Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Swanton Local School District is a school district in Northwest Ohio, USA., which serves students who live in the village of Swanton, located in Fulton County and Lucas County, and including portions of Fulton, Swancreek, Spencer, Harding and Swanton townships.
He attended and wrestled for Graham High School, graduating in 1982. [9] He won state championships all four years he was in high school and compiled a 156–1 win–loss record. [10] After high school, Jordan went to the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where he became a two-time NCAA Division I wrestling champion. [11]
New York's 7th congressional district is a congressional district for the United States House of Representatives in New York City. It includes parts of Brooklyn and Queens . Democrat Nydia Velázquez represents the district in Congress.
Construction for the Federal Building began with the demolition of the Old Central Armory and the Cuyahoga County Morgue. The Armory building was designed by Lehman and Schmitt and constructed in 1896. It was made in a late Victorian style with a Gothic exterior. The Morgue, constructed in 1894, showed examples of Egyptian Revival architecture.
Brooklyn Centre was founded in 1812 by James Fish and became the first settlement west of the Cuyahoga River. [5] Two years later, around 200 people lived at Brooklyn Centre. [5]
Cleveland is served by the Cleveland Metropolitan School District. It is the only K–12 district in Ohio under the direct control of the mayor, who appoints a school board. [314] Approximately 1 square mile (2.6 km 2) of Cleveland's Buckeye–Shaker neighborhood is part of the Shaker Heights City School District. The area, which has been a ...
Curtis Samuel (born August 11, 1996) is an American professional football wide receiver for the Buffalo Bills of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the Ohio State Buckeyes, winning the 2015 College Football Playoff National Championship and earning All-American honors in 2016.
In 1855, the institution, then called City Infirmary, moved to its current location about 2 + 1 ⁄ 2 miles southwest of downtown on an 80-acre lot on Scranton Road in Brooklyn Township. The new five-story building was “designed to accommodate both the insane of the city and the sick and infirm poor, and furnish also facilities for clinical ...