run and in Buckeye Lake just south of I-70, can be stopped by mayor and council.
Not gonna happen. We can’t stop the wave washing out of the maelstrom that is the Columbus metro area, but we can prepare, negotiate, and redirect developers and investors in the best interests of the Hebron that is and the Hebron that will be.
So this citizen, veteran, parent, and voter will be casting a ballot for Clifford Mason as mayor, and for Mike Halter on council. Jan Yocum has shown some awareness of these realities and issues, and I believe she can be an asset to council in the next term as well, but Cliff and Mike have shown a clear track record of controlling and managing growth, and have a clear picture of the challenges ahead.
Along with two choices for council, you can vote for two of three on Lakewood School Board, and the good news is that we can’t go wrong: pick two and promise to help the ones that win, and our students will benefit regardless. Good, clean, fair campaigning from Pam, Tim, and Forrest is appreciated by all of us in the district.
Our other village candidates have a “go back” agenda which I quite candidly think would be swamped and overturned by the coming wave, a surge that they seem to quietly imagine will pass us by. If you wonder at my endorsement, just consider driving around Pickerington, Reynoldsburg, Groveport, or Hilliard, and you’ll see my point. Will we stay ahead of the game, or just let it happen to us?
Or you can call me at 928-4066, or e-mail disciple@voyager.net, and let the Hebron Crossroads know what you think!
Wednesday, October 08, 2003
Warning!!!
The last three weeks of October are in reverse order (reverse for blogs, anyhow) posted together, since i'm travelling my hind end off the rest of the month: enjoy!
Hebron Crossroads 10-12-2003
By Jeff Gill
Fall colors are out all across the landscape; I refer of course to the broad spectrum of campaign signs seen all around the Hebron Crossroads.
Red, white, and blue; black and white; Buckeye scarlet and grey; Browns earth tones; public safety yellow and black. Every possible set of colors is in use, and they are part of the lively conversation that is democracy. Voices, letters to the editors, talks across tables strewn with coffee cups and disemboweled newspapers, color schemes on signage; all help keep the discussion going.
The Hebron Lions are sponsoring a public discussion of sorts: a “Meet the Candidates” night at Hebron Elementary’s gym on Tuesday, October 14 at 7:00 pm. All candidates have been invited for offices relating to the Hebron area. Your friendly correspondent will be the moderator, and questions will be written down by those attending, passed up to yours truly, and I’ll assemble them together into a common set of queries to ask following three minute statements by each candidate.
Some unopposed offices won’t have representatives there, although I’m told John W. Slater will appear as sole candidate for Union Township trustee. We’ll have Lakewood school board candidates, those running for Hebron council, and the mayoral seekers each in turn by office.
I’m looking forward to asking your questions and hearing the candidate answers, and kudos to Hebron Lions for putting on this new tradition for our village.
By the way, all signs are required by the county Board of Elections, whether handmade or store-bought, to have contact info even if in small print on the lower edge. . .a word to the wise. . .
It is good to see that most offices are contested. A healthy sign for democracy is a number of candidates, not a long run of unopposed elections. We have a conversation going on through Hebron village council and our regular planning and zoning meetings about the pace and scope of growth in this area, and the election is just one more stage in the ongoing discussion.
Our current crop of village officials have done a good job of “managing” growth, which in truth can’t be halted (private property being part of the Great American Conversation, y’know), but can be kept within certain reasonable bounds. Dominion Homes builds 200 homes, not 400; apartments have certain requirements to be met even when the owner wants to maximize their income off of their part of an acre.
More is not always better, and less is certainly not always more. What makes for the right mix between Heath’s expansion toward Beaver Run Road and Columbus’ surge from the west will be the context for our elections for many, many years to come.
So support this great new initiative by the Hebron Lions on Tuesday, October 14, which we’ll no doubt be thankful for as a long-standing tradition in the coming election cycles. Let your candidates speak, and ask them your questions; that’s what makes democracy the only spectator sport for real grownups!
Community Youth Mapping is beginning in our area this week. Young people may come to your door or to your business, asking your perception of what makes for good activities for youth and families. This program out of the county Children and Families First council is part of a county wide effort to identify assets and strengths, as opposed to focusing on problems and needs.
If we can target the effective youth-serving programs in Licking County and help them to grow, we’ll really have something! Give those “youth mappers” the benefit of your best sense of what’s good in our community, and I look forward to sharing with you the results.
Three calendar notes to share: A Baked Steak dinner is offered at the United Methodist Church of Hebron on Saturday, October 25, from 4:30 PM. The Price is $5.50 for adults, $2.00 for children, and carryouts are available.
Hebron “Beggars Night” will be on Thursday, October 30, from 5:00 to 7:00 pm; don’t forget to put your porch light on if you welcome trick-or-treaters, and turn it off if you’re not involved.
And, well in advance but exciting news: the Veterans’ Memorial Committee for Hebron announces that on Veteran’s Day, November 11, at 1 pm, a dedication is scheduled out at Evans Park on Refugee Road. We’ll have more to share soon, but mark that date and time on your calendar now. It is after Election Day on November 4, but plan now to join us if you can as Hebron honors her veterans out of the Hebron school.
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and your “Meet the Candidates” night moderator Oct. 14 at 7 pm in the Hebron Elementary gym; if you have electoral notes to offer, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
* * * * * * *
Hebron Crossroads 10-19-2003
By Jeff Gill
With the harvest well on the way to the storehouse (aka garner, silo, bins, or elevator), and the leaves mostly on the lawns, we are deep in the heart of autumn.
Next weekend, we “fall back” an hour, and the circadian rhythms have to go through what is, for me at least, the most jarring reset in the calendar.
Many of us have recently experienced one of the rites of fall: school pictures.
To no one’s surprise here in the home of the Little Guy, pix week came with visible facial blemishes (thanks to one of the myriad colds circulating at school, church, and playground).
But modern photographic technology has the answer. One option they offer in the school package is “Soft Impressions,” which allows the parent to blur the child’s face into Hollywood style soft focus (kind of like shooting Cybill Shephard thru a filter on “Moonlighting”). Or you can trust the rapid healing properties of youth and the fact that you’re recording the facts of growth, not the myths of idyllic childhood, and capture warts, raw nose, and all.
Actually, the whole range of choices left me thinking about how much more challenging parenting is these days. Aside from hazards of drugs and debauchery unknown (we like to think) in past generations, did our parents have to choose between eight primary selection packages, a dozen shades of backdrop (wasn’t it a glorified window blind they pulled down behind all of us?) ranging from fuschia to teal, and among stickers, key fobs, and screensaver CD-ROMs?
I really think my mom had to decide between four wallet sized or eight, and whether or not to slick my ill behaved hair down with Vaseline (she didn’t).
The decision of what to wear on school picture day, on the other hand, has been a parenting challenge throughout the ages.
Mrs. Lincoln: “Little Abe, are we goin’ to pull on the linsey-woolsey trousers, or wear those patched ol’ leather breeches?” Mrs. Madison: “Lil’ Jemmy, what in Heaven’s name did you do with the buckles on your knickers? Those buff colored hose will never go with the butternut jerkin in your portrait by the travelin’ painter fellow.” Mrs. Hezekiah: “Young Adonijah, what have you done with your good twist o’ leather to gird your loins? This scrap of burlap can’t look right carved into a mud tablet.”
We will probably end up with 144 stamp sized photos, a mural adhesive picture suitable for sticking to the living room wall, and eight of that “in-between” size that you can’t send to the grandparents and is a little too large for sending to old college friends with the Christmas letter. We also didn’t pick the Hanukkah dreidel with his picture embedded in Lucite on one side; that will have to wait for another year.
On a slightly more serious note, Hospice of Central Ohio would like to offer a special program to the southern half of Licking County.
Are you a “Caregiver”? Are you part of the “sandwich” generation, with children in school and parents who need special care to allow them to stay in their homes, or just to support a better quality of life in a care facility? Do you need to hear how others deal with the stresses, the strains, and the rewards of caring for a family member of friend as the bridge between formal medical care and the loving community each of us wants to have around us?
“Meeting the Challenges of Caregiving” is a four week series that will start on Thursday, October 30, at 7:00 pm. Hebron Christian Church will host the program, run by the caring professionals of Hospice of Central Ohio, on that date and November 6, 13, and 20 in their meeting room at 612 W. Main next to the church building.
The series is free and open to anyone whether currently providing caregiving services to a friend or family member, or simply if you expect to be in that position someday. . .which pretty much could describe almost any of us.
If you have questions or would like more information, call Hospice at (740) 344-0311 or (800) 804-2505.
Don’t forget: next Saturday, a “Baked Steak dinner” is offered at the United Methodist Church of Hebron on October 25, from 4:30 PM. The Price is $5.50 for adults, $2.00 for children, and carryouts are available. And that night, set your clocks back one hour, and change your smoke detector batteries!
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and a strong advocate for the life affirming work of the Hospice movement. If you have tales of caregiving or news of local interest, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
* * * * * * *
Hebron Crossroads 10-26-2003
By Jeff Gill
Beggar’s Night at the Hebron Crossroads is Thursday night from 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm.
You can, if you wish to participate, turn on your porch light, and leave it off if you’d rather the trick-or-treaters pass your door by.
Some folks just set out a bowl of candy on a folding chair when they’re forced to be away, and the interesting thing about Hallowe’en is that you rarely hear of that strategy going awry. As with Mark Twain’s death, reports of October 31 related misbehavior are often greatly exaggerated.
On this night of costumed and sugared excess, certain proprieties are observed. There are always a few visitors who seem a bit too old for the sport (I keep a bag of carrots near the door for them), and once in a great while the campaigners for the next week’s election get turned around on dates and show up all too well disguised as politicians: otherwise, the kids are alright, as The Who once said. I’ve seen Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey on Beggar’s Night, along with Mick Jagger, Benjamin Franklin, and He-Man, plus Ariel, Pocahontas, and Cinderella.
Last year I got Fidel Castro (he had no idea how scary he was), Mickey Mouse, a giant M&M, a pair of dice (twins), and Gumby. This year I’m curious to see if anyone pulls off Nemo or Dory, or Arianna Huffington would be a scary choice in my book, and I hear the Incredible (Mini) Hulk may make an appearance in our neighborhood.
Some neighborhoods get their hundreds, and others have but a few nearby visitors, depending on the arrival of van loads from isolated spots in the township. You can eye this practice cynically, but if there’s a “thank you” behind the mask or make-up, I really don’t care where the kid lives. And I hear many more thanks than grunts each year from the parade of princesses, wrestlers, ballerinas, and spidery-juveniles.
Can you forgive a bit of preaching? This pastor notes that, while there are “so-called” pagan roots of Hallowe’en, the word pagan itself comes from a root meaning “the countryside, *paganos*.” Folk tradition around the turn of the seasons, with shortening days and skeletal trees against ghostly moons, was gathered in by the early Christian church to be baptized into their calendar as a day to honor the dead in faith, the saints or “hallowed dead” of the Church Eternal, on November 1. That makes the eve of All Hallows’ commemoration “All Hallows’ Eve,” or to adapt the Old English, Hallowe’en, October 31.
The flickering light of life, glowing out across the harvested fields from a hollowed vegetable shell, whether turnip, gourd, or pumpkin, echoed the light of God placed within the human form. In a day when the ravages of illness and death were more clearly and regularly seen by young and old alike, the nighttime meaning of the Jack O’Lantern was reassuring and hopeful, not scary and dreadful.
Our need to laugh at the growing dark and sing out our faith in light’s certain return is well expressed by the best of Hallowe’en traditions. The sweetness of youth, and age’s acknowledgment that life is a gift to be given to the young are all a wonderful part of this “frightful” holiday. We mock the power death claims over life, and celebrate the end of one season rooted in the deeper promise of brighter, longer days to come.
Sounds like a holiday worth celebrating, right? In the right way, anyhow, as with most celebrations, even including the pagan rituals of Buckeye victories. . .
Outhouse tipping, thankfully, is a relic of the unlamented past, and let’s keep any newer property damage related pranks in your trick-or-treat bag. . .or there’s a costumed crusader (not caped) who will show you a few tricks with handcuffs and citations to appear before an ominously robed individual.
Honor the best that Hallowe’en represents, and you’ll find a depth to this season you may have missed!
Don’t forget on your own calendar that Election Day is Tuesday, November 4, and that the Veterans’ Memorial Committee for Hebron announces a Veteran’s Day, November 11 dedication at 1 pm in Evans Park on Refugee Road. We’ll have more to share soon, but mark that date and time on your calendar now. Plan now to join our community if you are available as Hebron honors her veterans out of the Hebron school.
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and father of a little Hallowe’en celebrator; if you have seasonal insights or tales of the Great Pumpkin, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net. Mark All Hallows’ Eve responsibly, and let’s all be here in November to celebrate Thanksgiving!
The last three weeks of October are in reverse order (reverse for blogs, anyhow) posted together, since i'm travelling my hind end off the rest of the month: enjoy!
Hebron Crossroads 10-12-2003
By Jeff Gill
Fall colors are out all across the landscape; I refer of course to the broad spectrum of campaign signs seen all around the Hebron Crossroads.
Red, white, and blue; black and white; Buckeye scarlet and grey; Browns earth tones; public safety yellow and black. Every possible set of colors is in use, and they are part of the lively conversation that is democracy. Voices, letters to the editors, talks across tables strewn with coffee cups and disemboweled newspapers, color schemes on signage; all help keep the discussion going.
The Hebron Lions are sponsoring a public discussion of sorts: a “Meet the Candidates” night at Hebron Elementary’s gym on Tuesday, October 14 at 7:00 pm. All candidates have been invited for offices relating to the Hebron area. Your friendly correspondent will be the moderator, and questions will be written down by those attending, passed up to yours truly, and I’ll assemble them together into a common set of queries to ask following three minute statements by each candidate.
Some unopposed offices won’t have representatives there, although I’m told John W. Slater will appear as sole candidate for Union Township trustee. We’ll have Lakewood school board candidates, those running for Hebron council, and the mayoral seekers each in turn by office.
I’m looking forward to asking your questions and hearing the candidate answers, and kudos to Hebron Lions for putting on this new tradition for our village.
By the way, all signs are required by the county Board of Elections, whether handmade or store-bought, to have contact info even if in small print on the lower edge. . .a word to the wise. . .
It is good to see that most offices are contested. A healthy sign for democracy is a number of candidates, not a long run of unopposed elections. We have a conversation going on through Hebron village council and our regular planning and zoning meetings about the pace and scope of growth in this area, and the election is just one more stage in the ongoing discussion.
Our current crop of village officials have done a good job of “managing” growth, which in truth can’t be halted (private property being part of the Great American Conversation, y’know), but can be kept within certain reasonable bounds. Dominion Homes builds 200 homes, not 400; apartments have certain requirements to be met even when the owner wants to maximize their income off of their part of an acre.
More is not always better, and less is certainly not always more. What makes for the right mix between Heath’s expansion toward Beaver Run Road and Columbus’ surge from the west will be the context for our elections for many, many years to come.
So support this great new initiative by the Hebron Lions on Tuesday, October 14, which we’ll no doubt be thankful for as a long-standing tradition in the coming election cycles. Let your candidates speak, and ask them your questions; that’s what makes democracy the only spectator sport for real grownups!
Community Youth Mapping is beginning in our area this week. Young people may come to your door or to your business, asking your perception of what makes for good activities for youth and families. This program out of the county Children and Families First council is part of a county wide effort to identify assets and strengths, as opposed to focusing on problems and needs.
If we can target the effective youth-serving programs in Licking County and help them to grow, we’ll really have something! Give those “youth mappers” the benefit of your best sense of what’s good in our community, and I look forward to sharing with you the results.
Three calendar notes to share: A Baked Steak dinner is offered at the United Methodist Church of Hebron on Saturday, October 25, from 4:30 PM. The Price is $5.50 for adults, $2.00 for children, and carryouts are available.
Hebron “Beggars Night” will be on Thursday, October 30, from 5:00 to 7:00 pm; don’t forget to put your porch light on if you welcome trick-or-treaters, and turn it off if you’re not involved.
And, well in advance but exciting news: the Veterans’ Memorial Committee for Hebron announces that on Veteran’s Day, November 11, at 1 pm, a dedication is scheduled out at Evans Park on Refugee Road. We’ll have more to share soon, but mark that date and time on your calendar now. It is after Election Day on November 4, but plan now to join us if you can as Hebron honors her veterans out of the Hebron school.
