Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Monthly Archives: March 2001

The Ohio Historical Society will make its building doctors available for eight clinics for old-building owners during 2001.

The Ohio Young Farmers recognized many state winners at its annual convention, Feb. 17-18.

Here are the details of the three irrigation/wetland demonstration sites created in Ohio.

How much corn to plant this spring is going to be a tough decision for Ohio and Indiana farmers facing either shortages or extremely high prices for nitrogen fertilizers, a key input.

Some of the Roman Empire's most significant archaeological and artistic remains, unearthed in the 1930s, are brought together again for the first time since their discovery in the major exhibition "Antioch: The Lost Ancient City," on view at the Cleveland Museum of Art from March 25 through June 3.

Growers have many new choices in the crop insurance market, but the clock is ticking on the insurance deadline.

Columbiana County volunteer Jean Rhodes recently received one of four Ohio Extension Agents Association Appreciation Awards presented statewide for 2000.

Because of unrelenting human demand for water, Africa's Lake Chad, once one of the continent's largest bodies of fresh water, has shriveled to a ghost of a great lake.

"A Fugitive's Path Escape on the Under Ground Railroad," a new program at Hale Farm and Village, presents a first hand look at a runaway slave's flight to freedom.

Believe it or not, February actually registered above-average temperatures - at least at Ed Copeland's weather station in southern Columbiana County.