found: nuc86-64234: Ngûgĩ wa Thiong'o The trial of Dedan Kimathi, 1983, c1976(hdg. on NjP rept.: Mugo, Micere Githae; usage: Micere Githae Mugo)
found: LC data base, 3-14-88(hdg.: Mugo, Micere Githae; MLC hdg.: Githae-Mugo, Micere)
found: Mugo, M.G. African orature and human rights, 1991:t.p. (M.M.G. Mugo)
found: Dictionary of African Biography, accessed March 9, 2015, via Oxford African American Studies Center database:(Mugo, Micere Githae; fiction writer, pan-africanist; born 1942 in Kenya; left Kenya as political exile; PhD in literature, University of New Brunswick, Canada (1973); associate professorship at the University of Nairobi (1973); the first woman dean of the Faculty of Arts (1980-1982); a visiting professor at Saint Lawrence University (Canton, New York) (1982-1984); associate professorship in the Department of Curriculum and Arts Education at the University of Zimbabwe (1984-1991); subsequently became a Zimbabwean national; regained her Kenyan passport and nationality (2009); a BA (with honors) from the University of East Africa in Makerere, Uganda; a full professor of African American Studies at Syracuse University; a recipient of the 2004-2007 Meredith Professorship for Teaching Excellence; a strong anti-FGM (female genital mutilation) activist; gave distinguished lectures at the University of North Carolina and Cleveland State University; served on the editorial boards of journals such as “Transition, African Commentary”, “African Women”; a speaker for Amnesty International)
found: Mīcere Gīthae Mūgo, 2022:pages xxxiii-xxxix (born Mīcere Njūrī Gīthae (and baptised Madeleine), in Baricho, Kirinyaga, 12 December, 1942; first and only Black student in an all-white high school in colonial Kenya, Limuru Girls' School, 1961-1962; at Makerere University [still University of East Africa], 1963-1966, B.A. Honors in English and Religious Studies 1966; at University of New Brunswick, 1969-1973, M.A. in Literature and Creative Writing and Ph.D. in Literature, first person from East Africa to earn a doctorate in Literature; left for exile in the United States in 1982 following attempted coup in Kenya; while at Cornell (1992/93) and then Syracuse University, Department of African American Studies, started volunteer programs at prisons, involving students as volunteers; U.S. Amnesty International speaker on African human rights violations, 1995; president and co-founder, Pan African Community of Central New York, 1996/98; retired from Syracuse University in 2015)