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and your “Meet the Candidates” night moderator Oct. 14 at 7 pm in the Hebron Elementary gym; if you have electoral notes to offer, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
* * * * * * *
Hebron Crossroads 10-19-2003
By Jeff Gill
With the harvest well on the way to the storehouse (aka garner, silo, bins, or elevator), and the leaves mostly on the lawns, we are deep in the heart of autumn.
Next weekend, we “fall back” an hour, and the circadian rhythms have to go through what is, for me at least, the most jarring reset in the calendar.
Many of us have recently experienced one of the rites of fall: school pictures.
To no one’s surprise here in the home of the Little Guy, pix week came with visible facial blemishes (thanks to one of the myriad colds circulating at school, church, and playground).
But modern photographic technology has the answer. One option they offer in the school package is “Soft Impressions,” which allows the parent to blur the child’s face into Hollywood style soft focus (kind of like shooting Cybill Shephard thru a filter on “Moonlighting”). Or you can trust the rapid healing properties of youth and the fact that you’re recording the facts of growth, not the myths of idyllic childhood, and capture warts, raw nose, and all.
Actually, the whole range of choices left me thinking about how much more challenging parenting is these days. Aside from hazards of drugs and debauchery unknown (we like to think) in past generations, did our parents have to choose between eight primary selection packages, a dozen shades of backdrop (wasn’t it a glorified window blind they pulled down behind all of us?) ranging from fuschia to teal, and among stickers, key fobs, and screensaver CD-ROMs?
I really think my mom had to decide between four wallet sized or eight, and whether or not to slick my ill behaved hair down with Vaseline (she didn’t).
The decision of what to wear on school picture day, on the other hand, has been a parenting challenge throughout the ages.
Mrs. Lincoln: “Little Abe, are we goin’ to pull on the linsey-woolsey trousers, or wear those patched ol’ leather breeches?” Mrs. Madison: “Lil’ Jemmy, what in Heaven’s name did you do with the buckles on your knickers? Those buff colored hose will never go with the butternut jerkin in your portrait by the travelin’ painter fellow.” Mrs. Hezekiah: “Young Adonijah, what have you done with your good twist o’ leather to gird your loins? This scrap of burlap can’t look right carved into a mud tablet.”
We will probably end up with 144 stamp sized photos, a mural adhesive picture suitable for sticking to the living room wall, and eight of that “in-between” size that you can’t send to the grandparents and is a little too large for sending to old college friends with the Christmas letter. We also didn’t pick the Hanukkah dreidel with his picture embedded in Lucite on one side; that will have to wait for another year.
On a slightly more serious note, Hospice of Central Ohio would like to offer a special program to the southern half of Licking County.
Are you a “Caregiver”? Are you part of the “sandwich” generation, with children in school and parents who need special care to allow them to stay in their homes, or just to support a better quality of life in a care facility? Do you need to hear how others deal with the stresses, the strains, and the rewards of caring for a family member of friend as the bridge between formal medical care and the loving community each of us wants to have around us?
“Meeting the Challenges of Caregiving” is a four week series that will start on Thursday, October 30, at 7:00 pm. Hebron Christian Church will host the program, run by the caring professionals of Hospice of Central Ohio, on that date and November 6, 13, and 20 in their meeting room at 612 W. Main next to the church building.
The series is free and open to anyone whether currently providing caregiving services to a friend or family member, or simply if you expect to be in that position someday. . .which pretty much could describe almost any of us.
If you have questions or would like more information, call Hospice at (740) 344-0311 or (800) 804-2505.
Don’t forget: next Saturday, a “Baked Steak dinner” is offered at the United Methodist Church of Hebron on October 25, from 4:30 PM. The Price is $5.50 for adults, $2.00 for children, and carryouts are available. And that night, set your clocks back one hour, and change your smoke detector batteries!
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and a strong advocate for the life affirming work of the Hospice movement. If you have tales of caregiving or news of local interest, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
* * * * * * *
Hebron Crossroads 10-26-2003
By Jeff Gill
Beggar’s Night at the Hebron Crossroads is Thursday night from 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm.
You can, if you wish to participate, turn on your porch light, and leave it off if you’d rather the trick-or-treaters pass your door by.
Some folks just set out a bowl of candy on a folding chair when they’re forced to be away, and the interesting thing about Hallowe’en is that you rarely hear of that strategy going awry. As with Mark Twain’s death, reports of October 31 related misbehavior are often greatly exaggerated.
On this night of costumed and sugared excess, certain proprieties are observed. There are always a few visitors who seem a bit too old for the sport (I keep a bag of carrots near the door for them), and once in a great while the campaigners for the next week’s election get turned around on dates and show up all too well disguised as politicians: otherwise, the kids are alright, as The Who once said. I’ve seen Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey on Beggar’s Night, along with Mick Jagger, Benjamin Franklin, and He-Man, plus Ariel, Pocahontas, and Cinderella.
Last year I got Fidel Castro (he had no idea how scary he was), Mickey Mouse, a giant M&M, a pair of dice (twins), and Gumby. This year I’m curious to see if anyone pulls off Nemo or Dory, or Arianna Huffington would be a scary choice in my book, and I hear the Incredible (Mini) Hulk may make an appearance in our neighborhood.
Some neighborhoods get their hundreds, and others have but a few nearby visitors, depending on the arrival of van loads from isolated spots in the township. You can eye this practice cynically, but if there’s a “thank you” behind the mask or make-up, I really don’t care where the kid lives. And I hear many more thanks than grunts each year from the parade of princesses, wrestlers, ballerinas, and spidery-juveniles.
Can you forgive a bit of preaching? This pastor notes that, while there are “so-called” pagan roots of Hallowe’en, the word pagan itself comes from a root meaning “the countryside, *paganos*.” Folk tradition around the turn of the seasons, with shortening days and skeletal trees against ghostly moons, was gathered in by the early Christian church to be baptized into their calendar as a day to honor the dead in faith, the saints or “hallowed dead” of the Church Eternal, on November 1. That makes the eve of All Hallows’ commemoration “All Hallows’ Eve,” or to adapt the Old English, Hallowe’en, October 31.
The flickering light of life, glowing out across the harvested fields from a hollowed vegetable shell, whether turnip, gourd, or pumpkin, echoed the light of God placed within the human form. In a day when the ravages of illness and death were more clearly and regularly seen by young and old alike, the nighttime meaning of the Jack O’Lantern was reassuring and hopeful, not scary and dreadful.
Our need to laugh at the growing dark and sing out our faith in light’s certain return is well expressed by the best of Hallowe’en traditions. The sweetness of youth, and age’s acknowledgment that life is a gift to be given to the young are all a wonderful part of this “frightful” holiday. We mock the power death claims over life, and celebrate the end of one season rooted in the deeper promise of brighter, longer days to come.
Sounds like a holiday worth celebrating, right? In the right way, anyhow, as with most celebrations, even including the pagan rituals of Buckeye victories. . .
Outhouse tipping, thankfully, is a relic of the unlamented past, and let’s keep any newer property damage related pranks in your trick-or-treat bag. . .or there’s a costumed crusader (not caped) who will show you a few tricks with handcuffs and citations to appear before an ominously robed individual.
Honor the best that Hallowe’en represents, and you’ll find a depth to this season you may have missed!
Don’t forget on your own calendar that Election Day is Tuesday, November 4, and that the Veterans’ Memorial Committee for Hebron announces a Veteran’s Day, November 11 dedication at 1 pm in Evans Park on Refugee Road. We’ll have more to share soon, but mark that date and time on your calendar now. Plan now to join our community if you are available as Hebron honors her veterans out of the Hebron school.
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and father of a little Hallowe’en celebrator; if you have seasonal insights or tales of the Great Pumpkin, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net. Mark All Hallows’ Eve responsibly, and let’s all be here in November to celebrate Thanksgiving!
Thursday, October 02, 2003
Licking District Trails for the November SKC Scouter 2003
Lillian is Our Hero!
Before we get into real news, let’s tip our Scout chapeau to a scoutmaster from Dan Beard Council down by Cincinnati. Lillian (last name unknown) made it into the most recent “Survivor” in Panama on the Pacific coast. The schtick this time was that, instead of letting them have their prepared ditty bag with them, they were made to walk the plank with the clothes they chose to wear to what they thought was a “last night” party.
Lillian wore a full dress Scout uniform, with knots, insignia, and legit belt with shorts, all from Scout Service & Supply. Others were in Armani suits and gauzy evening dresses – guess which made it through a leap into the ocean, salt water, beach sand, a long boat ride sitting in bilge water, and weeks unwashed?
Add the regular knot lesson, solo skill at fire starting, and the stray three-fingered salute, and you’ve got a real hardcore troop leader, shown in prime time on network TV without the word “indictment” anywhere in sight.
No doubt she’ll be voted off by the time you read this, since she’s not hip, buff, or stylish, but she’s ours and we’re proud of her!
Apple Butter Days at CFR Nov. 1
Cub packs, Scout troops, and anyone who loves the smell of apples through the grinder simmering in vast iron kettles need to wander up Houdeshell and into Eden Township to visit Apple Butter Days at the Rock. Chris Farmer, CFR director for 2004, is coordinating a great day of activity for all, plus you can buy some top quality locally grown apple butter.
While you’re up there, you can learn more about Sequoia Lodge; which as those who came to the CFR Reunion learned, will be largely made of beautiful white pines that Aby Johnson and others planted some 50 years ago. They have been harvested for use in the new building, which will be on the site of the former structure. A handsome scale model of the building, crafted by Camp Ranger Denny Gray, was on display at the Reunion, the Fall Program Kickoff, and the Cooking Event.
A committee of local Eagles led by John Weaver is conducting a fund raising effort among county Eagles to raise some $70,000 to fund the project. Much of the actual construction will be accomplished by members of the Properties Committee and other volunteers. The new lodge will be known as The Sequoia Eagle Lodge.
For breaking news – See Our District Website: www.lickingdistrict.org David Francis, Webmaster. Check it out!
Deadlines: Nov. 3 for Silver Beaver applications to the council; Dec. 15 for District Award of Merit, Outstanding Scouter, Rookie Awards.
Calendar
Cub Scout Leader Basic Training, OSU-N/COTC, November 15, 2003
Licking District Annual Meeting/Awards Dinner, LCJVS, January 11, 2004
For info, call Dr. Joy Stovcik 323-4128
Licking District Klondike, at CFR January 17, 2004
Licking District Webelos Crossover, at CFR, January 24, 2004
2004 Spring Camporee, Emergency Preparedness, Hartford Fairgrounds, April 23-25
Simon Kenton Council Eagle Scout Recognition Dinner, May 11, 2004
Lillian is Our Hero!
Before we get into real news, let’s tip our Scout chapeau to a scoutmaster from Dan Beard Council down by Cincinnati. Lillian (last name unknown) made it into the most recent “Survivor” in Panama on the Pacific coast. The schtick this time was that, instead of letting them have their prepared ditty bag with them, they were made to walk the plank with the clothes they chose to wear to what they thought was a “last night” party.
Lillian wore a full dress Scout uniform, with knots, insignia, and legit belt with shorts, all from Scout Service & Supply. Others were in Armani suits and gauzy evening dresses – guess which made it through a leap into the ocean, salt water, beach sand, a long boat ride sitting in bilge water, and weeks unwashed?
Add the regular knot lesson, solo skill at fire starting, and the stray three-fingered salute, and you’ve got a real hardcore troop leader, shown in prime time on network TV without the word “indictment” anywhere in sight.
No doubt she’ll be voted off by the time you read this, since she’s not hip, buff, or stylish, but she’s ours and we’re proud of her!
Apple Butter Days at CFR Nov. 1
Cub packs, Scout troops, and anyone who loves the smell of apples through the grinder simmering in vast iron kettles need to wander up Houdeshell and into Eden Township to visit Apple Butter Days at the Rock. Chris Farmer, CFR director for 2004, is coordinating a great day of activity for all, plus you can buy some top quality locally grown apple butter.
While you’re up there, you can learn more about Sequoia Lodge; which as those who came to the CFR Reunion learned, will be largely made of beautiful white pines that Aby Johnson and others planted some 50 years ago. They have been harvested for use in the new building, which will be on the site of the former structure. A handsome scale model of the building, crafted by Camp Ranger Denny Gray, was on display at the Reunion, the Fall Program Kickoff, and the Cooking Event.
A committee of local Eagles led by John Weaver is conducting a fund raising effort among county Eagles to raise some $70,000 to fund the project. Much of the actual construction will be accomplished by members of the Properties Committee and other volunteers. The new lodge will be known as The Sequoia Eagle Lodge.
For breaking news – See Our District Website: www.lickingdistrict.org David Francis, Webmaster. Check it out!
Deadlines: Nov. 3 for Silver Beaver applications to the council; Dec. 15 for District Award of Merit, Outstanding Scouter, Rookie Awards.
Calendar
Cub Scout Leader Basic Training, OSU-N/COTC, November 15, 2003
Licking District Annual Meeting/Awards Dinner, LCJVS, January 11, 2004
For info, call Dr. Joy Stovcik 323-4128
Licking District Klondike, at CFR January 17, 2004
Licking District Webelos Crossover, at CFR, January 24, 2004
2004 Spring Camporee, Emergency Preparedness, Hartford Fairgrounds, April 23-25
Simon Kenton Council Eagle Scout Recognition Dinner, May 11, 2004
Wednesday, October 01, 2003
Hebron Crossroads 10-05-03
By Jeff Gill
Crops are coming down, the leaves are withering, and without their baffle effect, the traffic noise from I-70 is clearer every morning.
Colors are not much in evidence on the tree limbs, and some autumnal pundits suggest that fall will be muted after the odd weather cycle we’ve had.
Whether with splashes of orange and gold or in quieter earth tones, the land is changing into pajamas for a long winter’s nap. The terrain is stripping down, and frosts will soothe down the jagged hedgerows and wavy grasses into winter-ready curves.
Frost, as it comes, marks the turn of seasons quite well, and so do pumpkins. James Whitcomb Riley wrote that “when the frost is on the punkin” all manner of changes are due, including the arrival of pumpkin season at some area farms.
Circleville will have their Pumpkin Festival soon, and the Lancaster fairgrounds will swing wide their gates this weekend as well, but two local venues near the Hebron Crossroads offer all manner of pumpkin related fun.
Just the other side of Sunset Hill, west of Hebron, is Devine Farms, home of the famous Barrel Train ride. Those blue barrels are rolling through Ralph and Charla Devine’s cornfields just beyond the barns filled with pumpkin fun.
Their welcome to you and your family starts on the internet, at http://www.devinefarms.com, and continues with free parking and free admission, with most weekend activities still at $1.00.
Ralph and Charla are themselves one of the new attractions this year; well, they’ve been there a while, but the “American Gothic” portrait is new on the east wall of the bank barn, and on the south side is a 54 foot “Pumpkin Story Mural” by Mark Helser and Brian Scott, who have been the pumpkin air-brush painters and carvers these last few years.
On Saturday October 4 they have free hotdogs from 11 am to 1 pm as a thank you to their customers.
Coming up, Saturday Oct. 18 and Sunday, Oct. 19, are special events in honor of Ohio's Bicentennial. Frontier woman Mary Beth Sills will share pioneer lifeways on Saturday (she’s part of the Licking Park District staff in her day job), and on Sunday you can see frontier animals from Noon to 3 pm presented by Ohio Nature Education.
Saturday October 25 is the closing weekend Pumpkin Egg Hunt for ages 2-10 years at 10 am. The prize for the egg hunt is $100 in total prizes, including 2 gift certificates from Toys ‘R Us. Charla says “Come in a Halloween costume and get a free Barrel Train Ride!”
Through the last Wagon rides in the cornfield on Oct. 26 at 6 pm, they’ll have their “Corn Maze” open, crafts and straw for sale, and. . .right. . .pumpkins!
But another important sales note is that the concession stand in Building 4 is run by our own Lakewood High School Drama Club. All proceeds support the club and their activities.
Ralph and Charla are great supporters of our community and even welcome and use your suggestions to improve their “fall festival,” so drop ‘em a line at http://www.devinefarms.com, or just drive out US 40 and pull in.
If you head a bit further west on the National Road, ‘til the milestones say you’re 235 miles from Cumberland, Maryland, you’ll see another lavish display of farm living and pumpkin pleasures.
