Monthly Archives: March 2003
Will their words ever sink in?
In this week's commentary, Editor Susan Crowell discusses why a certain dairy specialist keeps her attention with talk of milk production.
Cool it! Cows can’t stand the heat
Ohio dairymen are losing $18 million each year to heat stress, a hidden production thief.
‘All-American’ doesn’t mean what it used to
Farmers, not Burger King, exemplify the real meaning of what's "American," observes this letter writer in response to a recent Alan Guebert column.
Dairy Excel: Milk prices: Dairy expert searches for 2003 rays of pricing sunshine
Ohio State's milk pricing expert Cam Thraen looks at possible changes that may pull us out of these rock-bottom price blues.
To some, pets always come first
Our companion animals are more than just animals, observes columnist Judith Sutherland. They are, indeed, our companions.
Hazard A Guess: Week of March 6, 2003.
Each week Farm and Dairy challenges readers to identify a small tool or gadget.
Read it Again: Week of March 6, 2003.
Each week Farm and Dairy takes a look at what was making news in years gone by.
Good-bye to the old Neighborhood
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood will always live on, although columnist Kymberly Foster Seabolt wishes more of us would pause to visit the old place now and then.
Napkins? Give Me Two, Please
How do busy families instill table manners, and what happens when the mom herself is a food-dropping klutz? Farm and Family Living columnist Laurie Marlatt Steeb confesses to always needing a napking or two.
Wooden boxes with many uses
Today's cardboard boxes don't have the charm (and uses) of yesteryear's wooden boxes, says columnist Roy Booth.