Monthly Archives: March 2003
Columnist off base with poison idea
Starling and sparrow traps better answer than poisoning.
Protecting church from the state
'Separation between church and state' has been misconstrued, misused and misapplied.
Reader says United schools needs change
Politics rearing its head at United Local School District board meetings.
Dairy Channel: Biotech: Science vs. pseudo science
Scientific advance always involves some risk of unintended outcomes. Columbiana County Ag Agent Ernest Oelker ponders comments by Norman Borlaug and their meaning for agriculture.
Bromfield’s world, then and now…
Louis Bromfield was a Pulitzer-prize winning author, but he wanted to be remembered for his contribution to agriculture, writes columnist Judith Sutherland in this week's Farm and Dairy.
Hazard A Guess: Week of March 27, 2003.
Each week Farm and Dairy challenges readers to identify a small tool or gadget.
Read it Again: Week of March 27, 2003.
Each week Farm and Dairy takes a look at what was making news in years gone by.
Learning to let go is a hard lesson
Columnist Kymberly Foster Seabolt lost two of her pets this month. Telling her two children was the hardest thing she ever had to do.
Mend Fences or Tear Them Down?
Although it might be time to check fences and make repairs, there is another way to look at them. This was sent in to family life editor Laurie Marlatt Steeb by an anonymous reader:
On the origin of fireplace tools
Collectors often referred to fireplace implements as "furniture."