Elizabeth M. Lion
March 1, 1926 - March 14, 2013
The below obituary was written by Dick Durisen with help from Anna Mecca, Guy Loftman, Margaret Lion, and the World Wide Web. You can also view this obituary on the Allen Funeral Home Obituary Webpage.
Elizabeth M. Lion, 87, of Bloomington, an Associate Professor Emeritus at the Bloomington campus of the Indiana University School of Nursing, died peacefully on Thursday evening, March 14, 2013. She was born on March 1, 1926 in Brooklyn, N.Y., the daughter of Felix and Maria (Rosaschi) Garbarini, and grew up in Newark, N.J.
Elizabeth received a B.S. in Education from the New Jersey State Teacher’s College in 1948, an M.S. in Public Health Nursing from the University of Pittsburgh’s School of Public Health in 1965, and an Ed.D. from IU’s School of Education in 1990. Her doctoral dissertation was titled “Sexuality of the Dying: What Dying Participants, their Spouses and their Caregivers Teach us about the Sexuality of the Dying”.
During her time as a faculty member at Indiana University, from 1969 to 1996, Elizabeth became a pioneer in teaching human sexuality for nursing students. In 1982, she edited a widely adopted textbook titled “Human Sexuality in Nursing Process”, to which she also contributed six chapters.
In addition to her renown as a teacher, Elizabeth made numerous contributions to the University community. She was an active member of the Bloomington Faculty Council, served as President of IUB’s Faculty Professional Association from 1992 to 1995, and was involved in the Affirmative Action Committee and the Commission on Multicultural Understanding (COMU) for much of her IU career. When asked recently, she said that she was most proud of co-chairing IU’s Educational Task Force on Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Concerns. The final report by this task force in 1993 revolutionized campus diversity policy and led to the creation of the GLBT Student Support Services Office. It became a model for similar efforts throughout the Big Ten. IU recognized her service with a Distinguished Service Award for academic year 1992-93 and the COMU Award in 1994-95. After Elizabeth’s retirement, the IU School of Nursing created the Elizabeth Lion Distinguished University Service Award for nursing faculty.
Elizabeth made similar service contributions to the Bloomington community, particularly in support of civil rights, diversity, and the dying. Elizabeth was a vital founding member of Hospice of Bloomington. Her long time professional interest in the dying as an RN, with a specialty in sex and the dying, gave her unusual insight into the emotional and medical needs of those near the end of their lives. In the mid-1970s, when her efforts began, openly discussing death was perhaps more taboo than discussing sex. Elizabeth joined with Unitarian Universalist minister Bill Murray, Bloomington Hospital pathologist Tony Pizzo, Trinity Episcopal Priest Hugh Laughlin, freshly minted attorney Guy Loftman, and others to shepherd this entity from good idea to vital community reality. Because she led this movement for the benefit of the many who have been comforted as death approached over the years, it is fitting that she became a Hospice patient herself in her last days.
Elizabeth was also an active member of the Unitarian Universalist Church, worked at Middle Way House, administered anonymous HIV tests at Public Health Nursing, and participated in organizations like the NAACP, the Indiana ACLU, and Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays. Her retirement in 1996 allowed her to increase her community activities, and she received Bloomington’s Woman of the Year Award in 2001. She referred to these later years of community service as not just “golden” years, but “platinum” ones.
Elizabeth loved theater and opera and was known for her hats, snappy outfits, and canes. She had a boisterous laugh and a sharp mind, and she loved to tell racy jokes and stories about her life. Elizabeth was famously articulate and almost always had the last word in any battle of wits at a committee meeting or around the dinner table.
Elizabeth is survived by her sister, Margaret E. Meehan, her daughter, Margaret M. Lion, her son-in-law, Scott Hutchinson, and her “grandson by special arrangement”, Michael V.M. Durisen, the son of her friends Annamaria Mecca and Richard H. Durisen. Elizabeth was preceded in death by her parents and her brother-in-law, Thomas Meehan.
