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William L. Fiesinger, U.S. Representative from Ohio [11] George L. Forbes, Cleveland City Council President, member of Baldwin-Wallace Board of Trustees [12] Chester K. Gillespie, civil rights lawyer and Ohio state representative from Cleveland; Jane Edna Hunter, L.B. 1925, founder of the Phyllis Wheatley Center for the poor in Cleveland, Ohio [13]
C. J. Prentiss, Ohio State Senator, founder of Policy Matters Ohio; Andrew Puzder (B.A., 1975), CEO of CKE Restaurants/Secretary of Labor-designate (for President-elect Donald Trump) Shawn Richards, member of the National Assembly of Saint Kitts and Nevis [1] Kahlil Seren (MSUS, 2010), first elected mayor of Cleveland Heights, Ohio; Carl B ...
Salmon P. Chase (Ohio governor, abolitionist, U.S.Treasury Secretary and Chief Justice) (Cincinnati) Gary Cohn (National Economic Council Director) (Shaker Heights) James M. Cox (governor, presidential candidate, media mogul) (Dayton) Ephraim Cutler (a framer of Ohio Constitution, abolitionist, longtime Ohio University Trustee (Ames Twp)
The Cleveland mayoral election of 1967 saw the election of Carl Stokes. Stokes was the first elected African American mayor of a major American city (Cleveland was, at the time, the ninth largest city in the United States). [1] [2] His election came alongside the election of Richard G. Hatcher in the 1967 Gary, Indiana, mayoral election.
A. Théodore Abada; Giustina Abbà; Mahyaddin Abbasov; Bud Abbott; Edmund Abbott; William Abbott (Newfoundland politician) Husein Hasanally Abdoolcader; Abdul Alim (folk singer)
Cleveland: Now! was a public and private funding program for the rehabilitation of neighborhoods in Cleveland, Ohio initiated by Mayor Carl B. Stokes on May 1, 1968. [1] Local businesses agreed to cooperate with the Stokes administration on the program "to combat the ills of Cleveland's inner city in order to preserve racial peace."
Samuel S. Cox, U.S. Representative from Ohio (1857–1865), U.S. Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire (1885–1886) serving under President Grover Cleveland, and U.S. Representative from New York (1886–1889) [11] Frank Cremeans, Ohio State Representative [12] William P. Cutler, Representative from Ohio [13] William H. Enochs, Representative from ...
David A. Dangler (born 1826), member of the Ohio House of Representatives and Ohio Senate [3] William H. Daniels, cinematographer; Mac Danzig, mixed martial artist; Khashyar Darvich, documentary filmmaker; Harry L. Davis, mayor, governor; Ruby Dee, actress; Donald DeFreeze, leader of Symbionese Liberation Army; Ed Delahanty, baseball player [4 ...