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Alliance is a city in eastern Stark County, Ohio, United States. The population was 21,672 as of the 2020 census . It was established in 1854 by the merger of three smaller communities and was a manufacturing and railroad hub for much of the 20th century.
It was founded in 1923 as the Alliance Manufacturing Company, located in Alliance, Ohio. At the time the company produced a broad line of consumer, industrial and military products. [ 2 ] In May 1954, the Alliance Manufacturing Company first produced its own garage door opener and called it Genie. [ 2 ]
Ohio Channel on 25.2, World Channel on 25.3, Create on 25.4, PBS Kids on 25.5, WKSU 89.7 FM Simulcast on 25.7, WCLV 90.3 FM Simulcast on 25.8, Cleveland Sight Center Network on 25.9 Cleveland: Millersburg: 13 27 W27DG-D WIVX-LD Independent
Housed at Great Lakes Science Center, the Alliance creates conversations and connections to bring attention to these critical issues and develop an economy in Northeast Ohio around their solutions. Working with its partners and collaborators, the Alliance is coordinating a community-wide effort to improve water quality and access.
A demonic California dad has been arrested for allegedly beheading his 1-year-old son Friday in an early-morning frenzy of violence that also injured his wife and her mother, according to police.
NDIA was founded in May 2015 under the auspices of the PAST Foundation in order to be "a unified voice for local technology training, home broadband access, and public broadband access programs." [7] [8] NDIA is a membership-based organization, and is an independent 501(c)(3) as of 2021. [9] As of October 2021, NDIA had 604 affiliated ...
The Alliance Manufacturing Co. of Alliance, Ohio, and the Astatic Corporation of Conneaut, Ohio, manufactured popular radio and TV booster and rotary antenna systems. These products were heavily advertised for radio use in newspapers starting in the early 1940s, [ 1 ] and for use with commercial television sets from 1949 into the 1960s.
The convention center opened in 1967 as the Convention-Exposition Center. It was renamed the Albert B. Sabin Convention and Exposition Center on November 14, 1985, amid national criticism that Second Street had been named after Pete Rose instead of the pioneering medical researcher. [3] [4] [5] The convention was renovated and expanded in 2006. [6]