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2007
Whitman College Alumni Award Recipients
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Sally
Rodgers Award for Lifelong Achievement
The
Sally Rodgers Award for Lifelong Achievement was created in
1999 to honor Sally Rodgers, long time director of alumni
relations. This award is given every other year by the Alumni
Association to "an individual/or individuals who graduated
from Whitman College over 50 years ago and whose life exemplifies
the qualities of a liberal arts education." This award is
presented at the 50-Plus Reunion.The two recipients for 2007 are: Mary Shuham Dore '50 and John Keil Richards '40 |
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2007 Sally Rodgers Award for Lifelong Achievement Recipient Mary Shuham Dore '50 , who passed away Nov. 6, 2007, and her husband Fred, a lawyer, state senator and later state Supreme Court justice, turned their grief over the 1961 "crib death" of their daughter, Christine, into a lifelong prevention crusade against what is known today as Sudden Infant Death Syndrome and its devastating effect on parent The Dores believed all parents deserved to know why their babies had died of what pediatricians then vaguely referred to as crib death. "We were in a situation where these sudden unexplained deaths had been occurring for 2,000 years, and yet no one was doing any research. People would talk about pneumonia and polio, but people avoided talking about sudden unexplained infant death even though at that time nearly three out of every 1,000 babies died suddenly." |
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The Dores spent their lives (Fred died in 1996) fighting for legislation to recognize and research these deaths, and comfort the parents of SIDS babies. They raised money for the necessary medical research to prevent SIDS, and they tried to comfort bereaved parents like themselves who had lost a baby to the mysterious ailment. In 1987, years after the Dores began their battle, the National SIDS Foundation newsletter "The Leaflet" ran an article noting that "Although family, business and friends claim Mary's time, her concern for SIDS parents never lessens. A personal note from Mary often finds its way to the home of newly grieving SIDS parents. Her main role now: Giver of Peace." "Every death must be looked at," says Dore today, "and every parent counseled. Even though there are many things in our modern society that are not good for babies, in most cases of SIDS, the death is due to a condition which could not have been recognized beforehand. There are also instances today that are recognized as creating a higher risk for causing sudden death, for example tummy-sleeping and even in some cases infant furniture. We should be willing to look at and recognize any threat that raises the risk factor." One thing that can certainly be done is to make sure parents recover from their loss and the medical profession gets an accurate count and study of these occurrences, she says. "In Washington, we have a pretty good method; the program has a tremendous background." Early legislation that the Dores worked to establish created a central location where all SIDS victims would be autopsied and researched. Originally this was the University of Washington Medical School; later the school transferred the base of the research project to Children's Orthopedic Hospital and Medical Center. One of the leaders in research there was Dr. J. Bruce Beckwith '55, who ultimately identified the syndrome now known as SIDS.
Dore, who lives in Bellevue, Wash., said she is "very pleased about the award; it's nice to be recognized. But I most want the babies to be accounted for. Parents cannot recover without knowing why, and that’s why it’s so important that each occurrence is properly handled and classified." |
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![]() John Keil Richards '40 |
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