Jump to content

User:Nitinsunny

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

भारतीय विकिपीडियन
Indian Wikipedian

______________________________

______________________________

भारत गणराज्य
Republic of India

This user has been on Wikipedia for 17 years, 3 months and 13 days.
♂This user is male.
This user is not from Mars because life doesn't exist there.
Indian WikipedianThis user is an Indian Wikipedian.
This user hails from Kerala, India.
This user is a Malayali and contributes to WikiProject Kerala.
This user is a Malayali.
en-4This user can contribute with a near-native level of English.
hi-3इस सदस्य को हिन्दी भाषा का प्रवीण स्तर का ज्ञान है।
This user enjoys writing.
Pi ≈ 3.14159 26535 89793 23846 26433 83279 50288 41971 69399 37510 58209 74944 59230 78164 06286 20899 86280 34825 34211 70679 82148 08651 32823 06647 09384 46095 50582 23172 53594 08128 48111 74502 84102 70193 85211 05559 64462 29489 54930 38196 44288 10975 66593 34461 28475 64823 37867 83165 27120 19091 45648 56692 34603 86104 54326 64821 33936 07260 24914 12737 24587 00660 63155 81748 81520 92096 28292 54091 71536 43678 92590 36001 13305 30548 82046 65213 84146 95194 15116 09...

|}








Shirley Graham Du Bois

Shirley Graham Du Bois (November 11, 1896 – March 27, 1977) was an American-Ghanaian writer, playwright, composer, and activist for African-American causes. Born in Indianapolis to an Episcopal minister, she moved with her family throughout the United States as a child. After marrying her first husband, she moved to Paris to study music at the Sorbonne. After her divorce and return to the United States, Graham Du Bois took positions at Howard University and Morgan College before completing her BA and master's at Oberlin College in Ohio. Her first major work was the opera Tom-Tom, which premiered in Cleveland in 1932. She married W. E. B. Du Bois in 1951, and the couple later lived in Ghana, Tanzania and China. She won several prizes, including an Anisfield-Wolf Book Award for her 1949 biography of Benjamin Banneker. This photograph of Graham Du Bois was taken by Carl Van Vechten in 1946.

Photograph credit: Carl Van Vechten; restored by Adam Cuerden

Recently featured:

|-