Class of 1940 | 2014 | Issue 1
TED NELSON
BrightView Commons,
57 Grandeville Crt., apt. 307, Wakefield, RI 02879
TED NELSON
BrightView Commons,
57 Grandeville Crt., apt. 307, Wakefield, RI 02879
June 10, 2013
Stephen Crites, Hedding Professor of Moral Science and Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus, died Sept. 13, 2007, at the age of 76.
A graduate of Ohio Wesleyan University, he majored in philosophy and concentrated in music. He then attended Yale, earning a Bachelor of Divinity degree and a PhD in philosophical theology. An ordained Methodist minister, he served as pastor of Grace Methodist Church in Stonington, Conn., and later as Wesleyan’s chaplain. He also taught at Yale Divinity School and at Colgate University.
Professor Crites joined the Wesleyan Religion Department faculty in 1961, later moving to the Philosophy Department. He was a much-loved faculty member who taught courses in the Philosophy of Religion and related fields, focusing on 19th-century European philosophy and religious thought, with a special interest in Hegel and Kierkegaard.
“Stephen Crites was an inspiring teacher, a thoughtful, engaged scholar, and a passionate and caring member of the campus community,” noted Wesleyan President Michael S. Roth ’78. “I remember Stephen vividly from my student days,” Roth added, “and have met many alumni over the years whose lives were enriched by his devotion to teaching and to finding connections between narrative and experience, between faith and philosophy.”
A widely published scholar and editor of several journals, his books include Dialectic and Gospel in the Development of Hegel’s Thinking: From the Early Writings through the Phenomenology of Spirit (Penn. State University Press, 1998). A gifted musician and singer, he performed a varied repertoire of works.
After 40 years of service, Prof. Crites retired from Wesleyan in 2001. In addition to his wife, Ann, he is survived by his four daughters, four stepchildren, and eight grandchildren.
A memorial service was held this fall at the Wesleyan Chapel.
PHILIPPA M. COUGHLAN, 75, a clinical psychologist who was the founder and for nearly 40 years the director of Wesleyan’s Office of Behavioral Health for Students (OBHS), died Mar. 17, 2011, after a brief illness. A graduate of Boston University, she received a Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where she worked with Carl Rogers. At Wisconsin, she was a principal in the post-Vatican II transformation of the University Catholic Center. Following an NIMH post-doctoral fellowship at the Wisconsin Psychiatric Institute, she was appointed to the faculty in the University of Wisconsin-Madison graduate school before joining the Department of Psychiatry at the Yale University School of Medicine. While there she was invited by Wesleyan to become head of the mental health service. Many generations of students benefited from her professional skills, diligent work, and caring support. She was a pioneer in the field of behavioral health for college students and spent a lifetime making a positive difference in young people’s lives. She held a Diplomate in clinical psychology and was a member of the American Psychological Association, the National Register of Health Service Providers in Psychology, the Society for Psychotherapy Research, and the Association of Social Psychiatry. For eight years she served as the chair of the Connecticut Board of Mental Health and Addiction Services and as a Governor’s appointee to the Community Mental Health Strategy Board. Her publications were in psychotherapy, instrumentation (process and outcome), mental retardation, and sexual violence. She is survived by her husband Neil and son John, daughter-in-law Karen and grandson Patrick, brother-in-law Paul, sister-in-law Tina, and nieces Nicole and Monica.
ROBERT E. BROWN, a distinguished ethnomusicologist who taught at Wesleyan from 1962 to 1971, died Nov. 29, 2005. He was 78. A U.S. Navy veteran of World War II, he attended Ithaca College, Cornell University and the University of California at Los Angeles. He reportedly coined the term ‘world music’, by which he meant study based on the presence of living musicians so that students have direct contact with master musicians. An expert in the music of India and Indonesia, he founded the nonprofit Center for World Music and was a pioneer in making the music of Indonesia available internationally. He also established a music school and research center in Payangan, Bali, to which students, teachers and performers come from all over the world.
MICHAEL J. BRENNAN, 79, professor of Economics emeritus, died Nov. 26, 2007. A graduate of DePaul University, he received a master’s degree and a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. He then joined the faculty of Brown University, where he became professor of economics and dean of the graduate school. In 1974 he came to Wesleyan, where he was vice president for academic affairs until 1978, when he joined the Economics faculty and served there, including as department Chair, until his retirement in 1993. He was interested primarily in quantitative methods in economics, and he worked with numerous professional organizations, both academic and administrative.
SPENCER J. BERRY, professor of biology emeritus, died Nov. 21, 2005. He was 72. After receiving a bachelor?s degree from Williams, a master?s from Wesleyan, and a Ph.D. from Western Reserve University, he joined the Wesleyan faculty, where he taught for 35 years. An expert in the mechanisms of insect development, his research was focused on the development of insect embryos, maternal messenger RNA, and cytoskeletal elements. He published more than 40 papers and held a National Institutes of Health award from 1971?76. An active member of the Wesleyan community, he was also an environmentalist who served on several local land-use boards and was an original member of the Middlefield Land Trust. He is survived by his wife, Susan Wylie Berry, MALS ?79; three children; and five grandchildren.
Howard Bernstein, a long-time visiting professor at Wesleyan, died of cancer on Jan. 15, 2007, at the age of 63. He earned a bachelor’s degree from the City College of the City University of New York and a doctorate in history from Columbia. Before coming to Wesleyan he taught at Brooklyn College, City College, York University, and Yale University. A world-renowned expert on the work of the German scholar G. W. Leibniz, he was a major contributor to a series of international conferences on Leibniz held in Germany in the early 1980s. He also published a number of works on Diderot, Einstein, and on Marxist philosophy. He taught at Wesleyan from 1979 to 2001 in a number of areas, including the College of Letters, the History Department, the programs in Educational Studies and Science in Society, and in Wesleyan’s Graduate Liberal Studies Program. He was also a major contributor to the Masters of Arts in Teaching Program. In addition, he supervised a large number of senior honors theses. For the past five years, he was a mentor and educator at Suffield Academy in Suffield, Conn. Among those who survive are his wife, Joan Leslie Bernstein, and their immediate family.
JOSHUA KEMENY, 36, died Feb. 23, 2009. After graduation from Wesleyan, he worked in advertising in New York and Chicago and won a number of awards in 2003 and 2005. He is survived by his wife, Madeleine Klein, his son, two half-siblings, his mother, and his grandparents.
FRANCES HOPE GREENE AREY, a former librarian in the Science Library, died Feb. 4, 2006. Her husband, Sheldon C. Arey, and a brother survive.