Ralph and Janice Jutte (what is it about Ralphs and farming?) have a wonderland of harvest displays and sale items, which can be previewed at http://www.pigeonroostfarm.com. The Jutte’s hosted a lunch stop for the bicentennial wagon train along with the village of Kirkersville, and their bicentennial fervor extends to the month of October with a huge Corn Maze that spells out “Ohio 200” and more! You can walk through the words and become one with history. . .especially if you don’t find your way out.
Pigeon Roost Farm always celebrates our area’s history, and does a very good job telling the story of the now extinct passenger pigeon, a former inhabitant of the swamps now drained around the Lake region.
And if anyone has more old tractor seats on display, I’d like to know about it. If you don’t think a wide variety of tractor seats sounds interesting, then you really need to take a trip out to Pigeon Roost.
Janice was testing out a new hands-free speaker system with the first day of school tours, and the high-tech merged well with the low-tech of everyday farming shown to the kids of Hebron Elementary’s kindergarten classes.
Weldon’s Ice Cream out of Millersport offers refreshments, and the fees for various activities are quite reasonable.
Free is the cost of admission to a Tuesday, Oct. 14 “Meet the Candidates” night sponsored by the Hebron Lions at Hebron Elementary. We’ll gather in the gymnasium at 7:00 pm, and you can submit questions in writing that will be asked by a very congenial moderator from the Hebron Crossroads of those running for Lakewood school board, Hebron village council, and mayor of these here crossroads, along with a chance even for unopposed candidates to speak their piece.
More info on that event next week, after I find and wind my stopwatch to keep them all to their three minute opening statements. If you watched the California recall debate, you saw a good model for how not to manage the dialogue: I promise to do better than Ted Baxter did that night!
And a closing word of no particular interest unless you loved “Singing In The Rain,” but I hope that’s many of our readers.
Donald O’Connor, the actor-singer-dancer, and I shared a birthday, and one brief telephone conversation. He died recently, and I wanted to remember something about him with you.
Thirty years ago, while I was in high school, Mr. O’Connor was passing through my hometown doing musical evenings in dinner theaters.
My parents had determined to go for their anniversary, and as the oldest, babysitting for the four of us was my contribution to the evening. That, and. . .
Just as they left, somehow I got the idea to call the Bridge-Vu Theatre, and ask for “Mr. O’Connor.” I got his manager, and explained that my parents would be in the audience and I just thought it would be nice if he could announce that.
The next voice, deeper and lilting, asked me my name, my age, and said something very kind about what it was I was up to, and then asked, “What would you like me to sing for them?”
Stammering, I admitted I had no idea. The voice on the other end laughed, and said “I’ll come up with something from 1958. It was a good year.”
Later that night, my parents came home quite happy with the evening, and bemused that in the middle of a set, Donald O’Connor had asked “where are the Gills?”
Especially since they assumed there was something wrong, and he was paging them to head home immediately!
Instead, he told the audience about their children (who were in good hands, I might add), and then sang them a song for their anniversary.
“What did he sing for you?” I asked.
Mom looked puzzled. “You know, I can’t recall.”
I guess we’ll never know, but thanks again, Mr. O’Connor. You still “Make ‘Em Laugh.”
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and he enjoyed Gene Kelly and Debbie Reynolds, too, but never talked to them on the phone (or Francis, either). If you have a brush with greatness to share or news we can use, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
By Jeff Gill
Crops are coming down, the leaves are withering, and without their baffle effect, the traffic noise from I-70 is clearer every morning.
Colors are not much in evidence on the tree limbs, and some autumnal pundits suggest that fall will be muted after the odd weather cycle we’ve had.
Whether with splashes of orange and gold or in quieter earth tones, the land is changing into pajamas for a long winter’s nap. The terrain is stripping down, and frosts will soothe down the jagged hedgerows and wavy grasses into winter-ready curves.
Frost, as it comes, marks the turn of seasons quite well, and so do pumpkins. James Whitcomb Riley wrote that “when the frost is on the punkin” all manner of changes are due, including the arrival of pumpkin season at some area farms.
Circleville will have their Pumpkin Festival soon, and the Lancaster fairgrounds will swing wide their gates this weekend as well, but two local venues near the Hebron Crossroads offer all manner of pumpkin related fun.
Just the other side of Sunset Hill, west of Hebron, is Devine Farms, home of the famous Barrel Train ride. Those blue barrels are rolling through Ralph and Charla Devine’s cornfields just beyond the barns filled with pumpkin fun.
Their welcome to you and your family starts on the internet, at http://www.devinefarms.com, and continues with free parking and free admission, with most weekend activities still at $1.00.
Ralph and Charla are themselves one of the new attractions this year; well, they’ve been there a while, but the “American Gothic” portrait is new on the east wall of the bank barn, and on the south side is a 54 foot “Pumpkin Story Mural” by Mark Helser and Brian Scott, who have been the pumpkin air-brush painters and carvers these last few years.
On Saturday October 4 they have free hotdogs from 11 am to 1 pm as a thank you to their customers.
Coming up, Saturday Oct. 18 and Sunday, Oct. 19, are special events in honor of Ohio's Bicentennial. Frontier woman Mary Beth Sills will share pioneer lifeways on Saturday (she’s part of the Licking Park District staff in her day job), and on Sunday you can see frontier animals from Noon to 3 pm presented by Ohio Nature Education.
Saturday October 25 is the closing weekend Pumpkin Egg Hunt for ages 2-10 years at 10 am. The prize for the egg hunt is $100 in total prizes, including 2 gift certificates from Toys ‘R Us. Charla says “Come in a Halloween costume and get a free Barrel Train Ride!”
Through the last Wagon rides in the cornfield on Oct. 26 at 6 pm, they’ll have their “Corn Maze” open, crafts and straw for sale, and. . .right. . .pumpkins!
But another important sales note is that the concession stand in Building 4 is run by our own Lakewood High School Drama Club. All proceeds support the club and their activities.
Ralph and Charla are great supporters of our community and even welcome and use your suggestions to improve their “fall festival,” so drop ‘em a line at http://www.devinefarms.com, or just drive out US 40 and pull in.
If you head a bit further west on the National Road, ‘til the milestones say you’re 235 miles from Cumberland, Maryland, you’ll see another lavish display of farm living and pumpkin pleasures.
Ralph and Janice Jutte (what is it about Ralphs and farming?) have a wonderland of harvest displays and sale items, which can be previewed at http://www.pigeonroostfarm.com. The Jutte’s hosted a lunch stop for the bicentennial wagon train along with the village of Kirkersville, and their bicentennial fervor extends to the month of October with a huge Corn Maze that spells out “Ohio 200” and more! You can walk through the words and become one with history. . .especially if you don’t find your way out.
Pigeon Roost Farm always celebrates our area’s history, and does a very good job telling the story of the now extinct passenger pigeon, a former inhabitant of the swamps now drained around the Lake region.
And if anyone has more old tractor seats on display, I’d like to know about it. If you don’t think a wide variety of tractor seats sounds interesting, then you really need to take a trip out to Pigeon Roost.
Janice was testing out a new hands-free speaker system with the first day of school tours, and the high-tech merged well with the low-tech of everyday farming shown to the kids of Hebron Elementary’s kindergarten classes.
Weldon’s Ice Cream out of Millersport offers refreshments, and the fees for various activities are quite reasonable.
Free is the cost of admission to a Tuesday, Oct. 14 “Meet the Candidates” night sponsored by the Hebron Lions at Hebron Elementary. We’ll gather in the gymnasium at 7:00 pm, and you can submit questions in writing that will be asked by a very congenial moderator from the Hebron Crossroads of those running for Lakewood school board, Hebron village council, and mayor of these here crossroads, along with a chance even for unopposed candidates to speak their piece.
More info on that event next week, after I find and wind my stopwatch to keep them all to their three minute opening statements. If you watched the California recall debate, you saw a good model for how not to manage the dialogue: I promise to do better than Ted Baxter did that night!
And a closing word of no particular interest unless you loved “Singing In The Rain,” but I hope that’s many of our readers.
Donald O’Connor, the actor-singer-dancer, and I shared a birthday, and one brief telephone conversation. He died recently, and I wanted to remember something about him with you.
Thirty years ago, while I was in high school, Mr. O’Connor was passing through my hometown doing musical evenings in dinner theaters.
My parents had determined to go for their anniversary, and as the oldest, babysitting for the four of us was my contribution to the evening. That, and. . .
Just as they left, somehow I got the idea to call the Bridge-Vu Theatre, and ask for “Mr. O’Connor.” I got his manager, and explained that my parents would be in the audience and I just thought it would be nice if he could announce that.
The next voice, deeper and lilting, asked me my name, my age, and said something very kind about what it was I was up to, and then asked, “What would you like me to sing for them?”
Stammering, I admitted I had no idea. The voice on the other end laughed, and said “I’ll come up with something from 1958. It was a good year.”
Later that night, my parents came home quite happy with the evening, and bemused that in the middle of a set, Donald O’Connor had asked “where are the Gills?”
Especially since they assumed there was something wrong, and he was paging them to head home immediately!
Instead, he told the audience about their children (who were in good hands, I might add), and then sang them a song for their anniversary.
“What did he sing for you?” I asked.
Mom looked puzzled. “You know, I can’t recall.”
I guess we’ll never know, but thanks again, Mr. O’Connor. You still “Make ‘Em Laugh.”
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and he enjoyed Gene Kelly and Debbie Reynolds, too, but never talked to them on the phone (or Francis, either). If you have a brush with greatness to share or news we can use, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
Monday, September 22, 2003
Hebron Crossroads 9-28-03
by Jeff Gill
Harvesting has begun out in the fields around the Hebron Crossroads. Time is always of the essence, but some factors this year add to the urgency.
Our wildly wet summer brought up some visitors from the south. A rarely seen blight
in this area hit the corn crop, creating the odd brown look to the rows instead of the more usual golden tan by now.
The yield, the quality of the corn itself, hasn't been affected, but the stalks are weak and could blow down on little provocation. Likewise, a species of aphid has taken a more northerly interest in soybeans this summer, nibbling away at the margins, profit and otherwise.
As always, please keep watch on the roads for slower moving farm equipment and give them a "brake." Impatience is for Columbus city streets and the new 670, but trust me when I tell you that the farmers are moving just as fast as they can!
Actually, little and big hopping things are everywhere in our lawns and on our porches,
not to mention occasionally sneaking into our homes. We've got about everything but locusts -- the cicadas started up last weekend, just in time for the autumnal equinox -- and as Jym Ganahl reminds us, this weird run started with record snows last winter and hailstones for Easter, so a plague of hoppers should be no surprise.
While we were doing the 9-11 community service project at Canal Park, a few folks noticed the main crossbeams looked like railroad rails. They're I-beams with a rounded top, and my guess is that they're from the railbed that went to Millersport and not from the interurban, given how long the interurban has been gone (70 plus years). If anyone knows, holler!
Working there also reminded quite a few of the recycling trailer parked there at Canal
and Cumberland. Joyce and I use it to keep our trash volume down and do a small favor to our planet; recycling isn't an environmental panacea, but even if it just kept the cubic footage of trash in landfills down it would be a good idea.
Recycling does take many forms, for efficiency and for the environment. There's those rails recycled into bridge beams, and just north of us in Canal Park is the patch of cement where the power plant for the interurban stood: the bricks from that imposing structure were reused into the 1937 gym addition onto Hebron Elementary, where Dale McFarland played in the first basketball game after the dedication that year, and where my Little Guy now has his indoor recess on these still often rainy days.
That kind of recycling pays all sorts of benefits down the years. . .
Fire Prevention Week is coming up, and a number of you thanked me for explaining why Hebron wanted people to “Get out! Stay out!” Proof, as if any was needed, that folks rarely read beyond the headlines.
If you are still reading, a) thank you, b) give yourself a pat on the back, and c) here’s an added tip. We’re entering that odd period when you want some air flowing in the afternoons, but need the heat to start overnight. This is a critical time to check your furnace or alternate heat sources for safety and reliability, and it is also a fine time, if you’ve not done so already, to get a carbon monoxide detector. Every fall we hear about some very close calls, and a CO detector can be as much of a life saver for your family as a smoke detector.
Plus change the filters and all that good stuff before heating season comes upon us with a vengeance. When Devine Farms has a field full of pumpkins set out, you know that the frost'll be on the punkin fore long. . .
The first Johnstown/Lakewood Band Festival went over big, I’m told. I had the pleasure, with my pastor hat on, of uniting Danielle Allison and Patrick Curran in marriage that same day at Infirmary Mound Park, and a more beautiful day we couldn’t have had. Much the same was said by all the band fans further north on 37, plus the excitement of seeing the Ohio University Band (Patrick & Danielle’s alma mater) in performance.
Marching contingents large and small each got some real learning and experience out of the day, the first of a new tradition I suspect.
Looking further back, the Bicentennial Wagon Train left a great impression, and they’re looking at a “reunion” of sorts at Infirmary Mound Park Oct. 10-11 with a few wagons, muleskinners, and an overnight campout.
Rhonda Carte, webmaster for the Licking Township trustees, was kind enough to send me the web address of their set of photos from the wagon train’s passage. Type into your browser window this URL, http://www.lickingtwpohio.us/wagon_train_photos.htm. Her family, the Swinehearts, have longstanding connections to the Hebron Crossroads, and we might have another story to tell on down the road from her.
And I can’t resist this tidbit from the web, which gave me a chuckle and then really made me think. See what you think: “Aoccdrnig to a rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it deosn't mttaer in waht oredr the ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoetnt tihng is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be at the rghit pclae. The rset can be a total mses and you can sitll raed it wouthit porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe.”
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and possessor of a CO detector in his home; if you have safety tips or recycling stories to share, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
* * * * * * *
Also, Linda Nicodemus of the village office asked me to pass along the following “letter to the editor.”
September 16, 2003
Letter to the Editor,
The Village of Hebron would like to thank all those who helped us exceed our goal during our recent blood drive. We had a wonderful turn-out with the help of local papers, radio stations, McDonalds who ran our ad on their marquee, businesses that let us display fliers, and Hebron Elementary who sent fliers home with children. Because of an emergency the Red Cross was operating with reduced staff for this event. They truly appreciate everyone’s patience with the slightly longer waiting times.
We also want to thank our faithful volunteers Dale McFarland, Jeff Gill and Jacob Hagans who donate their time at each blood drive. Cookies, juice, and other goodies were generously donated by Hometown Deli, Krogers and numerous village residents. Everyone’s next opportunity to participate in saving lives will be November 25th, 2003 from 1- 6 PM, at Hebron Municipal Complex.
Thank you,
Linda Nicodemus,
Blood Drive Coordinator
by Jeff Gill
Harvesting has begun out in the fields around the Hebron Crossroads. Time is always of the essence, but some factors this year add to the urgency.
Our wildly wet summer brought up some visitors from the south. A rarely seen blight
in this area hit the corn crop, creating the odd brown look to the rows instead of the more usual golden tan by now.
The yield, the quality of the corn itself, hasn't been affected, but the stalks are weak and could blow down on little provocation. Likewise, a species of aphid has taken a more northerly interest in soybeans this summer, nibbling away at the margins, profit and otherwise.
As always, please keep watch on the roads for slower moving farm equipment and give them a "brake." Impatience is for Columbus city streets and the new 670, but trust me when I tell you that the farmers are moving just as fast as they can!
Actually, little and big hopping things are everywhere in our lawns and on our porches,
not to mention occasionally sneaking into our homes. We've got about everything but locusts -- the cicadas started up last weekend, just in time for the autumnal equinox -- and as Jym Ganahl reminds us, this weird run started with record snows last winter and hailstones for Easter, so a plague of hoppers should be no surprise.
While we were doing the 9-11 community service project at Canal Park, a few folks noticed the main crossbeams looked like railroad rails. They're I-beams with a rounded top, and my guess is that they're from the railbed that went to Millersport and not from the interurban, given how long the interurban has been gone (70 plus years). If anyone knows, holler!
Working there also reminded quite a few of the recycling trailer parked there at Canal
and Cumberland. Joyce and I use it to keep our trash volume down and do a small favor to our planet; recycling isn't an environmental panacea, but even if it just kept the cubic footage of trash in landfills down it would be a good idea.
