557 research outputs found

    Senior Recital: Gary Grimes, Tenor; Maggie Mooha, Piano; April 27, 1976

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    Hayden AuditoriumTuesday EveningApril 27, 19768:15 p.m

    Senior Recital: David W. Reece, Tenor; Maggie Mooha, Piano/Harpsichord; April 25, 1976

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    Centennial East Recital HallSunday AfternoonApril 25, 19762:00 p.m

    Student Recital: Betsy Rehm, Flute; Maggie Mooha, Piano; Christine Paputsas, Piano; April 1, 1973

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    Centennial East Recital HallSunday AfternoonApril 1, 19733:00 p.m

    Maggie Anderson, 14th Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Maggie Anderson is the author of three collections of poems, most recently Cold Comfort (University of Pittsburgh, 1986). Recent poems have appeared in Indiana Review, Ploughshares, The American Voice, and other magazines. She is the editor of Hill Daughter: New and Selected Poems of Louise McNeill (University of Pittsburgh, 1991). She is a recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts. Anderson is an assistant professor at Kent State University and teaches undergraduate and graduate poetry workshops and minority literature

    CANCELLED: Author and Activist Maggie Harrison Lowery to Speak

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    Tollefson, Elizabeth. (2018). CANCELLED: Author and Activist Maggie Harrison Lowery to Speak. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/223946

    Maggie Smith, 43rd Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Maggie Smith is the author of four award-winning books of poems: Lamp of the Body; The Well Speaks of Its Own Poison; Good Bones, named by The Washington Post as one of the Five Best Poetry Books of 2017; and her most recent, Keep Moving. Good Bones was called the Official Poem of 2016 by Public Radio International and has been translated into nearly a dozen languages. Smith\u27s poems have appeared in The New York Times, Tin House, The Believer, The Paris Review, Kenyon Review, Best American Poetry, and on the CBS drama Madam Secretary. A Pushcart Prize winner, Smith has received fellowships and awards from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Academy of American Poets, the Ohio Arts Council, and the Sustainable Arts Foundation

    Mrs. Maggie Taylor postcard to Franklin County Woman Suffrage Association, September 24, 1914

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    Mrs. Maggie Taylor sent this letter to the Franklin County Woman Suffrage Association on September 24, 1914, to request suffrage literature. She wanted these materials to distribute them at the Grange Fair. The Franklin County Woman Suffrage Association was formed in 1912, after the Ohio Constitutional Convention elected to bring to a vote the question of removing the words "white male" from the state constitution with regard to voting rights. Headquartered in the Chamber of Commerce building in Columbus, Ohio, the organization put out regular publications, organized public speeches and meetings, distributed literature and held parades in support of the suffrage movement. Women's suffrage in Ohio was defeated in a special election in 1912 and again in 1914 and 1916 before a resolution narrowly passed in 1917 allowing municipal voting by women in Columbus. In 1920, the 19th Amendment passed, extending the vote to women and prohibiting state and federal government from denying suffrage on the basis of sex

    Bessie Unknown to Maggie Roberts (14 November)

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    A friend (or aunt) writes a letter to Maggie, sharing news of deaths and moves.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/ciwar_corresp/1760/thumbnail.jp
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