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Vernon family grows farm with good relations
This Muskingum County farm family started small and built their operation over the years, to about 3,000 acres.
Take time to properly winterize your boat
It’s time to put boats away for the winter. Doing it right will help your vessel last for extra years. Use these quick tips to winterize your boat.
Bayer and Monsanto finalize merger agreement
Bayer and Monsanto sign definitive merger agreement in which Bayer will acquire Monsanto for USD 128 per share. Closing expected by late 2017.
Crop harvest ahead of usual, but yields are down
Fall harvest continues well ahead of the five-year average, but yields are down across the state.
Medina girl finds a way with 4-H animals
Allie Loftis didn’t grow up on a farm, but she found one to help house her livestock projects.
You light up my life
When Mr. Wonderful came home and lit a candle before we sat down to eat, I was noticeably touched. Such a romantic! Scratch that. False alarm. He was looking for a breeze again. Off Being married to the man who considers it his life’s work to hold on to every last bit of energy our
Gulf of Mexico ‘dead zone’ predictions feature uncertainty
A team of NOAA-supported scientists is predicting that this year’s Gulf of Mexico hypoxic zone could range from a low of approximately 1,197 square miles to as much as 6,213 square miles.
Johns Hopkins researchers use Twitter to track health trends
By sorting these health-related tweets into electronic “piles,” Mark Dredze and Michael J. Paul uncovered intriguing patterns about allergies, flu cases, insomnia, cancer, obesity, depression, pain and other ailments.
Yearbook awakens memories of small town life
Sometimes, the smallest contribution pays big dividends. This past Saturday my hometown held its annual homecoming festivities. Though it was hotter than blue blazes, I just had to venture down the hill to the park to be a part of the day. After chatting with friends and family, I went to see what was being
A conversation with ornithologist and author
I met Bridget Stutchbury in the early 1980s at the University of Oklahoma Biological Station. I was teaching ornithology, and she was a visiting graduate student from Yale looking for a place to study the social behavior of purple martins. We had dozens of pairs of martins in six apartment houses right on campus, so






