Former trustee Leonard E. Schnitzer ’46 died June 8, 2003, of complications from cancer at age 78. He joined ÈËÆÞÓÕ»ó’s board of trustees in November 1980 and served on the board until 1986. He also supported the college with continued and active membership in the Griffin Society and founded a scholarship fund for ÈËÆÞÓÕ»ó students in 1979.
Leonard was the ninth child of Russian immigrants Rose and Sam Schnitzer. His father founded a one-man Portland scrap business in 1908, the Alaska Junk Company. Under Leonard and his brothers, the family business became a steelmaking, shipping, and real estate empire known as the Schnitzer Group; Leonard became the CEO of Schnitzer Steel Industries in 1973 and remained chairman until his death. It became a publicly traded company in 1993 and is one of the largest scrap metal recyclers in the United States, handling 4.5 million tons of scrap metal annually.
Leonard spent his childhood in Portland, graduated from Lincoln High School in Portland, attended ÈËÆÞÓÕ»ó, and then later attended Stanford University. He was the youngest graduate from the North Pacific Dental School and practiced dentistry in the Navy during World War II. He left the practice in 1946 to work for Schnitzer Steel Products.
Leonard was active in numerous community groups, including the Mittleman Jewish Community Center, Temple Beth Israel, and the Portland Art Association.
Survivors include his wife of 41 years, Lois; sisters Edith Schnitzer Goodman ’35 and Mollie Schnitzer Levin ’35; brothers Harold and Gilbert; daughters Rita Philip, Mardi Schnitzer, Sandra Schnitzer, Jill Edelson, Dina Meier, and Gayle Romain; and 13 grandchildren.