Recycling does take many forms, for efficiency and for the environment. There's those rails recycled into bridge beams, and just north of us in Canal Park is the patch of cement where the power plant for the interurban stood: the bricks from that imposing structure were reused into the 1937 gym addition onto Hebron Elementary, where Dale McFarland played in the first basketball game after the dedication that year, and where my Little Guy now has his indoor recess on these still often rainy days.
That kind of recycling pays all sorts of benefits down the years. . .
Fire Prevention Week is coming up, and a number of you thanked me for explaining why Hebron wanted people to “Get out! Stay out!” Proof, as if any was needed, that folks rarely read beyond the headlines.
If you are still reading, a) thank you, b) give yourself a pat on the back, and c) here’s an added tip. We’re entering that odd period when you want some air flowing in the afternoons, but need the heat to start overnight. This is a critical time to check your furnace or alternate heat sources for safety and reliability, and it is also a fine time, if you’ve not done so already, to get a carbon monoxide detector. Every fall we hear about some very close calls, and a CO detector can be as much of a life saver for your family as a smoke detector.
Plus change the filters and all that good stuff before heating season comes upon us with a vengeance. When Devine Farms has a field full of pumpkins set out, you know that the frost'll be on the punkin fore long. . .
The first Johnstown/Lakewood Band Festival went over big, I’m told. I had the pleasure, with my pastor hat on, of uniting Danielle Allison and Patrick Curran in marriage that same day at Infirmary Mound Park, and a more beautiful day we couldn’t have had. Much the same was said by all the band fans further north on 37, plus the excitement of seeing the Ohio University Band (Patrick & Danielle’s alma mater) in performance.
Marching contingents large and small each got some real learning and experience out of the day, the first of a new tradition I suspect.
Looking further back, the Bicentennial Wagon Train left a great impression, and they’re looking at a “reunion” of sorts at Infirmary Mound Park Oct. 10-11 with a few wagons, muleskinners, and an overnight campout.
Rhonda Carte, webmaster for the Licking Township trustees, was kind enough to send me the web address of their set of photos from the wagon train’s passage. Type into your browser window this URL, http://www.lickingtwpohio.us/wagon_train_photos.htm. Her family, the Swinehearts, have longstanding connections to the Hebron Crossroads, and we might have another story to tell on down the road from her.
And I can’t resist this tidbit from the web, which gave me a chuckle and then really made me think. See what you think: “Aoccdrnig to a rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it deosn't mttaer in waht oredr the ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoetnt tihng is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be at the rghit pclae. The rset can be a total mses and you can sitll raed it wouthit porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe.”
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and possessor of a CO detector in his home; if you have safety tips or recycling stories to share, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
* * * * * * *
Also, Linda Nicodemus of the village office asked me to pass along the following “letter to the editor.”
September 16, 2003
Letter to the Editor,
The Village of Hebron would like to thank all those who helped us exceed our goal during our recent blood drive. We had a wonderful turn-out with the help of local papers, radio stations, McDonalds who ran our ad on their marquee, businesses that let us display fliers, and Hebron Elementary who sent fliers home with children. Because of an emergency the Red Cross was operating with reduced staff for this event. They truly appreciate everyone’s patience with the slightly longer waiting times.
We also want to thank our faithful volunteers Dale McFarland, Jeff Gill and Jacob Hagans who donate their time at each blood drive. Cookies, juice, and other goodies were generously donated by Hometown Deli, Krogers and numerous village residents. Everyone’s next opportunity to participate in saving lives will be November 25th, 2003 from 1- 6 PM, at Hebron Municipal Complex.
Thank you,
Linda Nicodemus,
Blood Drive Coordinator
Tuesday, September 16, 2003
Hebron Crossroads 9-21-03
By Jeff Gill
Hurricane Isabel has nothing on the Hebron Crossroads for a swirling torrent of activity!
Let’s start with right now, go to some tips o’ the cap, and then look ahead (but not too far). Block some time out, and sit down with your calendar at hand. Ready? Let’s go:
The Lakewood High School Marching Band, the Marching Lancers, in cooperation with the Johnstown High School Marching Band, the Marching Big Red, presents the very first band festival of its kind in Licking County ... featuring Ohio University's Marching 110! (That's OU, not OSU!) Eight high school bands will be participating, including the sponsoring Lakewood and Johnstown High School Bands.
Here's the scoop, says Sherry Steinman for the Lakewood Band Boosters: Saturday, September 20, 2003, 1-4 p.m., Chambers Stadium at Johnstown High School, 401 South Oregon St. Cost is $5 per person.
[Note for Amy: If you have questions and/or want more info, contact Scott Coffey, Director of the Lakewood HS Band (740-929-1812), or, Band Director, Marc Zirille, at Johnstown High School, (740-967-2721). I’d follow up, but I have two weddings this weekend!]
As most of you have seen, the Sept. 11 memorial community service project was a great success, “painting the town”. . .at least around Canal Park. The “Charlie Wolf” gazebo that was part of Hebron’s sesquicentennial in 1985, the picnic shelter that was a bicentennial tribute in 1976 by Hebron and Buckeye Lake, playground equipment, three pedestrian bridges, and some other equipment between Rt. 79 and Cumberland Street.
Our Hebron Street Department, along with facilitating the whole project, finished up the next day with the rest of the picnic tables, another gazebo behind the ballfields, and the special paint on the concrete pad.
Mrs. Maslowski and Mrs. Manter brought their second graders after learning about service in class the previous few days, and they with a few brave parents helped eighteen kids paint two of the bridges, plus a bit of themselves, if you know what I mean.
Charla Devine and Marsha Justice, along with some preschool help, weeded the rose bed next to the Ohio outline flowers in red, white, and blue, with some paint on the trim from Amber Damron and Jennifer McNichols, while Lisa McNichols, Beth Walters, and Kim Halter finished some spots the kids may have missed.
Councilmembers Annelle Porter, Mike Halter, and Scott Walters all got some paint on ‘em, plus thanks to Bowman Chevrolet and Union Township trustee Jack Justice for getting our “Respond To The Call” banner up on Main Street.
Clay’s Café, McDonald’s, and our council folk helped with the food supply, with some invaluable co-ordinating help from Linda Nicodemus and Tonya Stapleton in the village office under Mike McFarland’s direction.
And the firefighters of our Hebron Division of Fire and EMS were just great! We had a brief ceremony at the station house at 9:15 that morning, and thanks to Brian Harkness, a new pastor in the area, for his involvement. Police, fire, and village officials were all represented at the flagpole, and then almost every fireman on and off duty that day came by Canal Park to help in some way. Thanks of course to Chief Randy Weekley, and yeoman work was done by Capt. Rich Vance, and Mike Yost is the “prince of paint,” whose equipment made more possible than we thought could be done that day. Three cheers for sure to Dulux Paint Center for their support!
But next year, Sept. 11 is on a Saturday, and we’ll find a nice, big, NON-painting project. . .
We had something over 60 individuals involved at one time or another through the day, and thanks to all of them named and un-named, and don’t let me end the thanks without noting that my wife Joyce Meredith and I got to do some painting together, which was more fun than you’d think! Marriages can survive painting, no matter what some may say.
Our fire department is still working hard, with “Fire Prevention Week” coming Oct. 5 through 11. Those banners at village hall, the station, and at Main and High saying “Get Out – Stay Out!” are not about visitors to Hebron (who said that?), but are the lesson we want children and adults to learn about a structure fire.
Doesn’t matter what the circumstances are: if you’re in a building on fire, “Get out! Stay out!” Too many people who die in fires have actually left the building, and go back in to get a pet or photo album or checkbook, not thinking right about the many ways a fire in a home or office can kill.
So the Hebron Fire Department will be out and about through a busy week, starting with the Buckeye Lake Fire Prevention Parade down Walnut Road on Oct. 5 starting at 2 pm.
Monday, Oct. 6 is an equipment demo at the Hebron Kroger from 6 to 8 pm.
Tuesday the 7th is aimed largely at older adults. At the fire station, 111 Basin St., the department will hold training sessions at 10 am and 2 pm on preventing falls and fire extinguisher use. Call the station number, 928-4721, for more information.
Thursday will be “Safety Day” at Hebron Elementary, and the firefighters will be interacting with the kids on both the 9th and 10th as they press home the message “Get Out! Stay Out!”
The kids at Hebron Elementary have benefited from the “Ohio Reads” program and our own local “Hebron Reads” initiative. Reading tutors are needed again for the coming year; we had about 24 total trained last year with 15 participating through the year. At least that many, if not more, are needed, and the training is coming soon. Call the school office at 928-2661, and Donita or Dr. Geist will get the message to Mrs. Christian, Mrs. Frush, or Mrs. Henry, and one of those teachers will be in touch with you. I’ve gotten to work with six different young readers over the last four years, and can tell you that the rewards last a lifetime for both participants. If you have a half hour a week between 9 am and 3:30 pm weekdays, you can be a tutor.
If you want to help out at the school district level, the Lakewood Board of Education is still taking applications for the Citizens Advisory Committee through Sept. 30. Hebron, I’m told, is well represented, but we need folks to participate from all geographic areas of the district. The Administrative offices on E. Main near the Rt. 79 bypass have forms, plus they went home with all district schoolchildren last week, and any building secretary or Tracy at the board office will be glad to receive your application.
The plan right now is for the board to appoint 15 members, and put in their hopper questions like fees, pay to participate, and a growth plan for the district. Come join the discussion!
Have you registered to vote in the November election? After petitions circulated for our council members, mayoral candidates, and Lakewood school board, it became clear that a fair number of people who think they’re registered are NOT. If you haven’t voted for a number of years, you aren’t registered anymore. If you’ve moved since you voted last, you aren’t legally registered anymore. If you’ve never actually filled out a registration form (“but I just got my driver’s license, right?”), you aren’t actually registered. If the election is Nov. 4, then you need to be registered no later than Oct. 4.
But it is very easy to register for voting, and you can drop by the municipal complex or library to get a simple form to do just that. It’s just that you’d better do it in the next couple weeks!
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church, where they also have a stack of voter registration forms on hand. If you have tales of citizenship and community in action to share from around the Hebron Crossroads, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
By Jeff Gill
Hurricane Isabel has nothing on the Hebron Crossroads for a swirling torrent of activity!
Let’s start with right now, go to some tips o’ the cap, and then look ahead (but not too far). Block some time out, and sit down with your calendar at hand. Ready? Let’s go:
The Lakewood High School Marching Band, the Marching Lancers, in cooperation with the Johnstown High School Marching Band, the Marching Big Red, presents the very first band festival of its kind in Licking County ... featuring Ohio University's Marching 110! (That's OU, not OSU!) Eight high school bands will be participating, including the sponsoring Lakewood and Johnstown High School Bands.
Here's the scoop, says Sherry Steinman for the Lakewood Band Boosters: Saturday, September 20, 2003, 1-4 p.m., Chambers Stadium at Johnstown High School, 401 South Oregon St. Cost is $5 per person.
[Note for Amy: If you have questions and/or want more info, contact Scott Coffey, Director of the Lakewood HS Band (740-929-1812), or, Band Director, Marc Zirille, at Johnstown High School, (740-967-2721). I’d follow up, but I have two weddings this weekend!]
As most of you have seen, the Sept. 11 memorial community service project was a great success, “painting the town”. . .at least around Canal Park. The “Charlie Wolf” gazebo that was part of Hebron’s sesquicentennial in 1985, the picnic shelter that was a bicentennial tribute in 1976 by Hebron and Buckeye Lake, playground equipment, three pedestrian bridges, and some other equipment between Rt. 79 and Cumberland Street.
Our Hebron Street Department, along with facilitating the whole project, finished up the next day with the rest of the picnic tables, another gazebo behind the ballfields, and the special paint on the concrete pad.
Mrs. Maslowski and Mrs. Manter brought their second graders after learning about service in class the previous few days, and they with a few brave parents helped eighteen kids paint two of the bridges, plus a bit of themselves, if you know what I mean.
Charla Devine and Marsha Justice, along with some preschool help, weeded the rose bed next to the Ohio outline flowers in red, white, and blue, with some paint on the trim from Amber Damron and Jennifer McNichols, while Lisa McNichols, Beth Walters, and Kim Halter finished some spots the kids may have missed.
Councilmembers Annelle Porter, Mike Halter, and Scott Walters all got some paint on ‘em, plus thanks to Bowman Chevrolet and Union Township trustee Jack Justice for getting our “Respond To The Call” banner up on Main Street.
Clay’s Café, McDonald’s, and our council folk helped with the food supply, with some invaluable co-ordinating help from Linda Nicodemus and Tonya Stapleton in the village office under Mike McFarland’s direction.
And the firefighters of our Hebron Division of Fire and EMS were just great! We had a brief ceremony at the station house at 9:15 that morning, and thanks to Brian Harkness, a new pastor in the area, for his involvement. Police, fire, and village officials were all represented at the flagpole, and then almost every fireman on and off duty that day came by Canal Park to help in some way. Thanks of course to Chief Randy Weekley, and yeoman work was done by Capt. Rich Vance, and Mike Yost is the “prince of paint,” whose equipment made more possible than we thought could be done that day. Three cheers for sure to Dulux Paint Center for their support!
But next year, Sept. 11 is on a Saturday, and we’ll find a nice, big, NON-painting project. . .
We had something over 60 individuals involved at one time or another through the day, and thanks to all of them named and un-named, and don’t let me end the thanks without noting that my wife Joyce Meredith and I got to do some painting together, which was more fun than you’d think! Marriages can survive painting, no matter what some may say.
Our fire department is still working hard, with “Fire Prevention Week” coming Oct. 5 through 11. Those banners at village hall, the station, and at Main and High saying “Get Out – Stay Out!” are not about visitors to Hebron (who said that?), but are the lesson we want children and adults to learn about a structure fire.
Doesn’t matter what the circumstances are: if you’re in a building on fire, “Get out! Stay out!” Too many people who die in fires have actually left the building, and go back in to get a pet or photo album or checkbook, not thinking right about the many ways a fire in a home or office can kill.
So the Hebron Fire Department will be out and about through a busy week, starting with the Buckeye Lake Fire Prevention Parade down Walnut Road on Oct. 5 starting at 2 pm.
Monday, Oct. 6 is an equipment demo at the Hebron Kroger from 6 to 8 pm.
Tuesday the 7th is aimed largely at older adults. At the fire station, 111 Basin St., the department will hold training sessions at 10 am and 2 pm on preventing falls and fire extinguisher use. Call the station number, 928-4721, for more information.
Thursday will be “Safety Day” at Hebron Elementary, and the firefighters will be interacting with the kids on both the 9th and 10th as they press home the message “Get Out! Stay Out!”
The kids at Hebron Elementary have benefited from the “Ohio Reads” program and our own local “Hebron Reads” initiative. Reading tutors are needed again for the coming year; we had about 24 total trained last year with 15 participating through the year. At least that many, if not more, are needed, and the training is coming soon. Call the school office at 928-2661, and Donita or Dr. Geist will get the message to Mrs. Christian, Mrs. Frush, or Mrs. Henry, and one of those teachers will be in touch with you. I’ve gotten to work with six different young readers over the last four years, and can tell you that the rewards last a lifetime for both participants. If you have a half hour a week between 9 am and 3:30 pm weekdays, you can be a tutor.
If you want to help out at the school district level, the Lakewood Board of Education is still taking applications for the Citizens Advisory Committee through Sept. 30. Hebron, I’m told, is well represented, but we need folks to participate from all geographic areas of the district. The Administrative offices on E. Main near the Rt. 79 bypass have forms, plus they went home with all district schoolchildren last week, and any building secretary or Tracy at the board office will be glad to receive your application.
The plan right now is for the board to appoint 15 members, and put in their hopper questions like fees, pay to participate, and a growth plan for the district. Come join the discussion!
Have you registered to vote in the November election? After petitions circulated for our council members, mayoral candidates, and Lakewood school board, it became clear that a fair number of people who think they’re registered are NOT. If you haven’t voted for a number of years, you aren’t registered anymore. If you’ve moved since you voted last, you aren’t legally registered anymore. If you’ve never actually filled out a registration form (“but I just got my driver’s license, right?”), you aren’t actually registered. If the election is Nov. 4, then you need to be registered no later than Oct. 4.
But it is very easy to register for voting, and you can drop by the municipal complex or library to get a simple form to do just that. It’s just that you’d better do it in the next couple weeks!
