Wow! Sorry to learn of the virus damage. I cannot begin to imagine how much work was in that computer...
Few things are coincidental with BHO. Remain ever vigilant my FRiend.
Well, at least you know that she was physically there during the subject time period with some measure of certainty.
What are the specific years in question?
Had to be the 1959 visit...her year of birth was 1940.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/malcolmx/timeline/timeline2.html
Spring-Summer: Malcolm makes his first trips abroad, visiting Ghana, Sudan, Nigeria, Iran, Syria, Egypt, and the United Arab Republic; illness prevents him from traveling to Mecca. Meets with President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt.
Had to be the 1959 visit...her year of birth was 1940.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/malcolmx/timeline/timeline2.html
Spring-Summer: Malcolm makes his first trips abroad, visiting Ghana, Sudan, Nigeria, Iran, Syria, Egypt, and the United Arab Republic; illness prevents him from traveling to Mecca. Meets with President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt.
http://www.theroot.com/blog/journal-isms/when_maya_angelou_worked_as_a_journalist/
Maya Angelou, the Renaissance woman who assumed roles ranging from poet to calypso singer, for a brief time was also a journalist. Angelou, who died at 86 Wednesday at her home in Winston-Salem, N.C., had her baptism of fire in journalism in 1960.
As Angelou explained on her web page, In my travels in Egypt, I met a civil rights activist over there named Vusumzi Make. We married and then moved to Cairo, in Egypt. That was where I got my job as an editor for The Arab Observer, an English-language magazine. Angelou knew nothing about being a journalist, but David Du Bois, a journalist in Cairo who was the stepson of the renowned intellectual W.E.B. Du Bois, introduced her to Zein Nagati, president of the Middle East Feature News Agency.