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| Enlarge Image (Jayne Doucette, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution) |
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Vicky Cullen, currently a freelance editor and
writer, was in the thick of communications efforts at Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution for 32 years. She signed on as editor of the
institution’s employee newsletter in 1973 when Paul Fye was director
and assumed growing responsibilities through the terms of succeeding
Directors John Steele, Craig Dorman, and Bob Gagosian. She edited Oceanus magazine for a decade, along with many annual reports, outreach newsletters (including Woods Hole Notes and Woods Hole Currents), and a variety of other publications.
As manager of Graphic Services, Cullen assisted the
transition from mainframe to desktop graphics, with a side excursion
into purchasing typesetting equipment. She initiated the exhibit center
on School Street in the 1970s and, more recently, was WHOI liaison for
the traveling museum exhibit “Extreme Deep: Mission to the Abyss,”
featuring deep-sea hydrothermal vents and WHOI underwater vehicles. She
also wrote and produced publications for the National Science
Foundation, Joint Oceanographic Institutions, and The Oceanography
Society. Cullen’s WHOI swan song was the 186-page Down to the Sea for Science: 75 Years of Ocean Research, Education, and Exploration at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, published in 2005 as part of the institution’s 75th anniversary activities, which she managed.
Cullen was born in Kansas, where her father was
stationed during World War II. She grew up in Nebraska, earned a
bachelor’s degree in political science and English at the University of
Nebraska, and then went to Northwestern University for a master’s
degree in journalism. Her extracurricular activities include
jewelry-making, crochet, quiltingand she just might set up her looms
again, stashed away after she and husband John Waterbury, a WHOI
microbiologist, welcomed their second son in 1986.
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