DEBBIE REESE POTTS
For seven years, Debbie Reese Potts served as a mental health therapist at Baylor Scott & White Health, the largest nonprofit health care system in Texas.
For seven years, Debbie Reese Potts served as a mental health therapist at Baylor Scott & White Health, the largest nonprofit health care system in Texas.
Naomi Farrell, RN has written for the UN Observer and International Report since 1993 and for the Jerusalem Post since 1995.
With her interest in digital imaging coming to her naturally, Nancy Bogen most recently served as the artistic director of “The Lark Ascending” in New York.
Although Ms. Garrahan-Masters retired as a social worker in 1990, she continued to lend her skills and services to her community.
Since 1998, Anne Fabbri has critiqued art for a number of publications including Philadelphia Daily News and Art in America.
Helen Fioratti serves as the president of noted art gallery, L’Antiquaire and the Connoisseur, Inc., in New York since 1988.
Marjorie Flory currently lends her talents to the field as a freelance writer and editor, which she’s been doing since 1985.
Kathrine Switzer famously became the first woman ever to finish the Boston Marathon in 1967, thus changing her life forever.
As a poet, Alyce Nielson has contributed myriad poems to anthologies, with titles such as “Melting Glaciers,” “The Raven,” and “Words Are Treasures.”
Seeking to share her passion and knowledge with others, Ms. Grue founded the New Orleans Poetry Forum in 1972. The group brought in all types of writers.
Outside of her high school classroom, Ms. Rickerl focuses on her love for poetry. She has released three anthologies of poems.
When Paulette Denise Martin learned to type, a world of career opportunities opened to her. She found the skill to be in very high demand.
Passionate and hardworking, Edith Lederer fell in love with journalism in high school. She was the news editor of her high school paper.
Dr. Anne Montague Blythe is currently focusing her attention on documentaries of, “The History, Mystery, Magic of the Dark Corner, South Carolina.”
Among Temple Grandin’s greatest accomplishments was developing an objective scoring system used for monitoring animal welfare in slaughter plants.
Barbara L. Lobron was a teacher of speech improvement for the New York City Board of Education from 1995 until her retirement in 2014.
Lucille Lang Day is the founder and director of Scarlet Tanager Books, and continues to edit and author poems, articles, books and book reviews.
Susan Heilmann Miller spent more than 40 years in the field of newspaper journalism before retiring to work in ministry.
Carolyn E. Wedin became a professor emeritus of the University of Wisconsin in 1996.
Virginia Ramey Mollenkott has been a member of the editorial board of Studies in Theology & Sexuality since 1997.
Deborah S. Rieselman is the owner of Write Tight Communications and the editor of the Ohio Innocence Project Annual Report for the University of Cincinnati.
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.