Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Meeting Date City Country Region Notes Reference; 78: 2023, October 21–26: Hamburg Germany TBD (25th AGM) 77: 2023, June 12–15: Washington, D.C. USA TBD: 76: 2023, March 11–16
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... [21] [l] 21 st: December 1940: Tuskegee, Alabama ... 2023 – July 16, 2023: George R. Brown Convention ...
Washington, D.C. The 1987 convention endorsed Jesse Jackson for president. [6] Jackson requested DSA not endorse him. [7] November 10–12, 1989 Baltimore, Maryland: This convention was the first convention to be held after the death of Michael Harrington, founder of DSOC and DSA. [6] [8] November 8–11, 1991 Chicago, Illinois [9] November 11 ...
4 [1860 June] Caleb Cushing resigned as permanent chair. 5 [1860 June] Douglas and Johnson were chosen as the candidates of the Front Street Theater convention after most of the Southern delegations walked out. The convention bolters soon formed their own convention, located at the Maryland Institute, also in Baltimore, on June 28, 1860.
Statehouse Convention Center Little Rock, Arkansas [75] 75 th: July 13, 2008 – July 17, 2008: Sheraton Birmingham Birmingham, Alabama: Alpha Phi [76] 76 th: July 22, 2010 – July 30, 2010: Raleigh Convention Center Raleigh, North Carolina: Iota Iota [77] [78] 77 th: July 27, 2011 – July 31, 2011: Washington, D.C. Alpha Omega [1] [79] [r ...
This page was last edited on 28 December 2022, at 15:12 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Delta Sigma Theta is an international organization of college-educated women. Delta Sigma Theta held its first national convention in 1919 in Washington, D.C. The national body of Delta Sigma Theta previously met annually, but due to several factors, the main of which is the establishment of regions and regional leadership, the National body currently meets at wikt:biennial conventions, and ...
1 This convention was known as the National Union Convention. 2 This convention was known as the National Union Republican Convention. 3 Sherman, who had been elected vice president in 1908, died six days before the 1912 election; he was subsequently replaced as Republican vice-presidential nominee by Nicholas M. Butler of New York.