Deecy Gray

Dorothy (Deecy) Stephens Gray is President of Public Relations and Government Affairs of the company she founded. In 2019 she served as a delegate and Ambassador designate to the 74th UN General Assembly for the United States. She also is a Commissioner of the American Battle Monuments Commission (ABMC), serves on the George Mason University (GMU) Law School Advisory Committee of the Dean and the Atlas Foundation. Commissioner Gray is a board member of the Virginia Kincaid Philanthropic Foundation and was on the Board of Dubuque Packing Company, the Women's National Bank, Blair House, Citizens for a Sound Economy, the National Philanthropic Trust, and the Foundation for Research on Economics and the Environment, where she was Vice Chair.

Deecy Gray
Gray's official ABMC portrait
NationalityUnited States
OccupationPresident of Public Relations and Government Affairs of the company she founded
Known forDelegate and Ambassador designate to the 74th UN General Assembly for the United States

Gray was appointed to a special task force to study the role of women in the military; in 1980, to the Board of Governors of the United Service Organizations; in 1990, to the U.S. Delegation to the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women; in 1999, to the U.S. Women's Progress Commemorative Commission.

She received her Bachelor of Arts from Marymount College, Tarrytown, and her Master of Arts from St. Louis University. She was Senior Vice President for Government Affairs and International Relations at Hellmuth, Obata, and Kassabaum; an editorial writer for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and other papers. Her first husband was the late Burton C. Gray, son of Gordon Gray and brother of C. Boyden Gray. On September 22, 2007, she married U.S. Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia Circuit Judge Douglas H. Ginsburg.

Sources

gollark: For biology, it's just really complicated, because of being run through ruthless optimization processes for billions of years.
gollark: For encryption you run your data through a transform which makes it basically impossible to get the original data back out again without some other data (the key).
gollark: Encryption, I mean.
gollark: No, that's totally different and unrelated.
gollark: What?

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.