JULIE G. TAYLOR
In 2014, Julie G. Taylor became director of the Department of Children and Family Services with the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation.
In 2014, Julie G. Taylor became director of the Department of Children and Family Services with the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation.
Toni Goodin-Whitegrass came to her current position of generalist attorney in the legal department of the Puyallup Tribe of Indians in 2005.
In the late 1980s, Harriet McDonald and her husband established The Doe Fund and the Ready, Willing & Able program.
Doris Laverne Jackson-Hardwick spent 32 years with the Department of Veterans Affairs, retiring as a military services coordinator in 2015.
Mayor Veronica Smith-Creer has proudly served the city and people of El Dorado, Arkansas, in her office since 2019.
Priscilla E. Flint-Banks is a licensed minister and community organizer who has been the director of the Black Economic Justice Institute since 2012.
Ruth-Arlene W. Howe dedicated almost 40 years to Simmons College and Boston College Law School as a professor of legal interviewing, family, and elder law.
Jacqueline Haessly, PhD, is a writer, teacher, coach, and the founder of Peacemaking Associates and the Milwaukee Peace Education Library.
Since 1999, Kay Cowie excelled as an advocate for children with disabilities, working with school districts and/or one-on-one with parents.
Cathy A. Arsenault currently holds the position of co-chair of the patient and family advisory council of the UNC REX Healthcare System.
Kye Kilpatrick Fox serves as a community activist, the president and the chief executive officer of Urban Advisory Services.
An accomplished citizen activist in Athens, Ohio, Lois Deimel Whealey previously excelled as a teacher for nearly 10 years.
Having earned distinction as a program manager with IBM, Shirley B. Berardo initially launched her professional journey with the IBM Club.
Ruthee Goldkorn currently excels as an ambassador for the Abilities Expo, which is a resource for the disabled community.
Vera Matty worked as an advocacy and communications officer for the Office of the United Nations Special Coordinator for Middle East Peace Process.
A talented writer of songs and freelance features, Carol M. Booth has garnered a reputation among notable luminaries in the fields of art and entertainment.
Lauren Book is the founder and chief executive officer of Lauren’s Kids and senator of District 32 of the Florida State Legislature in Broward County.
Kathrine Switzer famously became the first woman ever to finish the Boston Marathon in 1967, thus changing her life forever.
Inspired by the beauty of the California coast, Phyllis Faber dedicated much of her career to environmental advocacy. She moved to the state in 1970.
Marquis Who’s Who was established in 1898 and promptly began publishing biographical data in 1899. More than 120 years ago, our founder, Albert Nelson Marquis, established a standard of excellence with the first publication of Who’s Who in America.