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church, where they also have a stack of voter registration forms on hand. If you have tales of citizenship and community in action to share from around the Hebron Crossroads, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
Thursday, September 11, 2003
Hebron Crossroads 9-14-03
by Jeff Gill
Not long ago I was watching, through dark of night, "The Last Picture Show." The Little Guy has taken to regularly waking at 2 am or so, and while he goes back to sleep with some mild tending, the parents do not, often. Hence, movie watching 'til dawn.
If you don't know this movie . . . a young Cybill Shepherd, Peter Bogdanovich directing with Larry McMurtry's script, and Cloris Leachman in an amazing role . . . too many references could throw you, but the title tells most of what you need.
A small Texas town, but still the hub for a vast sweep of ranchland all around, is losing the tiny movie theater on the dying Main Street, and the cinematography in black and white starkly illuminates the desolation most of the residents see, except for a few lucky souls who thrive on the stark beauty and simplicity of their sweeping horizons.
Of course, the young all bemoan how far away "everything worth doing" is, and it would seem hard to argue the point.
What this got me to thinking about, though (and I warned you this was during the wee hours), was how everywhere I've ever lived, I hear youth and parents say that "you have to go away somewhere to find anything to do."
Now, I grew up in a county seat town ten minutes from Lake Michigan and forty minutes from downtown Chicago: OK. In seminary I served a church not five minutes from the center of Indianapolis, and before coming to Hebron pastored in West Virginia, plus service before and in between that spanned those demographics.
In each place, kids said about the same thing: "If I lived in (name of place about an hour away), there'd be more to do. This place is boring." Around all those communites, moms and dads said, "I just wish there was more for kids to do around here, like they have in (place known by TV that is distant, but not too far away)."
It all makes me wonder if boredom is simply a state of mind, an attitude of persons more than a quality of place.
Here in Hebron, we have more going on and more to do every passing day, and there are more homework assignments, more clubs and groups meeting and working even beyond extracurriculars at the school, more options and choices about leisure time activities, and more concern about, well, being bored.
But at the same time I see high school youth volunteering for Ohio Reads, rocking for the Drama Club, working at Hayman's Dairy Bar and Clay's Cafe, stopping atop one of the bike jumps they built themselves at Evans Park and looking long and intently at a flaring, horizon wide sunset, like Ben Johnson leaning on his pickup door. They don't look, sound, or act bored. Tired maybe, but not bored.
I wouldn't quite want to say that being bored is a character flaw, but maybe not being bored is a sign of maturity. Except that small children hardly ever seem to be bored; they find a pile of dirt and three sticks and are rapt in fascination for hours (well, minutes anyhow) at a time.
Perhaps being interested as a person is more like being an interesting person than we like to think. Hebron and the Buckeye Lake region are filled with interest and activity, and it is up to us to make the most of what the Lakewood area has to offer. Boring or interesting: we make the call, we create the reality, for ourselves and others around us.
A group called "Partnerships for Success," working through the county Children and Families First program, is preparing to do another round of what they call "Community Youth Mapping." In this process, youth themselves are trained to go out and interview peers and community members to find out what activities and services for youth and families are available in their area.
Invariably, when the kids get back from a round of doing youth mapping, they are amazed to find out how much is going on around them that they didn't even know was available. Of course, the next step is to help spread that word, and you can count on the Hebron Crossroads to help do just that when the process works through our area.
Next week, I'm looking forward to telling you about our local response on Sept. 11, as we "responded to the call" of Patriot Day, as President Bush has designated the commemoration. There will be interesting stories to share, I'm sure!
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and gets to meet many interesting people through writing for the Booster as well; if you know any interesting folk we'd all enjoy meeting, call Jeff at 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
by Jeff Gill
Not long ago I was watching, through dark of night, "The Last Picture Show." The Little Guy has taken to regularly waking at 2 am or so, and while he goes back to sleep with some mild tending, the parents do not, often. Hence, movie watching 'til dawn.
If you don't know this movie . . . a young Cybill Shepherd, Peter Bogdanovich directing with Larry McMurtry's script, and Cloris Leachman in an amazing role . . . too many references could throw you, but the title tells most of what you need.
A small Texas town, but still the hub for a vast sweep of ranchland all around, is losing the tiny movie theater on the dying Main Street, and the cinematography in black and white starkly illuminates the desolation most of the residents see, except for a few lucky souls who thrive on the stark beauty and simplicity of their sweeping horizons.
Of course, the young all bemoan how far away "everything worth doing" is, and it would seem hard to argue the point.
What this got me to thinking about, though (and I warned you this was during the wee hours), was how everywhere I've ever lived, I hear youth and parents say that "you have to go away somewhere to find anything to do."
Now, I grew up in a county seat town ten minutes from Lake Michigan and forty minutes from downtown Chicago: OK. In seminary I served a church not five minutes from the center of Indianapolis, and before coming to Hebron pastored in West Virginia, plus service before and in between that spanned those demographics.
In each place, kids said about the same thing: "If I lived in (name of place about an hour away), there'd be more to do. This place is boring." Around all those communites, moms and dads said, "I just wish there was more for kids to do around here, like they have in (place known by TV that is distant, but not too far away)."
It all makes me wonder if boredom is simply a state of mind, an attitude of persons more than a quality of place.
Here in Hebron, we have more going on and more to do every passing day, and there are more homework assignments, more clubs and groups meeting and working even beyond extracurriculars at the school, more options and choices about leisure time activities, and more concern about, well, being bored.
But at the same time I see high school youth volunteering for Ohio Reads, rocking for the Drama Club, working at Hayman's Dairy Bar and Clay's Cafe, stopping atop one of the bike jumps they built themselves at Evans Park and looking long and intently at a flaring, horizon wide sunset, like Ben Johnson leaning on his pickup door. They don't look, sound, or act bored. Tired maybe, but not bored.
I wouldn't quite want to say that being bored is a character flaw, but maybe not being bored is a sign of maturity. Except that small children hardly ever seem to be bored; they find a pile of dirt and three sticks and are rapt in fascination for hours (well, minutes anyhow) at a time.
Perhaps being interested as a person is more like being an interesting person than we like to think. Hebron and the Buckeye Lake region are filled with interest and activity, and it is up to us to make the most of what the Lakewood area has to offer. Boring or interesting: we make the call, we create the reality, for ourselves and others around us.
A group called "Partnerships for Success," working through the county Children and Families First program, is preparing to do another round of what they call "Community Youth Mapping." In this process, youth themselves are trained to go out and interview peers and community members to find out what activities and services for youth and families are available in their area.
Invariably, when the kids get back from a round of doing youth mapping, they are amazed to find out how much is going on around them that they didn't even know was available. Of course, the next step is to help spread that word, and you can count on the Hebron Crossroads to help do just that when the process works through our area.
Next week, I'm looking forward to telling you about our local response on Sept. 11, as we "responded to the call" of Patriot Day, as President Bush has designated the commemoration. There will be interesting stories to share, I'm sure!
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and gets to meet many interesting people through writing for the Booster as well; if you know any interesting folk we'd all enjoy meeting, call Jeff at 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
Tuesday, September 02, 2003
Hebron Crossroads 9-7-03
By Jeff Gill
Time to answer a few questions and first, make a correction!
A very nice note was passed to me following the Sweet Corn Festival, written in the sacred confines of the Lakewood Band Boosters donut booth. Contrary to my impression that the entire uniforms of our marching band were new this year, it was pointed out to the Community Booster by the Band Boosters that each band member is sporting new “hats and spats,” a black beret jauntily worn at one end, with bright “shoe toppers” giving flash to their dash at the other end.
Their fifteen year old uniforms “look new, because of the Loving Care of the three ladies on the Uniform Committee, Karen, Cheryl, and Vivian.”
Well, thanks for the loving care, the loving correction, and the reminder that someday soon those well worn jackets and trousers will have to be replaced, and the Uniform Committee doesn’t want to hear any surprised comments when they announce in a coming year that it’s time to buy new ones.
Obviously, men (like me) know nothing about accessorizing outfits! It is amazing what some modest improvements around the edges can do to improve the look of the whole. The school buildings along US 40 and Hebron Elementary all got under $90,000 worth of paving and some painting done, and they look like new for just that much (plus driving through the lots is a whole lot easier).
Speaking of schools, the Lakewood School Board “Citizens Advisory Committee” will take names through Sept. 30; forms to show your interest are available in the offices of each school or on E. Main at the Administrative Offices. Your correspondent has turned his name in, and we hope for a full complement to review and share community input with the elected members of the board in their decision-making.
Focusing back to Hebron, our “Respond To The Call” service project for Sept. 11 will start at 10 am in Canal Park. Come down Cumberland to the picnic shelter entrance through the day, and we’ll be painting up a storm on a clear, sunny day (right?) across the two bridges and the gazebo with the shelter. All skill levels are welcome!
Folks often ask, and I try to mention every few months or so here in print, why do I/don’t I get the “Booster” at my home? The official answer is that the Advocate motor carriers are “supposed” to deliver, on Friday, Saturday, or Sunday, a copy to each home that isn’t a subscriber to the daily Advocate. Right here in Hebron, Monte tries to get one to every house, which I take very kindly, but each route is a little different.
They also leave a stack at places like Hometown Deli, the Duke Station, and so on. Basically, I can’t get anyone to deliver you a copy, but moving into Hebron proper would help! I understand that almost 25,000 copies of the Booster go out each week; there is also a “Booster West” that carries different columns for Alexandria, Johnstown, and Granville, which runs another 10,000-plus, but since they don’t get “Hebron Crossroads,” they’re just missing out, aren’t they?
Sadly, I often get asked about a fellow (actually, a series of fellows, but hold on) who stands at the I-70 exit ramp onto Rt. 37 near the truck stops with a sign “Will work for food.” Friends, let me tell you as a pastor: don’t give him/them a dime, not one thin dime. Try offering them a ride to a place with a “now hiring” sign, or tell them you’ve got a cord of wood to split for $7 an hour, and you’ll see what I mean.
This is an all too typical scam, staffed by a number of guys carefully dressed badly, but not too badly, all holding the same sign that they pass to each other at “shift change.” They count on guilty consciences heading home from a good day at work in tough economic times, who want to help someone less fortunate with a twenty or a fifty out the window and drive on. An actual offer to help will result in a well-timed stammering stall until the light changes, and then back to the next line of cars.
As long as they stay well to one side, don’t walk out into the road until beckoned over, and start to walk away each time they see a Highway Patrol cruiser coming up the ramp, there’s nothing that can be done officially about them. They are (generally) breaking no laws, and when you hand over cash, you hand over all right to how that money is used.
I’ve had opportunity to follow up on cons like this before, and I can say that at least for me, I have never, ever seen one of these “will work for food” situations at roadside ever be anything other than a scam at best, and a well-run if utterly amoral business at worst.
A few months back, drinking coffee and reading a newspaper before a meeting in Heath, I saw a fellow working the 30th and Hebron Rd. corner get a large wad of bills from a very sweet, well-intentioned fast food employee, along with a cold drink on a hot day. Not long after she walked back into the store, he started to fold his sign under his arm, and knowing what I’ve seen before, I decided to drive past him, stop, and see where he ended up.
Sure enough, he walked down 30th to another restaurant, where behind it was waiting his “boss,” I assume, who got a portion of his cash from five pockets before they got in the car. A Cadillac. A new Cadillac. With whitewalls.
If you want to help the needy, good for you; there is much need around us. Talk to Lynne Cash at Buckeye Lake LEADS (928-1435), or call my heroes at the Licking County Housing Coalition (345-1970). Or call your church! They know how to help in ways that really help.
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and knows that Hebron area folk really want to help; if you have ideas or suggestions for community causes, call 928-4066 or e-mail him at disciple@voyager.net.
By Jeff Gill
Time to answer a few questions and first, make a correction!
A very nice note was passed to me following the Sweet Corn Festival, written in the sacred confines of the Lakewood Band Boosters donut booth. Contrary to my impression that the entire uniforms of our marching band were new this year, it was pointed out to the Community Booster by the Band Boosters that each band member is sporting new “hats and spats,” a black beret jauntily worn at one end, with bright “shoe toppers” giving flash to their dash at the other end.
Their fifteen year old uniforms “look new, because of the Loving Care of the three ladies on the Uniform Committee, Karen, Cheryl, and Vivian.”
Well, thanks for the loving care, the loving correction, and the reminder that someday soon those well worn jackets and trousers will have to be replaced, and the Uniform Committee doesn’t want to hear any surprised comments when they announce in a coming year that it’s time to buy new ones.
Obviously, men (like me) know nothing about accessorizing outfits! It is amazing what some modest improvements around the edges can do to improve the look of the whole. The school buildings along US 40 and Hebron Elementary all got under $90,000 worth of paving and some painting done, and they look like new for just that much (plus driving through the lots is a whole lot easier).
Speaking of schools, the Lakewood School Board “Citizens Advisory Committee” will take names through Sept. 30; forms to show your interest are available in the offices of each school or on E. Main at the Administrative Offices. Your correspondent has turned his name in, and we hope for a full complement to review and share community input with the elected members of the board in their decision-making.
Focusing back to Hebron, our “Respond To The Call” service project for Sept. 11 will start at 10 am in Canal Park. Come down Cumberland to the picnic shelter entrance through the day, and we’ll be painting up a storm on a clear, sunny day (right?) across the two bridges and the gazebo with the shelter. All skill levels are welcome!
Folks often ask, and I try to mention every few months or so here in print, why do I/don’t I get the “Booster” at my home? The official answer is that the Advocate motor carriers are “supposed” to deliver, on Friday, Saturday, or Sunday, a copy to each home that isn’t a subscriber to the daily Advocate. Right here in Hebron, Monte tries to get one to every house, which I take very kindly, but each route is a little different.
They also leave a stack at places like Hometown Deli, the Duke Station, and so on. Basically, I can’t get anyone to deliver you a copy, but moving into Hebron proper would help! I understand that almost 25,000 copies of the Booster go out each week; there is also a “Booster West” that carries different columns for Alexandria, Johnstown, and Granville, which runs another 10,000-plus, but since they don’t get “Hebron Crossroads,” they’re just missing out, aren’t they?
Sadly, I often get asked about a fellow (actually, a series of fellows, but hold on) who stands at the I-70 exit ramp onto Rt. 37 near the truck stops with a sign “Will work for food.” Friends, let me tell you as a pastor: don’t give him/them a dime, not one thin dime. Try offering them a ride to a place with a “now hiring” sign, or tell them you’ve got a cord of wood to split for $7 an hour, and you’ll see what I mean.
This is an all too typical scam, staffed by a number of guys carefully dressed badly, but not too badly, all holding the same sign that they pass to each other at “shift change.” They count on guilty consciences heading home from a good day at work in tough economic times, who want to help someone less fortunate with a twenty or a fifty out the window and drive on. An actual offer to help will result in a well-timed stammering stall until the light changes, and then back to the next line of cars.
As long as they stay well to one side, don’t walk out into the road until beckoned over, and start to walk away each time they see a Highway Patrol cruiser coming up the ramp, there’s nothing that can be done officially about them. They are (generally) breaking no laws, and when you hand over cash, you hand over all right to how that money is used.
I’ve had opportunity to follow up on cons like this before, and I can say that at least for me, I have never, ever seen one of these “will work for food” situations at roadside ever be anything other than a scam at best, and a well-run if utterly amoral business at worst.
A few months back, drinking coffee and reading a newspaper before a meeting in Heath, I saw a fellow working the 30th and Hebron Rd. corner get a large wad of bills from a very sweet, well-intentioned fast food employee, along with a cold drink on a hot day. Not long after she walked back into the store, he started to fold his sign under his arm, and knowing what I’ve seen before, I decided to drive past him, stop, and see where he ended up.
Sure enough, he walked down 30th to another restaurant, where behind it was waiting his “boss,” I assume, who got a portion of his cash from five pockets before they got in the car. A Cadillac. A new Cadillac. With whitewalls.
If you want to help the needy, good for you; there is much need around us. Talk to Lynne Cash at Buckeye Lake LEADS (928-1435), or call my heroes at the Licking County Housing Coalition (345-1970). Or call your church! They know how to help in ways that really help.
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and knows that Hebron area folk really want to help; if you have ideas or suggestions for community causes, call 928-4066 or e-mail him at disciple@voyager.net.
Wednesday, August 27, 2003
Hebron Crossroads 8-31-03
by Jeff Gill
A couple weeks ago, on a Sunday evening out at Evans Park on Refugee Road, Prime Producers 4-H celebrated the close of their season of activity.
