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The WLW transmitter tower in Mason, Ohio, a distinctive diamond-shaped Blaw-Knox tower.. The 13-county Cincinnati metropolitan area (including Northern Kentucky and Southeast Indiana) is the 30th largest radio market in the United States, with an estimated 1.8 million listeners aged 12 and above as of September 2016. [2]
List of alternative weekly newspapers in the United States; List of business newspapers in the United States; List of family-owned newspapers in the United States; List of Jewish newspapers in the United States; List of LGBTQ periodicals in the United States; List of student newspapers in the United States; List of supermarket tabloids in the ...
Carthage had 148 inhabitants in the 1830 United States census. [3] Carthage was incorporated [4] as a village in 1868 and then annexed [5] into Cincinnati in 1911. Carthage began to experience significant Hispanic migration in the 1990s, resulting in the creation of a Hispanic community around the business district along Vine Street. [6]
Carthage Township is one of the fourteen townships of Athens County, Ohio, United States. The 2020 census found 1,459 people in the township. [3] Geography
CANTON − An old newspaper box has a new and potentially lifesaving purpose. Ohio's first newspaper box turned Narcan distributor made its debut this week in Canton, promising free access to the ...
Carthage, Ohio may refer to: Carthage, Cincinnati; Etna, Licking County, Ohio, formerly called Carthage; Kent, Ohio, includes an area that was originally platted as ...
Evanston is one of the 52 neighborhoods of Cincinnati, Ohio. A mostly African-American neighborhood since the 1960s, it is known as "the educating community", [citation needed] and is bordered by the neighborhoods of East Walnut Hills, Hyde Park, North Avondale, and Walnut Hills, as well as the City of Norwood. The population was 8,838 at the ...
The newspaper was owned and published by Brown Publishing Company, which publishes more than fifteen daily newspapers and over sixty weekly newspapers. In 2007, it was sold to American Consolidated Media. [3] American Consolidated Media owned more than 100 newspapers in 18 distinct regions of the United States. [4]