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...CLEVELAND: Incumbent Mayor Ralph Perk, a white Republican running against Arnold Pinkney, a black Democrat, won a third term with the help of a large turnout from the city's predominantly white West Side...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Election Roundup | 11/5/1975 | See Source »

...concession speech, school superintendent Pinkney said this loss--his second in a race against Perk--will not stop his efforts to show that "black folks will someday be somebody...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Election Roundup | 11/5/1975 | See Source »

...with his political notions. "This fascist Government has got to fall!" he ranted. "These fascists have done nothing but keep the little man down. The only way you can be free is with this!" he shouted, waving his Luger. Putting the weapon to the head of a newsman, Ron Pinkney, he demanded: "What's the matter, black man? Are you afraid to die? Blacks who do not fight and give into the white man are slave niggers." He turned on a white man and asked him what he did for a living. When the man replied that he worked...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CRIME: A Bureaucrat Berserk | 11/13/1972 | See Source »

...same time he was pandering to anti-black sentiments on the West Side. As it turned out Carney-West, with the result that the combined effort was a dismal failure. A scant three days before the election, the Cleveland Plain Dealer predicted that Carney would edge out Pinkney, with Perk finishing a poor third. What actually occurred was that Perk won handily with 38.7 per cent of the total, beating Pinkney by 16,000 votes. Pseudo-brother Carney finished third with only 28.7 per cent. Carney took 20 per cent of the black vote, but lost to Perk...

Author: By Dan Folster, | Title: What Happened In Cleveland? | 11/23/1971 | See Source »

...seems fairly obvious that in a race between Pinkney, Perk, and Garofoli. Pinkney would have pulled close to 95 per cent of the black vote as well as a good number of liberal white votes. Since the two conservatives would have competed for the same anti-Stokes votes. Pinkney would have won. In politics you win some and you lose some, but this was one that shouldn't have been lost...

Author: By Dan Folster, | Title: What Happened In Cleveland? | 11/23/1971 | See Source »

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