Some 40 model rockets went up into the air once, twice, some even four times, as the 4-H’ers launched their group projects towards, if not into, space.
The sky and the winds co-operated, with the gentlest of breezes and feathers of cirrus clouds giving depth to the air and a screen for the changing colors of sunset. The last few launches, as the sun dipped below the western horizons, had visible orange trails capped in a red-gold “pop” as the descent charge fired from the top of the engine to push off the nosecone and deploy the drogue chute.
Martha and Dave Cable have done a great job with these 40 kids since February, and they deserve congratulations all around for their work, which has resulted in recognition through Hartford Fair judging for the members in woodwork, cooking, sewing, and of course, model rocketry among many others. The rockets, by the way, were homemade by the kids, with fins hand cut from card stock, drinking straws for launch guides, and cones each uniquely lathe turned from foam. After a few flights they also had a fair amount of duct tape on them, too, but they flew just as well as store bought.
The Cable’s son David let my Little Guy “launch” his rocket a few times after the first round, and take it home, where he hasn’t hardly let it out of his sight.
By the time you read this, we’ll have started kindergarten at Hebron Elementary; it’s hard to believe that he wasn’t even two when we first moved back to Licking County four years ago this week. This is our fifth Sweet Corn Festival, and from being our “first night” outing with a babe in stroller, to this year riding in the Greater Buckeye Lake Historical Society rocketship: what a long, strange trip it’s been! The rocket, by the way, is from one of the great old rides at Buckeye Lake Park that the society has on display in their Museum on Walnut near the Post Office.
Oh, and y’all have put up with my blather for two years now; thanks for writing and e-mailing and calling and saying nice things in line at the store, and a shout-out to Les Anspaugh and Joe Reed who let us know these columns actually get read.
The best way I can thank excellent editor Amy, though, is to get back to work. . .
Local updates: Hebron Village blood drive on Friday, Sept. 5 from 1 to 6 pm; come bleed with us! “Respond To The Call” community service project on Sept. 11 (and can you believe that it has been two years now since that grim day?), starting at the picnic shelter from 10 am to ??? as we paint our way to the two pedestrian bridges at the east end of the park.
Lakewood football got started, and we’ve got some home games coming up to cheer on down at Calhoun Field; the grounds crew would like us to not park on the grass, since we’ve got plenty of paved parking all around the campus, from the intermediate school to the back of the high school. C’mon folks, most of us need the walk, and you’ll have to work off the Band Booster food anyhow; let the people with the blue handicap permits have the close-in spots and stay off the grass! Save the mudbog event for the Lancaster fair next month.
Lakewood Band. . .well, all I can say is you gotta see ‘em, but they have a new look, new uniforms, new routines, and even a new walk off the field. Yeah, and a drum major with a few tricks too. . .
Speaking of schools, a little news reminder combined with an editorial. The staff at all the buildings (and for you foreign readers, this pretty much applies to all of Licking County and beyond, I’m fairly sure) tell parents that kids can’t bring medication of any sort to school, including cough drops or throat lozenges, and that kids found giving any kind of pill or capsule to a fellow student, even if it’s a painkiller found at the cash register of any convenience store, will be suspended.
I’ve heard quite a few parents groan, roll their eyes, and say how dumb they think that kind of rule is. Friends, can I ask you all to think it through for a moment? The teachers and staff are not pharmacists, and they can’t waste time monitoring medication transfers on the playground or in the back rows of classrooms. You may say it’s easy to tell “drugs” from a Tylenol, but that’s not their job and I don’t want it to be, either (and how do you know it’s that easy, hmmmm?).
The point is there’s no need for kids to be medicating other kids. Once swallowed, if a student says “he just gave me an aspirin,” how do you know what that was? So please, back up the administration on this one, and tell your kids this is how it needs to be, and send necessary meds to school through the office with the signed form.
Between paving potholed parking and painting in almost every building (love those steps at Hebron), Lakewood schools are looking good. We're looking good with some improvement from the last year, with room to look better at "continuous improvement" (see http://www.ode.state.oh.us/reportcardfiles/2002-2003/DRATINGS/047993.pdf for full info), and with the average experience of our teaching staff at 14 years, one year better than the state average. Let’s keep Lakewood looking good, inside and out!
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and parent of a new kindergardener (try typing that word three times fast); if you have first day tales or news of local interest, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
by Jeff Gill
A couple weeks ago, on a Sunday evening out at Evans Park on Refugee Road, Prime Producers 4-H celebrated the close of their season of activity.
Some 40 model rockets went up into the air once, twice, some even four times, as the 4-H’ers launched their group projects towards, if not into, space.
The sky and the winds co-operated, with the gentlest of breezes and feathers of cirrus clouds giving depth to the air and a screen for the changing colors of sunset. The last few launches, as the sun dipped below the western horizons, had visible orange trails capped in a red-gold “pop” as the descent charge fired from the top of the engine to push off the nosecone and deploy the drogue chute.
Martha and Dave Cable have done a great job with these 40 kids since February, and they deserve congratulations all around for their work, which has resulted in recognition through Hartford Fair judging for the members in woodwork, cooking, sewing, and of course, model rocketry among many others. The rockets, by the way, were homemade by the kids, with fins hand cut from card stock, drinking straws for launch guides, and cones each uniquely lathe turned from foam. After a few flights they also had a fair amount of duct tape on them, too, but they flew just as well as store bought.
The Cable’s son David let my Little Guy “launch” his rocket a few times after the first round, and take it home, where he hasn’t hardly let it out of his sight.
By the time you read this, we’ll have started kindergarten at Hebron Elementary; it’s hard to believe that he wasn’t even two when we first moved back to Licking County four years ago this week. This is our fifth Sweet Corn Festival, and from being our “first night” outing with a babe in stroller, to this year riding in the Greater Buckeye Lake Historical Society rocketship: what a long, strange trip it’s been! The rocket, by the way, is from one of the great old rides at Buckeye Lake Park that the society has on display in their Museum on Walnut near the Post Office.
Oh, and y’all have put up with my blather for two years now; thanks for writing and e-mailing and calling and saying nice things in line at the store, and a shout-out to Les Anspaugh and Joe Reed who let us know these columns actually get read.
The best way I can thank excellent editor Amy, though, is to get back to work. . .
Local updates: Hebron Village blood drive on Friday, Sept. 5 from 1 to 6 pm; come bleed with us! “Respond To The Call” community service project on Sept. 11 (and can you believe that it has been two years now since that grim day?), starting at the picnic shelter from 10 am to ??? as we paint our way to the two pedestrian bridges at the east end of the park.
Lakewood football got started, and we’ve got some home games coming up to cheer on down at Calhoun Field; the grounds crew would like us to not park on the grass, since we’ve got plenty of paved parking all around the campus, from the intermediate school to the back of the high school. C’mon folks, most of us need the walk, and you’ll have to work off the Band Booster food anyhow; let the people with the blue handicap permits have the close-in spots and stay off the grass! Save the mudbog event for the Lancaster fair next month.
Lakewood Band. . .well, all I can say is you gotta see ‘em, but they have a new look, new uniforms, new routines, and even a new walk off the field. Yeah, and a drum major with a few tricks too. . .
Speaking of schools, a little news reminder combined with an editorial. The staff at all the buildings (and for you foreign readers, this pretty much applies to all of Licking County and beyond, I’m fairly sure) tell parents that kids can’t bring medication of any sort to school, including cough drops or throat lozenges, and that kids found giving any kind of pill or capsule to a fellow student, even if it’s a painkiller found at the cash register of any convenience store, will be suspended.
I’ve heard quite a few parents groan, roll their eyes, and say how dumb they think that kind of rule is. Friends, can I ask you all to think it through for a moment? The teachers and staff are not pharmacists, and they can’t waste time monitoring medication transfers on the playground or in the back rows of classrooms. You may say it’s easy to tell “drugs” from a Tylenol, but that’s not their job and I don’t want it to be, either (and how do you know it’s that easy, hmmmm?).
The point is there’s no need for kids to be medicating other kids. Once swallowed, if a student says “he just gave me an aspirin,” how do you know what that was? So please, back up the administration on this one, and tell your kids this is how it needs to be, and send necessary meds to school through the office with the signed form.
Between paving potholed parking and painting in almost every building (love those steps at Hebron), Lakewood schools are looking good. We're looking good with some improvement from the last year, with room to look better at "continuous improvement" (see http://www.ode.state.oh.us/reportcardfiles/2002-2003/DRATINGS/047993.pdf for full info), and with the average experience of our teaching staff at 14 years, one year better than the state average. Let’s keep Lakewood looking good, inside and out!
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and parent of a new kindergardener (try typing that word three times fast); if you have first day tales or news of local interest, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
Tuesday, August 26, 2003
Notes From My Knapsack – The Church Window Sept. 2003
Many of you saw the article in the Advocate recently that quoted Bob and John Slater, along with their sister Mary Alice Dernberger, about the impact of Buckeye Egg Farm’s closing on local markets for farmers large and small.
We often don’t think about how what we don’t like is involved in what we do like: washing dishes makes the next hearty meal possible, kitty cats have litter boxes to clean, and lovely green lawns gotta be mowed. We want cheap eggs and family farms in our area, but it is so easy to say “and Buckeye Egg has to go!”
I’m sure I’d be less than thrilled to have 4000 layers in a battery just west of us, but there are ways we all have to tend to the maintenance and building of community that are easy to miss is reality right now.
“Respond To The Call” will have a number of us observing the second anniversary of 9-11 with a very everyday task that needs doing: painting the bridges and shelters in Canal Park. It doesn’t just happen, but peeling and decay do, so obviously the need to tend things on an ongoing basis is part of the very structure of creation – nothing just takes care of itself.
That would seem to me a reason to believe that we’re called to find a deeper meaning, a wider value, and even some joy is those mundane tasks that God refuses to take away from us. We may find someone else to do some of them, we may be able to say “not in my backyard,” but sooner or later we all have to do our part somehow, and why not find the blessing in the middle of what appears to be a curse?
Since I’m already looking forward to the fellowship of the work and the satisfaction at the end of the day that we felt last year with the fire hydrant project, I know that must be part of the blessing. But are there more blessings waiting to be found?
Why don’t you come join us and see? Beth Walters and I will be looking for you at Cumberland and Canal on Thursday, Sept. 11 after 10 am, when we commemorate the day and “Respond To The Call!”
In Grace and Peace, Pastor Jeff
Fall Bible Study: The Book of Acts!
Wed. at 10 am starting October 1
Coming soon: “The Purpose-Driven Life”
An invitation will be extended to the entire congregation
From the elders, who are finishing a study of
“The Purpose-Driven Church,”
to join in a 40 day discipline of reading/listening
together with these 40 meditations.
If you’ve already read Rick Warren’s book,
please let Pastor Jeff know!
Many of you saw the article in the Advocate recently that quoted Bob and John Slater, along with their sister Mary Alice Dernberger, about the impact of Buckeye Egg Farm’s closing on local markets for farmers large and small.
We often don’t think about how what we don’t like is involved in what we do like: washing dishes makes the next hearty meal possible, kitty cats have litter boxes to clean, and lovely green lawns gotta be mowed. We want cheap eggs and family farms in our area, but it is so easy to say “and Buckeye Egg has to go!”
I’m sure I’d be less than thrilled to have 4000 layers in a battery just west of us, but there are ways we all have to tend to the maintenance and building of community that are easy to miss is reality right now.
“Respond To The Call” will have a number of us observing the second anniversary of 9-11 with a very everyday task that needs doing: painting the bridges and shelters in Canal Park. It doesn’t just happen, but peeling and decay do, so obviously the need to tend things on an ongoing basis is part of the very structure of creation – nothing just takes care of itself.
That would seem to me a reason to believe that we’re called to find a deeper meaning, a wider value, and even some joy is those mundane tasks that God refuses to take away from us. We may find someone else to do some of them, we may be able to say “not in my backyard,” but sooner or later we all have to do our part somehow, and why not find the blessing in the middle of what appears to be a curse?
Since I’m already looking forward to the fellowship of the work and the satisfaction at the end of the day that we felt last year with the fire hydrant project, I know that must be part of the blessing. But are there more blessings waiting to be found?
Why don’t you come join us and see? Beth Walters and I will be looking for you at Cumberland and Canal on Thursday, Sept. 11 after 10 am, when we commemorate the day and “Respond To The Call!”
In Grace and Peace, Pastor Jeff
Fall Bible Study: The Book of Acts!
Wed. at 10 am starting October 1
Coming soon: “The Purpose-Driven Life”
An invitation will be extended to the entire congregation
From the elders, who are finishing a study of
“The Purpose-Driven Church,”
to join in a 40 day discipline of reading/listening
together with these 40 meditations.
If you’ve already read Rick Warren’s book,
please let Pastor Jeff know!
Thursday, August 21, 2003
Hebron Crossroads 8-24-03
By Jeff Gill
"Respond To The Call" returns to Hebron in a few weeks; that’s the name of our community service project commemorating 9-11.
Last year, we brought people from all over our community together to then send them out, with the guidance of the Hebron Fire Department, to paint fire hydrants (yellow, in case you forgot) and got about 150 of them done for the HFD. We had firefighters, schoolkids from Hebron Elementary, staff from the village offices, and folks from most of the churches in town, all responding to the call.
September 11 falls on a Thursday this year. The plan, as Beth Walters and I have discussed with helpful guidance from Mike McFarland, village administrator, is to gather this year at Canal Park at 10 am, and spend the day painting there.
Levi Glaser is doing his Eagle Scout project painting the bleachers, so that takes care of the south side of Cumberland! We’ll be starting at the picnic shelter and working north, painting the shelter, gazebo, and tables, coating the floors of each, and then heading along the old canal bed to the two pedestrian bridges on either side of the Ohio outline flower bed that Mary Alice Dernberger keeps up for us. If we have time, we may even weed the bed of rosebushes next to it that was moved when the municipal building relocated (another Eagle project, one that Beau Heberlin put in and was relocated to Canal Park).
So we’ll be painting wood stain brown, floor coating grey, rustproof silver on the handrails and supports, and a good solid white on the decking of the two bridges. Pick your work clothes accordingly, or add some new colors to your yellow from last year.
On those bridges over the old canal channel, you might notice as you step up that the stone supports on the ends are Black Hand Gorge sandstone, pieces from the locks and bridge supports of the Ohio & Erie Canal itself. As we commemorate some recent history, we’ll be honoring our local history as well.
As you can tell, there’ll be painting for folks who like ladders, jobs at eye level for all heights, sitting down work, and lots of unskilled labor to share. Everyone can participate!
Like last year, we know not everyone is available between 10 am and 6 pm on a weekday, but in fact quite a few are, and this is both a service project and our own way of having a memorial: an active memorial, which year by year will make a positive impact on our community. Beth and I hope that next year we might be able to aim towards putting up a shelter house at Evans Park to match the historic one at Canal Park. . .but that’s for ’04. For this year, just plan to "Respond To The Call!"
The village staff is also sponsoring their next American Red Cross Blood Drive on Friday, Sept. 5, from 1 to 6 pm. Dale McFarland knows your preference by now back at the canteen after you’ve donated, and if you haven’t tried the variety of cookies and goodies offered after you’ve left behind a measly little pint of blood, you need to drop by and let the ARC staff and Hebron volunteers help relieve you of it. Thanks also to Bowman Chevrolet, who held a blood drive in their new showroom recently.
Speaking of volunteers at the Hebron Crossroads, at a recent village council meeting, a presentation was made to Kim Halter showing appreciation for all the organizational work on the Ohio Bicentennial Wagon Train. The clear panel of the display shows the Hebron seal, with the historic "Crossroads of Ohio" both announced in text and shown in outline: a very appropriate thank you for that event.
Mayor Cliff Mason presented one of these to Kim, and also one to your correspondent, for traffic control above and beyond the call of necessity, no doubt. We’re still seeing some really neat pictures from the wagon train, including the cover of "Country Living" magazine (thanks to David Dernberger on that). Kim is looking forward to pulling her rocker up to the side of US 40 in 2053 to watch the holographic wagon train roll by; somebody else will be in charge, she says. We’ll see. . .
This week, friends, school is back in session. Watch the corners and sidewalks early in morning as we get used to the new/old traffic patterns, especially out in the country where the corn is high at the intersections, blocking easy views during most of the year.
