Marina Harrison

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Marina Harrison
Beauty pageant titleholder
Born Marina Harrison
Fort Sill, Oklahoma
Height 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
Hair color Brown
Eye color Brown
Title(s) Miss Maryland 2003
Miss Maryland USA 2005
Major
competition(s)
Miss America 2004 (3rd runner-up)
Miss USA 2005 (Top 10)
Marina Harrison (born 1981) is a former beauty queen from Maryland who was the first woman to represent that state at both Miss USA and Miss America.

Harrison was born in Fort Sill, Oklahoma, grew up as a military brat, living in locations all around the United States.[1]

Biography

Pageantry

Harrison entered her first pageant at age 21 in the hope of gaining scholarship money after her parents were unable to pay her tuition costs.[1] Harrison first competed in the Miss Maryland 2002 pageant held in June 2002, where she placed fourth runner-up. She returned in 2003 as Miss Burtonsville, and won the Miss Maryland 2003 title.[2] Harrison represented Maryland in the Miss America 2004 pageant held in Atlantic City, New Jersey in September 2003. She placed third runner-up in the nationally televised pageant, which was won by Ericka Dunlap of Florida.

After giving up her Miss Maryland crown, Harrison competed in and won the Miss Maryland USA pageant, which was held in North Bethesda, Maryland in December 2004. Representing Maryland in the Miss USA 2005 pageant held in Baltimore in her home state in April 2005, Harrison placed in the top ten, and was the first delegate from Maryland to make the cut since 1995. In November 2005 she passed on her crown to Melissa DiGiulian of Ocean City who has been her first runner-up the year previously.

Education and Employment

Harrison received a bachelor's degree in communications and public relations from the University of Maryland, College Park in 2003 after collecting more than $52,000 in scholarship money from her pageant participation.[1] Her aspiration is to become White House press secretary[3] and she has been active in all levels of politics. She worked in the Foreign Service Institute of the US Department of State in Arlington, Virginia for three years.[1] She was employed as the Public Information Officer and Director of International Affairs for the Maryland office of the Secretary of State in the Governor's Executive Department.[1] She has previously worked for the Maryland Department of Education and was involved with the former First Lady of Maryland Kendel Ehrlich's Maryland Teen Advisory Council initiatives.[3] Her first experience with the public education policy came when she was by her peers and appointed by the governor to be the Anne Arundel County Student Board Member at age seventeen. At the time she was the only full voting student board member in the United States.[4]

In 2007 Harrison became the new special assistant to Anne Arundel County executive John R. Leopold, with responsibility for communications, media and policy.[5]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 "Marina Harrison profile". Annapolis Chamber of Commerce. 
  2. Turn for the Judges, Miss Maryland 2003 pageant summary (accessed 2006-09-04)
  3. 3.0 3.1 Willis, Roderick (2005-08-15). "Miss Maryland has ambitions beyond beauty pageant". AFRO News. Retrieved 2006-09-04. 
  4. Marina Harrison biography, Miss Maryland USA official website (accessed 2006-09-04)
  5. "Harrison picked as Leopold assistant". Baltimore Sun. 2007-07-11. 

External links

Preceded by
Tia Shorts
Miss Maryland USA
2005
Succeeded by
Melissa DiGiulian
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.