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Rose Richardson Olver (1937-2014).

American Psychologist 2015 September
Rose Richardson Olver, devoted her professional life to understanding cognitive development, sex, and gender and to nurturing the development of 5 decades of students. She died on November 19, 2014, at age 77 in Amherst, Massachusetts, after a 3-year battle with cancer. Rose was born outside of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on January 17, 1937, daughter of Claude and Anne Richardson. Rose is survived by her husband, John, former U.S. Congressman for 21 years; her daughter, Martha Jane Olver; her brother, David Richardson, and sister-in-law, Jane Shelby Richardson; and by eight nieces and nephews. The breadth of her interests and expertise was reflected in her teaching as well as her research. In 1962, Amherst College, then an all-male institution, offered Rose a position, making her the first female tenure-track faculty member. She had a distinguished 50-year career at the college, where she fought for coeducation and served as a role model and mentor for all women faculty. She was instrumental in establishing both the neuroscience program and the Women and Gender Studies Department and made behavioral neuroscience a key component the psychology major. (PsycINFO Database Record

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