Drive carefully, thank a teacher if you can read this, and enjoy the new beginnings of a school year just starting, especially for new kindergardeners!
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church, and dad for a brand new kindergardener (as if you didn’t know that already); if you have school updates or other news to share, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
By Jeff Gill
"Respond To The Call" returns to Hebron in a few weeks; that’s the name of our community service project commemorating 9-11.
Last year, we brought people from all over our community together to then send them out, with the guidance of the Hebron Fire Department, to paint fire hydrants (yellow, in case you forgot) and got about 150 of them done for the HFD. We had firefighters, schoolkids from Hebron Elementary, staff from the village offices, and folks from most of the churches in town, all responding to the call.
September 11 falls on a Thursday this year. The plan, as Beth Walters and I have discussed with helpful guidance from Mike McFarland, village administrator, is to gather this year at Canal Park at 10 am, and spend the day painting there.
Levi Glaser is doing his Eagle Scout project painting the bleachers, so that takes care of the south side of Cumberland! We’ll be starting at the picnic shelter and working north, painting the shelter, gazebo, and tables, coating the floors of each, and then heading along the old canal bed to the two pedestrian bridges on either side of the Ohio outline flower bed that Mary Alice Dernberger keeps up for us. If we have time, we may even weed the bed of rosebushes next to it that was moved when the municipal building relocated (another Eagle project, one that Beau Heberlin put in and was relocated to Canal Park).
So we’ll be painting wood stain brown, floor coating grey, rustproof silver on the handrails and supports, and a good solid white on the decking of the two bridges. Pick your work clothes accordingly, or add some new colors to your yellow from last year.
On those bridges over the old canal channel, you might notice as you step up that the stone supports on the ends are Black Hand Gorge sandstone, pieces from the locks and bridge supports of the Ohio & Erie Canal itself. As we commemorate some recent history, we’ll be honoring our local history as well.
As you can tell, there’ll be painting for folks who like ladders, jobs at eye level for all heights, sitting down work, and lots of unskilled labor to share. Everyone can participate!
Like last year, we know not everyone is available between 10 am and 6 pm on a weekday, but in fact quite a few are, and this is both a service project and our own way of having a memorial: an active memorial, which year by year will make a positive impact on our community. Beth and I hope that next year we might be able to aim towards putting up a shelter house at Evans Park to match the historic one at Canal Park. . .but that’s for ’04. For this year, just plan to "Respond To The Call!"
The village staff is also sponsoring their next American Red Cross Blood Drive on Friday, Sept. 5, from 1 to 6 pm. Dale McFarland knows your preference by now back at the canteen after you’ve donated, and if you haven’t tried the variety of cookies and goodies offered after you’ve left behind a measly little pint of blood, you need to drop by and let the ARC staff and Hebron volunteers help relieve you of it. Thanks also to Bowman Chevrolet, who held a blood drive in their new showroom recently.
Speaking of volunteers at the Hebron Crossroads, at a recent village council meeting, a presentation was made to Kim Halter showing appreciation for all the organizational work on the Ohio Bicentennial Wagon Train. The clear panel of the display shows the Hebron seal, with the historic "Crossroads of Ohio" both announced in text and shown in outline: a very appropriate thank you for that event.
Mayor Cliff Mason presented one of these to Kim, and also one to your correspondent, for traffic control above and beyond the call of necessity, no doubt. We’re still seeing some really neat pictures from the wagon train, including the cover of "Country Living" magazine (thanks to David Dernberger on that). Kim is looking forward to pulling her rocker up to the side of US 40 in 2053 to watch the holographic wagon train roll by; somebody else will be in charge, she says. We’ll see. . .
This week, friends, school is back in session. Watch the corners and sidewalks early in morning as we get used to the new/old traffic patterns, especially out in the country where the corn is high at the intersections, blocking easy views during most of the year.
Drive carefully, thank a teacher if you can read this, and enjoy the new beginnings of a school year just starting, especially for new kindergardeners!
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church, and dad for a brand new kindergardener (as if you didn’t know that already); if you have school updates or other news to share, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
Tuesday, August 12, 2003
Hebron Crossroads 8-17-03
by Jeff Gill
Red. Deep, dark, glowing, vital red; cherry tomato red, with streaks of russet yellow echoing the seeds rougher gold inside.
There's no doubting that the tomato crop this year is small and slow, no doubt to a severe drought of sunlight with the excessive surplus of water, agua, liquid precipitation.
But oh, do they taste sweet and strong!
No one has left tomatoes on my doorstep anonymously, nor have they appeared on the driver's seat of cars incautiously left unlocked as in years past. There won't be quite the same abundance of marinara, or "red sauce" this fall, or of homemade salsa in the Gill residence, but the cherry tomatoes tast absolutely heavenly.
We've got a pot of basil going, too; it has a strong and savory taste to it as well. Nature is going for density over quantity this year, and we'd best enjoy it. Scissored up over a cold pasta salad or just on top of angel hair and olive oil with parmesan is a great late summer dish, especially as i'm way too lazy to make pesto. (Climb the mountain, pick the pinon nuts, crack and grind them, wash the tree resin off my. . .what? They have pine nuts at Kroger? Nevermind. . .)
Green is also dark and deep right now. Francis Mayes, the poet, talks of "the green fuse" of spring, but it's the mid to late August explosion of wildflowers straight up into the sky that amazes me with nature's resiliency and surprise. Ironweed in particular: boom, right up in a deep green shading to purple stem with flanging leaves, growing seemingly overnight and then a kapow of glowing purple majesty.
Brown is starting to fringe the trees and fields. Searing heat at the margins plus the work of voracious mites on the locust trees gives a distinct hint of autumn in various corners and pockets, but with less yellow than you might expect with as cool a summer as we've had.
Dark pockets of dim shadow are filling the voids under the heavy canopy along treelines; even at noon -- no, especially at noon, the dim recesses of the woodlots are a kind of dark you only see in high summer, a darkness suffused with light.
But there's also no whiteness of sumulus clouds like you get in August, with the ridged columns of white lined out by a shadowed blue that hints of the water inside them, waiting to fall thousands of feet to pund you tomatoes yet again.
And the pink of evening cloudbanks in the west, shimmering into a magenta on the way to night.
Turquoise at the dawn to come around again, and the light strikes the dull silver of the cages around the tomato plants, with their heavy green leaves spilling out through the rungs, shading the occasional dot of. . .red, as a larger sphere in the east bumps up over the horizon to echo its smaller cousin hanging from the vine, glowing tomato red in the early morning murk low in the sky.
So, have you bought a box of crayons yet for your child's back to school? Lord have mercy: lime fizz green, neon yellow, electric gonzo blue, ethnically diverse brown, snazz-bo silver, fright-house severed finger red, zone of lethal radioactivity chartreuse. (I may have made up a few of those last ones) What will the Little Guy color with these? Kindergarten will be a fun year, I have no doubt; we just want him to enjoy it, too.
But I do hope that the primary grades still use the primary colors, occasionally. Still, we have only ourselves to blame for the fact that he thinks that rodents have three fingers (see Mouse, Mickey), octopi have pets who are made up of fast food parts (you don't watch Oswald and Weenie-dog?), and that a box of crayons have no colors found in nature.
On the other hand, when I read him "The Wind In The Willows," the idea of a Water Rat rowing a Mole across The River isn't strange to him at all, and that's how it should be as the summer of 2003 comes to a close.
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and proud possessor of a 64 color box of crayons, the old set that includes "burnt sienna." If you have stories of lost colors, primary or elementary, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
by Jeff Gill
Red. Deep, dark, glowing, vital red; cherry tomato red, with streaks of russet yellow echoing the seeds rougher gold inside.
There's no doubting that the tomato crop this year is small and slow, no doubt to a severe drought of sunlight with the excessive surplus of water, agua, liquid precipitation.
But oh, do they taste sweet and strong!
No one has left tomatoes on my doorstep anonymously, nor have they appeared on the driver's seat of cars incautiously left unlocked as in years past. There won't be quite the same abundance of marinara, or "red sauce" this fall, or of homemade salsa in the Gill residence, but the cherry tomatoes tast absolutely heavenly.
We've got a pot of basil going, too; it has a strong and savory taste to it as well. Nature is going for density over quantity this year, and we'd best enjoy it. Scissored up over a cold pasta salad or just on top of angel hair and olive oil with parmesan is a great late summer dish, especially as i'm way too lazy to make pesto. (Climb the mountain, pick the pinon nuts, crack and grind them, wash the tree resin off my. . .what? They have pine nuts at Kroger? Nevermind. . .)
Green is also dark and deep right now. Francis Mayes, the poet, talks of "the green fuse" of spring, but it's the mid to late August explosion of wildflowers straight up into the sky that amazes me with nature's resiliency and surprise. Ironweed in particular: boom, right up in a deep green shading to purple stem with flanging leaves, growing seemingly overnight and then a kapow of glowing purple majesty.
Brown is starting to fringe the trees and fields. Searing heat at the margins plus the work of voracious mites on the locust trees gives a distinct hint of autumn in various corners and pockets, but with less yellow than you might expect with as cool a summer as we've had.
Dark pockets of dim shadow are filling the voids under the heavy canopy along treelines; even at noon -- no, especially at noon, the dim recesses of the woodlots are a kind of dark you only see in high summer, a darkness suffused with light.
But there's also no whiteness of sumulus clouds like you get in August, with the ridged columns of white lined out by a shadowed blue that hints of the water inside them, waiting to fall thousands of feet to pund you tomatoes yet again.
And the pink of evening cloudbanks in the west, shimmering into a magenta on the way to night.
Turquoise at the dawn to come around again, and the light strikes the dull silver of the cages around the tomato plants, with their heavy green leaves spilling out through the rungs, shading the occasional dot of. . .red, as a larger sphere in the east bumps up over the horizon to echo its smaller cousin hanging from the vine, glowing tomato red in the early morning murk low in the sky.
So, have you bought a box of crayons yet for your child's back to school? Lord have mercy: lime fizz green, neon yellow, electric gonzo blue, ethnically diverse brown, snazz-bo silver, fright-house severed finger red, zone of lethal radioactivity chartreuse. (I may have made up a few of those last ones) What will the Little Guy color with these? Kindergarten will be a fun year, I have no doubt; we just want him to enjoy it, too.
But I do hope that the primary grades still use the primary colors, occasionally. Still, we have only ourselves to blame for the fact that he thinks that rodents have three fingers (see Mouse, Mickey), octopi have pets who are made up of fast food parts (you don't watch Oswald and Weenie-dog?), and that a box of crayons have no colors found in nature.
On the other hand, when I read him "The Wind In The Willows," the idea of a Water Rat rowing a Mole across The River isn't strange to him at all, and that's how it should be as the summer of 2003 comes to a close.
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church and proud possessor of a 64 color box of crayons, the old set that includes "burnt sienna." If you have stories of lost colors, primary or elementary, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
Sweet Corn Festival 2003
By Jeff Gill
“Heritage Village at Historic Lions Park” is the latest attraction at the 57th annual Millersport Sweet Corn Festival. Starting Wednesday, August 27 and ending at midnight on Saturday the 30th, the midway, entertainment stages, and all the long standing attractions will join the newest, attracting tens of thousands to this village at the west end of Buckeye Lake.
That, and lots of buttered sweet corn to eat!
“We started out in 1996 to create an area where our history will live on for the benefit of future generations,” says Ron Keller, general chairman for this year’s edition of the festival. “Ohio statehood and our 200 year history are visible in this collection of historic buildings.” Near the Lions’ clubhouse on the festival grounds, a local “Greenfield Village” of relocated and refurbished structures, from a covered bridge and a canal barge to an early gas station and pharmacy, is open for visitors with hosts and hostesses scheduled through the run of the event.
For a county with no official “county fair,” residents of Licking County have a wide range of choices through the end of the summer. Especially in the southern half of the county, residents are kept busy with following the 4-H displays up to the Hartford Fair in Croton (just ended), supporting many local non-profit organizations through their food booths at the Sweet Corn Festival, and winding down the season (and starting the fall) at the Fairfield County Fair in Lancaster.
But groups like the local Lions Clubs, the Buckeye Lake Youth Association, and Lakewood Band Boosters all raise a significant portion of their funds each year through this four day celebration of food. “We have 80 charitable groups from eight counties in central Ohio who sell food and raise funds at the festival,” says Keller. “Many people don’t know how important that part of the Sweet Corn Festival is.”
The Millersport Lions Club is the sponsoring organization, as they have been since 1946 when the first plans were laid after World War II to put on a fun and fund-raising activity for the Buckeye Lake area. Fairfield, Licking, Perry, and Franklin Counties have always been well represented in both the participant and the visitor side of the festival, and some visitors have been spotted from as far away as Australia and Japan.
This is probably one of the most family friendly activities in central Ohio, with no entry fee to the festival grounds and entertainment on four free stages. You can pay for parking if you want, but free parking is easily available, and the cost for the midway attractions is some of the lowest you’ll find.
As for food, from ears of butter-dunked sweet corn to boxes of freshly fried doughnuts, you won’t find better deals anywhere, anytime.
For most festival goers, Wednesday at 6 pm is the real beginning of the program, with the Sweet Corn Parade starting out at Millersport High School and turning downtown out to the festival park. Many area marching bands are making their first public appearance since organizing at band camp earlier in the month, and are testing out new music and routines.
With the state “festival season” winding down, an amazing number of “Strawberry Queens” and “Pork Princesses” from all over Ohio appear in the parade, a pretty counterpoint to the raucous assortment of Shriner vehicles and antique fire engines and other assorted entries, along with some very attractive floats and rolling displays by a variety of local organizations and businesses.
With the Sweet Corn Festival in full gear, each night is some kind of “corn eating contest,” with Saturday night culminating in the Grand Champion Corn Eating Contest, featuring each night’s champs.
Saturday, August 30, starts the last day of the affair with the Ken Keener Classic 5-K Run, open to all ages (call 740-246-6101 to register). Word has it that runners are looking for fresh cut French fries as soon as the race is over, causing the deep fryers to start early, as they’ll run late to the midnight drawing for the $10,000 Sweet Corn Festival Raffle Grand Prize.
Through the last day is also the Amateur Talent Show on the bandstand stage, with cash prizes for the top five finishers (call 740-246-5680 to register).
When the last box of doughnuts is sold for church coffee hour the next morning, and the raffle announcement echoes off the emptying grounds of Lions Park, it will be both the end of the 57th Sweet Corn Festival, and the start of the 361 days of planning for the 58th, which will be as it always has on the Wednesday through Saturday before Labor Day, 2004!
For more information and a complete schedule of the 57th Millersport Sweet Corn Festival, click on www.sweetcornfest.com.
By Jeff Gill
“Heritage Village at Historic Lions Park” is the latest attraction at the 57th annual Millersport Sweet Corn Festival. Starting Wednesday, August 27 and ending at midnight on Saturday the 30th, the midway, entertainment stages, and all the long standing attractions will join the newest, attracting tens of thousands to this village at the west end of Buckeye Lake.
That, and lots of buttered sweet corn to eat!
“We started out in 1996 to create an area where our history will live on for the benefit of future generations,” says Ron Keller, general chairman for this year’s edition of the festival. “Ohio statehood and our 200 year history are visible in this collection of historic buildings.” Near the Lions’ clubhouse on the festival grounds, a local “Greenfield Village” of relocated and refurbished structures, from a covered bridge and a canal barge to an early gas station and pharmacy, is open for visitors with hosts and hostesses scheduled through the run of the event.
For a county with no official “county fair,” residents of Licking County have a wide range of choices through the end of the summer. Especially in the southern half of the county, residents are kept busy with following the 4-H displays up to the Hartford Fair in Croton (just ended), supporting many local non-profit organizations through their food booths at the Sweet Corn Festival, and winding down the season (and starting the fall) at the Fairfield County Fair in Lancaster.
But groups like the local Lions Clubs, the Buckeye Lake Youth Association, and Lakewood Band Boosters all raise a significant portion of their funds each year through this four day celebration of food. “We have 80 charitable groups from eight counties in central Ohio who sell food and raise funds at the festival,” says Keller. “Many people don’t know how important that part of the Sweet Corn Festival is.”
The Millersport Lions Club is the sponsoring organization, as they have been since 1946 when the first plans were laid after World War II to put on a fun and fund-raising activity for the Buckeye Lake area. Fairfield, Licking, Perry, and Franklin Counties have always been well represented in both the participant and the visitor side of the festival, and some visitors have been spotted from as far away as Australia and Japan.