A memorial service will be held at the Unitarian Universalist Church in Bloomington at 2pm on Sunday, March 24, 2013. In addition to or in lieu of flowers, donations in her memory can be made to the Unitarian Universalist Church, the ACLU of Indiana, the Monroe County Humane Society, the World Wildlife Fund, or Bloomington’s Middle Way House. Development of a commemorative website (emlion.weebly.com) is currently in progress.
Elizabeth received a B.S. in Education from the New Jersey State Teacher’s College in 1948, an M.S. in Public Health Nursing from the University of Pittsburgh’s School of Public Health in 1965, and an Ed.D. from IU’s School of Education in 1990. Her doctoral dissertation was titled “Sexuality of the Dying: What Dying Participants, their Spouses and their Caregivers Teach us about the Sexuality of the Dying”.
During her time as a faculty member at Indiana University, from 1969 to 1996, Elizabeth became a pioneer in teaching human sexuality for nursing students. In 1982, she edited a widely adopted textbook titled “Human Sexuality in Nursing Process”, to which she also contributed six chapters.
In addition to her renown as a teacher, Elizabeth made numerous contributions to the University community. She was an active member of the Bloomington Faculty Council, served as President of IUB’s Faculty Professional Association from 1992 to 1995, and was involved in the Affirmative Action Committee and the Commission on Multicultural Understanding (COMU) for much of her IU career. When asked recently, she said that she was most proud of co-chairing IU’s Educational Task Force on Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Concerns. The final report by this task force in 1993 revolutionized campus diversity policy and led to the creation of the GLBT Student Support Services Office. It became a model for similar efforts throughout the Big Ten. IU recognized her service with a Distinguished Service Award for academic year 1992-93 and the COMU Award in 1994-95. After Elizabeth’s retirement, the IU School of Nursing created the Elizabeth Lion Distinguished University Service Award for nursing faculty.
Elizabeth made similar service contributions to the Bloomington community, particularly in support of civil rights, diversity, and the dying. Elizabeth was a vital founding member of Hospice of Bloomington. Her long time professional interest in the dying as an RN, with a specialty in sex and the dying, gave her unusual insight into the emotional and medical needs of those near the end of their lives. In the mid-1970s, when her efforts began, openly discussing death was perhaps more taboo than discussing sex. Elizabeth joined with Unitarian Universalist minister Bill Murray, Bloomington Hospital pathologist Tony Pizzo, Trinity Episcopal Priest Hugh Laughlin, freshly minted attorney Guy Loftman, and others to shepherd this entity from good idea to vital community reality. Because she led this movement for the benefit of the many who have been comforted as death approached over the years, it is fitting that she became a Hospice patient herself in her last days.
Elizabeth was also an active member of the Unitarian Universalist Church, worked at Middle Way House, administered anonymous HIV tests at Public Health Nursing, and participated in organizations like the NAACP, the Indiana ACLU, and Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays. Her retirement in 1996 allowed her to increase her community activities, and she received Bloomington’s Woman of the Year Award in 2001. She referred to these later years of community service as not just “golden” years, but “platinum” ones.
Elizabeth loved theater and opera and was known for her hats, snappy outfits, and canes. She had a boisterous laugh and a sharp mind, and she loved to tell racy jokes and stories about her life. Elizabeth was famously articulate and almost always had the last word in any battle of wits at a committee meeting or around the dinner table.
Elizabeth is survived by her sister, Margaret E. Meehan, her daughter, Margaret M. Lion, her son-in-law, Scott Hutchinson, and her “grandson by special arrangement”, Michael V.M. Durisen, the son of her friends Annamaria Mecca and Richard H. Durisen. Elizabeth was preceded in death by her parents and her brother-in-law, Thomas Meehan.
A memorial service will be held at the Unitarian Universalist Church in Bloomington at 2pm on Sunday, March 24, 2013. In addition to or in lieu of flowers, donations in her memory can be made to the Unitarian Universalist Church, the ACLU of Indiana, the Monroe County Humane Society, the World Wildlife Fund, or Bloomington’s Middle Way House. Development of a commemorative website (emlion.weebly.com) is currently in progress.