Yearly Archives: 2001
Hazard A Guess: Week off Sept. 27, 2001
Each week Farm and Dairy challenges readers to identify a small tool or gadget.
Read it Again: Week off Sept. 27, 2001.
Each week Farm and Diary takes a look at what was making news in years gone by.
ONLY WORDS
Farm and Family Living columnist Laurie Marlatt Steeb writes about values and permanenc.
Cameo history told at glass museum
Antique columnist Roy Booth explores the history of that masterpiece of 2000 years of glass-making, Cameo glass.
Wayne County youth donate $24,341 from 4-H livestock sale to Red Cross
Just when you think you know these kids, they turn around and surprise you by doing something like this, said Mike Priest, past president of the board of the Wayne County Chapter of the American Red Cross and a former exhibitor in the Wayne County junior fair.
Wealth of nations relies on Jack Frost
Economists William Masters of Purdue University and Margaret McMillan of Tufts University say frost plays two important roles in establishing the haves and the have nots of the world.
Timing critical to forage harvest
A combination of in-field observation and more scientific measurements gives producers the most accurate indicator of optimal harvest date.
Terrorist act could hurt U.S. agriculture
Shifts in national priorities could leave the farm bill and commodity support at the bottom of the list.
Stark County farm tour set Oct. 7
The 12th annual Stark County Farm Bureau drive-it-yourself tour will consist of five stops, including A & J Farms, Kridler Gardens, Motts Greenhouse, Park Farms/St. Peters site, and Raber Dairy Farms.
Picasso exhibition opens Oct. 28 at Cleveland Museum of Art
The approximately 36 paintings and all of the nine drawings featured in "Picasso: The Artist's Studio" encompass a large range of styles - realist, cubist, symbolist, surrealist, abstract and classical - and span Picasso's lengthy career, from as early as 15 until two years before his death at age 91.








