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WMFD-TV (channel 68) is an independent television station in Mansfield, Ohio, United States. It is owned by Mid-State Television, Inc., along with sister radio stations WVNO-FM (106.1) and WRGM (1440 AM/106.7 FM). The stations share studios on Park Avenue West in Ontario, Ohio (with a Mansfield mailing address), where WMFD-TV's transmitter is ...
World Spice Merchants (WSM) is a shop on Western Avenue [1] near Pike Place Market in Seattle's Central Waterfront district. The store stocks cookbooks , curries , herbs , salts, "exotic" seasonings , [ 2 ] spices and rubs , [ 3 ] as well as teas from around the world.
Scripps positioned Fine Living as a multi-platform brand, having launched a companion website, and purchasing a 49% stake in a free-circulation magazine that would be co-branded with the channel. [2] [3] [4] Scripps planned to invest $100 million in original programming for Fine Living. [5] The network was launched on August 21, 2002.
Into this frenzy of growth comes Regatta, a new waterfront development from Breakwater Hospitality, the group behind The Wharf Miami and Wharf Fort Lauderdale, Carousel Club at Gulfstream Park in ...
The mall opened in 1969 in the Mansfield suburb of Ontario near US 30. It occupied a 64-acre site, with Lazarus, Sears, and O'Neil's (later May Company Ohio, then Kaufmann's) as its anchor stores. Jacobs Visconsi Jacobs developed the property, and first announced it in 1966. [2] The Lazarus store was their first location outside the Columbus ...
Toledo, Ohio WUPW: Fox: No Formerly listed in local Windsor TV Guides Toledo, Ohio WTVG-DT 13.2: The CW: Partial Added to Windsor-area TV Guides on October 17, 2009, replaces WNWO-TV: Toledo, Ohio WGTE-TV: PBS: Dropped No longer listed in local Windsor TV Guides, reception is fair to poor in downtown Windsor.
SmacNally's Waterfront Bar & Grill, at 180 Irvin Garrish Highway in Ocracoke, N.C. The owners are planning to open a location in Holden Beach in May 2024.
The Alaskan Way Seawall is a seawall which runs for approximately 7,166 feet (2,184 m) along the Elliott Bay waterfront southwest of downtown Seattle from Bay Street to S. Washington Street. [1] The seawall was being rebuilt in the 2010s as part of a waterfront redevelopment megaproject estimated to cost over $1 billion.