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How to maintain a living Christmas tree

Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Successfully transplanting a living Christmas tree can be tricky, but following these selection, home care and planting tips will help.

Manure nutrient application takes good management

Thursday, March 5, 2015

The late winter and early spring last year was a time when a large number of manure releases occurred.

Why farming changed the way I eat, part two

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

In this second installment of Why farming changed the way I eat, Ivory Harlow shares the ways farming tuned her into the natural cycle of seasons, localized her eating, and terminated her food waste.

Health insurance premiums to increase

Monday, September 2, 2013

The Ohio Department of Insurance says that individual consumers buying health insurance on the federal government’s health insurance exchange for Ohio will pay an average of 41 percent more than they did in 2013.

I’ll take a couple pulled pork pierogi stacker dogs (this is not your father’s stadium hot dog!)

Monday, April 16, 2012

The great American pastime may be eating hot dogs at the ballpark! Americans will eat 20.5 million hot dogs this season.

Life Out Loud: Appliance services

Thursday, October 27, 2011

I realize that in light of tragedies such as war, famine and natural disaster, losing three convenience appliances in the space of three days is a First World Problem to have, but that doesn’t mean I have to be happy about it.

Grandin: Can’t buy the solution to livestock handling, it takes training

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Downer cows. Bruised animals. Dark cutters. Problems with e. coli, salmonella, or a host of pathogens. Is it the slaughter facility? Are the causes a lack of training or improper training?

Researchers derive accurate estimates for the cost of foodborne illness

Saturday, January 17, 2009

COLUMBUS — Ohio State University researchers have derived new, more accurate estimates for the cost of foodborne illness in Ohio. To do so, they developed a method for more comprehensively measuring the social cost of foodborne illness that could become the standard model used nationwide. New model Using the new model, the best estimate of

Democratic Obama/Clinton split mirrors Republicans of 1880

Saturday, May 24, 2008

MENTOR, Ohio — Political pundits, left, right and center are asking what would happen if the Democrats fail to select a candidate this spring, and go to the August convention in Denver still very divided. Occasionally someone asks, “Has anything like this happened before?” Divided Yes, in the spring of 1880, the Republicans were as

Egyptian pyramids required brute strength and smart construction

Friday, March 28, 2008

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — The Aztecs, Mayans and ancient Egyptians were three very different civilizations with one very large similarity: pyramids. However, of these three ancient cultures, the Egyptians set the standard for what most people recognize as classic pyramid design: massive monuments with a square base and four smooth-sided triangular sides, rising to a