This is probably one of the most family friendly activities in central Ohio, with no entry fee to the festival grounds and entertainment on four free stages. You can pay for parking if you want, but free parking is easily available, and the cost for the midway attractions is some of the lowest you’ll find.
As for food, from ears of butter-dunked sweet corn to boxes of freshly fried doughnuts, you won’t find better deals anywhere, anytime.
For most festival goers, Wednesday at 6 pm is the real beginning of the program, with the Sweet Corn Parade starting out at Millersport High School and turning downtown out to the festival park. Many area marching bands are making their first public appearance since organizing at band camp earlier in the month, and are testing out new music and routines.
With the state “festival season” winding down, an amazing number of “Strawberry Queens” and “Pork Princesses” from all over Ohio appear in the parade, a pretty counterpoint to the raucous assortment of Shriner vehicles and antique fire engines and other assorted entries, along with some very attractive floats and rolling displays by a variety of local organizations and businesses.
With the Sweet Corn Festival in full gear, each night is some kind of “corn eating contest,” with Saturday night culminating in the Grand Champion Corn Eating Contest, featuring each night’s champs.
Saturday, August 30, starts the last day of the affair with the Ken Keener Classic 5-K Run, open to all ages (call 740-246-6101 to register). Word has it that runners are looking for fresh cut French fries as soon as the race is over, causing the deep fryers to start early, as they’ll run late to the midnight drawing for the $10,000 Sweet Corn Festival Raffle Grand Prize.
Through the last day is also the Amateur Talent Show on the bandstand stage, with cash prizes for the top five finishers (call 740-246-5680 to register).
When the last box of doughnuts is sold for church coffee hour the next morning, and the raffle announcement echoes off the emptying grounds of Lions Park, it will be both the end of the 57th Sweet Corn Festival, and the start of the 361 days of planning for the 58th, which will be as it always has on the Wednesday through Saturday before Labor Day, 2004!
For more information and a complete schedule of the 57th Millersport Sweet Corn Festival, click on www.sweetcornfest.com.
Thursday, August 07, 2003
Hebron Crossroads 8-10-03
By Jeff Gill
There’s a figure from Newark’s history who passed through our Hebron Crossroads many times, needing some special attention from all corners of Licking County.
Israel Dille, whose portrait by local legend Amzi Godden hangs in the Sherwood-Davidson House along the Licking County Historical Society row on 7th Street in Newark, was born near the beginning point for our recent bicentennial wagon train, at Dille’s Bottom near Martin’s Ferry. He came into this world about the same time as Ohio became a state, in 1802, and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery after his death in Washington DC in 1874. His monument. . .well, more about that later.
From a pioneer family in the Cleveland area and teaching in the Somerset vicinity, Israel apprenticed to the law, and shortly after moved to become one the first true citizens of Licking County’s new seat of government. He was an early county commissioner, a mayor of Newark, held a variety of other county offices, and was the leading light in the first "board of education" in the county in 1848, and his daughter Anna was the first graduate of Newark schools in 1853.
He helped to bring the now 150 year old Ohio State Fair to Licking County, put on within the vast embrace of the Great Circle earthworks now at the entrance to Newark Earthworks State Memorial. It is still known to some old-timers as "the Fairgrounds Circle" since it was the county fair grounds for many years afterwards.
One of the organizers of the nascent Republican Party, then a new "third" party on the American scene, he led the movement to support freedom for slaves, education for all, and equality of opportunity for everyone (including his daughters). He lost his only son, William, in the Civil War, and served in our nation’s capital from the Lincoln administration to the time of his death.
An elderly man by the standards of his day in DC, he was notably healthy and active, and caught the attention of fellow amateur scientists, antiquarians, and lovers of literature, including Joseph Henry, the first secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, and poet Walt Whitman, who noted with sorrow Dille’s sudden death in his letters.
I was remembering Israel Dille a few weeks ago when I saw an article in "The Atlantic Monthly" about Whitman which references a significant but little known prose work of his called "Democratic Vistas." Finding it on line and reading the whole, again I ran into Mr. Dille, who is unmistakably described in the essay as a respected friend and perceptive political analyst.
Clearly, we much to be proud of with someone like Dille in our local history (and I haven’t told the half of it!); he was known by his contemporaries as an authority on archaeology, botany, geology, and meterology (keeping Licking County’s first systematic weather records).
But Israel himself, a good Episcopalian, wasn’t given to public displays, and in fact ordered that his grave site, on the highest spot in Cedar Hill (which he was influential in establishing) be marked with no gravestone at all. There’s an echo here of Christopher Wren, architect of St. Paul’s cathedral: "If you desire to see his monument, look around."
Not long ago, though, there was on the grounds of the county courthouse a plaque noting that, long before Dawes Arboretum, there was on the Courthouse Square a "Newark Botanic Gardens," an extension of the many and varied plantings once surrounding his home just north of where Hudson and St. Clair now intersect. Dille established these gardens during his term as mayor as another silent gift to all of Licking County, but the marker was discreetly maintained as one place the citizens would see this illustrious name preserved.
Somehow, a few years back, it disappeared. Could it be returned or restored? Let’s think about it, as we mull over our patriotic reflections this bicentennial year.
Dille, with his forward looking and advanced thinking approach to public policy, was on my mind recently as Congress had a hissy-fit over a program that clearly not a one of them understood. I can just see the twinkle Amzi Godden tried to capture in his marvelous portrait (you really should go see it) as Dille might read through the idea of a "forecasting marketplace" for the finest minds of the country to place bets on likely future events.
Then he’d log on to the internet and click on www.longbets.org to see how his forecasts were doing in attracting speculation and investment. That’s right, the very thing senators and representatives derided as "bizarre foolishness" has one of the few self-supporting presences on the web, started by two of the founders of Wired Magazine and the Whole Earth Review. We need some Israel Dille’s in public life again, that’s for sure.
Astronomy and deep time would have sparked Dille’s twinkle as well; late at night, look to the southwest to see Mars as close as it’s been in 60,000 years (paging Dr. Wells, attention, H.G. Wells, your agent is calling). Bright and fiery, even a good pair of binoculars will reveal some green shot through the orange background, and at the right angle, a jaunty cap of white at the north pole. We’ll be celebrating Ohio’s quadricentennial before Mars is anywhere near this close again (AD 2200 or so), so go check the Red Planet out tonight.
The Perseid meteor shower is this weekend, but a full moon all night Aug. 12 is right on top of the peak activity evening, so we won’t have much to record in the make a wish department. Just salute the boundless curiosity and creativity of Licking County pioneers as you gaze at the heavens this weekend.
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church; he has a pair of bionculars and isn’t afraid to use ‘em! If you have news to use, just e-mail disciple@voyager.net or call 928-4066.
By Jeff Gill
There’s a figure from Newark’s history who passed through our Hebron Crossroads many times, needing some special attention from all corners of Licking County.
Israel Dille, whose portrait by local legend Amzi Godden hangs in the Sherwood-Davidson House along the Licking County Historical Society row on 7th Street in Newark, was born near the beginning point for our recent bicentennial wagon train, at Dille’s Bottom near Martin’s Ferry. He came into this world about the same time as Ohio became a state, in 1802, and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery after his death in Washington DC in 1874. His monument. . .well, more about that later.
From a pioneer family in the Cleveland area and teaching in the Somerset vicinity, Israel apprenticed to the law, and shortly after moved to become one the first true citizens of Licking County’s new seat of government. He was an early county commissioner, a mayor of Newark, held a variety of other county offices, and was the leading light in the first "board of education" in the county in 1848, and his daughter Anna was the first graduate of Newark schools in 1853.
He helped to bring the now 150 year old Ohio State Fair to Licking County, put on within the vast embrace of the Great Circle earthworks now at the entrance to Newark Earthworks State Memorial. It is still known to some old-timers as "the Fairgrounds Circle" since it was the county fair grounds for many years afterwards.
One of the organizers of the nascent Republican Party, then a new "third" party on the American scene, he led the movement to support freedom for slaves, education for all, and equality of opportunity for everyone (including his daughters). He lost his only son, William, in the Civil War, and served in our nation’s capital from the Lincoln administration to the time of his death.
An elderly man by the standards of his day in DC, he was notably healthy and active, and caught the attention of fellow amateur scientists, antiquarians, and lovers of literature, including Joseph Henry, the first secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, and poet Walt Whitman, who noted with sorrow Dille’s sudden death in his letters.
I was remembering Israel Dille a few weeks ago when I saw an article in "The Atlantic Monthly" about Whitman which references a significant but little known prose work of his called "Democratic Vistas." Finding it on line and reading the whole, again I ran into Mr. Dille, who is unmistakably described in the essay as a respected friend and perceptive political analyst.
Clearly, we much to be proud of with someone like Dille in our local history (and I haven’t told the half of it!); he was known by his contemporaries as an authority on archaeology, botany, geology, and meterology (keeping Licking County’s first systematic weather records).
But Israel himself, a good Episcopalian, wasn’t given to public displays, and in fact ordered that his grave site, on the highest spot in Cedar Hill (which he was influential in establishing) be marked with no gravestone at all. There’s an echo here of Christopher Wren, architect of St. Paul’s cathedral: "If you desire to see his monument, look around."
Not long ago, though, there was on the grounds of the county courthouse a plaque noting that, long before Dawes Arboretum, there was on the Courthouse Square a "Newark Botanic Gardens," an extension of the many and varied plantings once surrounding his home just north of where Hudson and St. Clair now intersect. Dille established these gardens during his term as mayor as another silent gift to all of Licking County, but the marker was discreetly maintained as one place the citizens would see this illustrious name preserved.
Somehow, a few years back, it disappeared. Could it be returned or restored? Let’s think about it, as we mull over our patriotic reflections this bicentennial year.
Dille, with his forward looking and advanced thinking approach to public policy, was on my mind recently as Congress had a hissy-fit over a program that clearly not a one of them understood. I can just see the twinkle Amzi Godden tried to capture in his marvelous portrait (you really should go see it) as Dille might read through the idea of a "forecasting marketplace" for the finest minds of the country to place bets on likely future events.
Then he’d log on to the internet and click on www.longbets.org to see how his forecasts were doing in attracting speculation and investment. That’s right, the very thing senators and representatives derided as "bizarre foolishness" has one of the few self-supporting presences on the web, started by two of the founders of Wired Magazine and the Whole Earth Review. We need some Israel Dille’s in public life again, that’s for sure.
Astronomy and deep time would have sparked Dille’s twinkle as well; late at night, look to the southwest to see Mars as close as it’s been in 60,000 years (paging Dr. Wells, attention, H.G. Wells, your agent is calling). Bright and fiery, even a good pair of binoculars will reveal some green shot through the orange background, and at the right angle, a jaunty cap of white at the north pole. We’ll be celebrating Ohio’s quadricentennial before Mars is anywhere near this close again (AD 2200 or so), so go check the Red Planet out tonight.
The Perseid meteor shower is this weekend, but a full moon all night Aug. 12 is right on top of the peak activity evening, so we won’t have much to record in the make a wish department. Just salute the boundless curiosity and creativity of Licking County pioneers as you gaze at the heavens this weekend.
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church; he has a pair of bionculars and isn’t afraid to use ‘em! If you have news to use, just e-mail disciple@voyager.net or call 928-4066.
Sunday, July 27, 2003
Hebron Crossroads 8-03-03
By Jeff Gill
Hartford Fair time is coming around again, which means that summer is winding down. Of course, summer isn’t over, no matter what the temperature does or the first day of school starts on, until the Millersport Sweet Corn Festival winds up, so we’ve got some time.
Before I turn to the fair (or fairs), kindergarten prescreening is next week on Wednesday and Thursday at Hebron Elementary, where our Little Guy is starting this year. If your little one is starting kindergarten this year (and I hear some wonderful new kindergarten teachers have been hired for the building already to meet the all-day needs for Hebron and Buckeye Lake), make sure they get a time slot next week to get ready for this big new step in their life. Call 928-2661 for more info.
Supposedly, we have no “official county fair” in Licking County, but wherever our 4-H judging is shown off is official enough for me. Prime Producers 4-H is getting their rocket powered booth ready, with some help from Martha Neutron or someone like that, and I can’t wait to see it and the barrel racing and the hog barns up in Croton (Hartford P.O.), or is it Hartford (Croton P.O.)? Anyhow, sometime remind me to tell you about the story of the Halcyon Academy. . .
But this is the 145th Hartford Fair up in the northwest corner of Licking County, where since before the Civil War the lambs have been shown and the tomatoes compared. Quilts, cobblers, whittlin’, hobby projects, and all the stuff of which dreams are made of. . .or at least idle activities are made of can be found on display.
Way back when the first eastern settlers came to Licking County, the Beards and the Greens and the Bevers and the Cooperriders and the Staddens (to name just a few pioneer families) wondered how the next farm’s harvest came in, or how their calves looked compared to grandma’s whiskey rubdown treatment.
Even preceding the venerable Hartford Fair, Isaac and Ezra would lean over the fence rails and say, “Howzabout those turnips? You use livestock manure, or mix it with swamp mud?” Next thing you know, you’ve got a county fair . . . official or otherwise.
So this week, I hope to see you up there; the omnipresent Newspaper Network of Central Ohio probably has a booth there (insert editorial comment here, Amy!) and maybe we can move the Hebron Crossroads temporarily up there for a week.
They aren’t kidding when they call it “145 years of family traditions,” and their year-round web site, http://www.hartfordfair.com has a full schedule and other information on it (or call 893-4881, but they won’t answer too fast next week, and don’t ask to page someone). Along with the Ohio State Fair, which is also beginning about now, they are one of the real perks of living in Central Ohio, and you really should take advantage of them!
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church, and a pretty fair fairgoer; if you have tales of the midway or sad stories of elephant ears gone wrong, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
By Jeff Gill
Hartford Fair time is coming around again, which means that summer is winding down. Of course, summer isn’t over, no matter what the temperature does or the first day of school starts on, until the Millersport Sweet Corn Festival winds up, so we’ve got some time.
Before I turn to the fair (or fairs), kindergarten prescreening is next week on Wednesday and Thursday at Hebron Elementary, where our Little Guy is starting this year. If your little one is starting kindergarten this year (and I hear some wonderful new kindergarten teachers have been hired for the building already to meet the all-day needs for Hebron and Buckeye Lake), make sure they get a time slot next week to get ready for this big new step in their life. Call 928-2661 for more info.
Supposedly, we have no “official county fair” in Licking County, but wherever our 4-H judging is shown off is official enough for me. Prime Producers 4-H is getting their rocket powered booth ready, with some help from Martha Neutron or someone like that, and I can’t wait to see it and the barrel racing and the hog barns up in Croton (Hartford P.O.), or is it Hartford (Croton P.O.)? Anyhow, sometime remind me to tell you about the story of the Halcyon Academy. . .
But this is the 145th Hartford Fair up in the northwest corner of Licking County, where since before the Civil War the lambs have been shown and the tomatoes compared. Quilts, cobblers, whittlin’, hobby projects, and all the stuff of which dreams are made of. . .or at least idle activities are made of can be found on display.
Way back when the first eastern settlers came to Licking County, the Beards and the Greens and the Bevers and the Cooperriders and the Staddens (to name just a few pioneer families) wondered how the next farm’s harvest came in, or how their calves looked compared to grandma’s whiskey rubdown treatment.
Even preceding the venerable Hartford Fair, Isaac and Ezra would lean over the fence rails and say, “Howzabout those turnips? You use livestock manure, or mix it with swamp mud?” Next thing you know, you’ve got a county fair . . . official or otherwise.
So this week, I hope to see you up there; the omnipresent Newspaper Network of Central Ohio probably has a booth there (insert editorial comment here, Amy!) and maybe we can move the Hebron Crossroads temporarily up there for a week.
They aren’t kidding when they call it “145 years of family traditions,” and their year-round web site, http://www.hartfordfair.com has a full schedule and other information on it (or call 893-4881, but they won’t answer too fast next week, and don’t ask to page someone). Along with the Ohio State Fair, which is also beginning about now, they are one of the real perks of living in Central Ohio, and you really should take advantage of them!
Jeff Gill is pastor of Hebron Christian Church, and a pretty fair fairgoer; if you have tales of the midway or sad stories of elephant ears gone wrong, call 928-4066 or e-mail disciple@voyager.net.
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