In 1988, she received the Rozendaal Award from Hospice of Schenectady. She was a consultant to the Ferrano Center for HIV Positive Infants and Children with AIDS, and for Hospice of Schenectady, Saratoga, and Montgomery Counties. She served on the Governor’s Commission on Children and Youth and the Mental Health Advisory Panel to the governor. She served as a psychologist for a demonstration program that worked with neglected and abandoned children and developed intake evaluation procedures for the project. She opened a private practice in Schenectady, where she counseled individuals, couples, and children, and developed a specialty in therapy for people with life-threatening illnesses. After attending Reed, she transferred to the University of Colorado, where she earned bachelor’s, master’s, and doctorate degrees in psychology. Jenilu Levi Schoolman ’64, of cancer, February 24, 1996, in Schenectady, New York. She is survived by her husband, two daughters, two brothers, a stepson, and a grandson. In 1991, they received the prestigious Writers’ Guild Award for their pilot script for the television series Sisters. The couple received the Scott Newman Award at the 1987 Emmy Awards ceremony for a script they wrote for the series that dealt with alcoholism. From 1986 to 1988, they were supervising producers for Cagney and Lacey, a popular television series about two women police detectives. Beginning in the ’80s, she and her husband, Jonathan Estrin, worked together to write and produce many television mini-series and situation comedies. She moved to California to try her hand at television writing and sold a script which was made into the 1979 movie And Baby Makes Six, an NBC-TV production starring Colleen Dewhurst. In 1972, she published her first novel, Did You Love Daddy When I Was Born? A second novel, Nobody Makes Me Cry, was published in 1975. She began her career as a theatre reviewer and feature writer for newspapers in Connecticut. After graduating from Reed, she earned a master’s degree in English literature from Teachers’ College of Columbia University. She lived in Venice, California and was a television script writer and producer. Shelley Steinman List ’51, of ovarian cancer, May 22, 1996, in New York, New York. Survivors include her husband of 53 years, two sons, seven grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren. She was a member of the Oregon Retired Educators Association and Alpha Delta Kappa, an honorary teachers' sorority. She taught art, foreign languages, and social studies at the Shriners' Hospital for Crippled Children through the Portland Public School District from 1956 until her retirement in 1979. After earning her master's degree from Reed, she earned a special education certificate for teaching crippled children. Marie-Louise Langdell Melvin MAT ’58, June 14, 1995, in Portland. In addition to her husband, she is survived by their son, Roger B. After retirement, the couple traveled in Europe, the Caribbean, Mexico, and Hawaii, as well as making several trips back to Portland. She and her husband were members of the Unitarian Fellowship. She was active in various civic affairs, including the Red Cross, Recording for the Blind, and United Way. Jean worked for many years with Opinion Research Corporation as a proofreader and in other capacities. In 1952, they settled in Princeton, New Jersey. They then spent three years in Medford and three years in Eugene before moving to White Plains, New York, in 1945. She married Kenneth Wells ’30 in the Eliot Hall chapel in 1932 and the couple lived in Portland until 1940. After graduation from Reed, she taught high school in Newberg, Oregon, for several years. Jean Lowery Wells ’30, in April 29, 1995, in Princeton, New Jersey. Survivors include a daughter son Fred Rigby ’70 sister Ethel Lenon Setterberg ’42 brother Harlow Lenon ’35 and two grandchildren, Rachel Kleban ’92, and Matthew Kleban ’96. She was an ICCU nurse for 10 years prior to her retirement in 1980. Vera Lenon Rigby ’37, May 29, 1994, in Lubbock, Texas. Dell Lynn Rhodes Ī B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Results for "L"
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