Millennium Magazine_6th Ed
53 Millennium - A Marquis Who’s Who Magazine ARTIST Villager Newspaper Chicago, IL T he first American artist accepted into the Louvre Museum for the 21st century, Dr. Robert P. Workman is known for discovering Workman’s Gate of 22 Stones of Cydonia on Mars in 2003 and invented the Millennium Star Explorer spacecraft. He is a frequent freelance artist and creator of acrylic sculptures. Since 1991, he has served as an artist for the Villager Newspaper in Chicago. Dr. Workman earned a BA in French, MA and Docteur d’Etat, all from École du Louvre. He holds a doctorate in hieroglyphics from the National Institute for Oriental Languages and Civilizations and received a DSc from Université Blaise-Pascal and Université d’Auvergne. Likewise, he has a Diplôme d’études approfondies from Lumière University Lyon II and a PhD from Roosevelt University. Dr. Workman has taught at the University of Arizona, St. Xavier College, University of Oxford and the National Museum of Natural History in France. The recipient of Special Recognition Commemorating 35 Years as an American Artist by the U.S. Senate in 2016, he curated the Virginia I. Workman Collection at Woodson Regional Library in Chicago and founded the Kennedy Park Library. DR. ROBERT P. WORKMAN MUSIC EDUCATOR Wertime’s Keyboard Studio Greencastle, PA T imothy Ray Wertime received a BA in 1976 and an MA in sacred music in 1985, both from Wittenberg University. Growing up in a musical family, he is now a distinguished pianist and organist. Since 1992, he has been a teacher at Wertime’s Music Studio, and since 1995, an organist at St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church in Mercersburg, Pennsylvania. Mr. Wertime was a music teacher at Urbana City Schools from 1986 to 1990, as well as a substitute teacher at Clark County Schools and Springfield City Schools. He has been the choirmaster at St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, an organist at Northminster Presbyterian Church and the director of the youth choir at Covenant Presbyterian Church. An ordained Presbyterian deacon, he was the director of the Civic Boy Choir from 1980 to 1992, which twice sang the National Anthem for the Cincinnati Reds. Mr. Wertime is a member of the American Guild of Organists, English Royal School of ChurchMusic, PennsylvaniaMusicEducatorsAssociation and the National Association for Music Education. Mr. Wertime credits much of his success to his postgraduate overseas studies in England, the encouragement from his family and his self-initiative personality. TIMOTHY RAY WERTIME, MSM ARTS, MEDIA AND ENTERTAINMENT
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