CHARLES D. LAUFER ’49

CHARLES D. LAUFER, 87, a psychologist, died Sept. 6, 2015. He was a member of Delta Tau Delta. After receiving master’s and doctoral degrees from New York University, he joined his father in writing Presbyterian hymns and other religious books. He attended Union Theological Seminary and became interested in psychology, later pursuing another doctorate at the University of Michigan, this time in educational psychology. He helped to establish the Michigan Psychological Association and lectured and conducted workshops throughout the country. Among those who survive are his wife, Dorothy MacFadyen Laufer, five children, and ten grandchildren.

CHARLES A. BRIGGS SR. ’49

CHARLES A. BRIGGS SR., former executive director of the Central Intelligence Agency, died Nov. 4, 2015, at age 89. A member of Alpha Delta Phi, he served in the U.S. Army during World War II and in 1952 joined the CIA after receiving a master’s degree from the University of Michigan. Over the course of the following 34 years he went from being a Junior Officer Trainee to the top position of CIA Executive Director. He served in administrative roles in all four divisions with the agency, including postings as Inspector General, Comptroller, Director of Services Staff, Congressional Liaison, and Executive Director. He held the unique distinction (in June 1983) while serving as Executive Director, of being briefly designated as the Acting Director of Central Intelligence and Acting Deputy Director, serving in all three positions simultaneously. He was awarded the Distinguished Intelligence Medal in honor of his service and accomplishments. After retiring in 1986, he was called back to served the intelligence community as a private contractor. A notable contribution was serving as liaison for the creation of the Sixth Floor Museum in Dallas, Tex., dedicated to the JFK Assassination. He served five years as chairman of the board for the Central Intelligence Retirement Association (CIRA) and also four years as chairman of the board for the Association of Former Intelligence Officers (AFIO). In 1999 he was awarded the distinguished David Atlee Phillips Founder’s award by AFIO for sustained and exceptional contributions. He was also active with his children in numerous sports leagues and organizations in his Vienna, Va., community. His wife, Catherine Ann Murphy Briggs (Caty) died in 2008. Nine children, 20 grandchildren, seven great-grandchildren, three brothers, and a large extended family survive.

DOUGLAS F. DORCHESTER ’46

DOUGLAS F. DORCHESTER, a retired minister, died Nov. 1, 2015. He was 91. The great-grandson of Daniel Dorchester of the class of 1847 and the son of Donald H. Dorchester of the class of 1917, he received his degree with high honors and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. During World War II he served as a chaplain in the U.S. Navy and then received a degree from the Yale Divinity School. He served a wide range of ministries from the local parish to the denominational level. For more than 20 years he served as executive secretary of the Board of Education in Southern New England and Northern New Jersey, as well as serving in a number of ecumenical positions. His wife, Janice Potter Dorchester, survives, as do four children, six grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren. One son predeceased him.

VINCENT W. JONES JR. ’45

VINCENT W. JONES JR., 92, a financial adviser, died Nov. 27, 2015. The son of Vincent W. Jones of the class of 1911; the grandson of Robert W. Jones of the class of 1871; the cousin of Frederic W. Frost of the class of 1923, Bradford R. Frost of the class of 1935, and Frederic W. Frost III of the class of 1956, he received his bachelor’s degree from Harvard University, from which he also received an MBA. During World War II he served in the U.S. Navy. His first wife, Marie Prince Jones, predeceased him. Among those who survive are his wife, Cindy Fisher Jones; three children; five grandchildren; his brother, David P. Jones ’51; a nephew, David P. Jones Jr. ’83; two nieces, Suzanne H. Varney ’84 and Lisa J. Chung ’86.

JOSEPH L. WEITZ ’44

JOSEPH L. WEITZ, professor emeritus of geology at Colorado State University in Fort Collins and a former assistant professor of geology at Wesleyan, died July 22, 2015, at age 93. He was the brother of John H. Weitz of the class of 1938. A member of Delta Kappa Epsilon, he received his degree with honors and was elected to Sigma Xi. He received an MS and a PhD from Yale University. During World War II he served in the U.S. Army Air Forces. He did his doctoral field studies in Newfoundland, co-authored a geologic map of Wyoming in 1954, and worked for the U.S. Geologic Survey. He joined his father’s company, Independent Explosives Company, in Pennsylvania for three years, then left to teach at Wesleyan from 1958-1960. In 1960 he took a position as professor of geology at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, retiring in 1983. During this time he served as director of the Earth Science Curriculum Project and did significant summer field work for the U.S.G.S. in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Connecticut, Colorado, and Switzerland. He was a member and leader of several professional societies and authored several publications for the U.S.G.S. Active in his community, he had been a volunteer firefighter and also helped to establish the Front Range Forum, an educational program, in addition to helping to arrange and catalogue the mineral collection at the Fort Collins Museum. Survivors include his wife, Jean Corthell Weitz, three children, one grandson, and a large extended family. One granddaughter preceded him in death.

CHARLES C. GILLISPIE ’40

CHARLES C. GILLISPIE, 97, the Dayton-Stockton Professor of History and professor emeritus of the history of science at Princeton University, died Oct. 6, 2015. He was the son of Raymond L. Gillispie of the class of 1910, the brother of Robert L.J. Gillispie of the class of 1942, the nephew of Robert W. Gillispie of the class of 1904, and the cousin of David L. Gillispie of the class of 1939. He received his degree in chemistry with honors and with high distinction in history. Elected to Phi Beta Kappa, he was a member of Psi Upsilon. After graduation he remained at Wesleyan for his master’s degree in history. During World War II he served with the U.S. Army. Following the war, he returned to the study of history, joining Princeton University’s faculty and earning a PhD in history from Harvard University. A leading figure in the establishment of the history and philosophy of science as an academic discipline, he founded the Program in the History of Science at Princeton in the 1960s. He was the author of many books that have become classics in the field, including Genesis and Geology: A Study in the Relations of Scientific Thought, Natural Theology, and Social Opinion in Great Britain, 1790-1850; The Edge of Objectivity: An Essay in the History of Scientific Ideas; and Pierre-Simon Laplace, 1749-1827: A Life in Exact Science. He was also the editor-in-chief of the Dictionary of Scientific Biography, a monumental reference work in 16 volumes with more than 4,500 essays on scientists and mathematicians of all periods and nationalities, for which he received the Dartmouth Medal from the American Library Association in 1981. He co-authored his final work, Lazare and Sadi Carnot: A Scientific and Filial Relationship, which was published in 2014. His many awards and distinctions include the 1997 Balzan Prize for History and Philosophy of Science for “the extraordinary contribution he has made to the history and philosophy of science by his intellectually vigorous and exacting works.” He received the Pfizer Prize in 1981 from the History of Science Society for his book, Science and Polity in France at the End of the Old Regime, and the Sarton Medal in 1984. Among his other awards are the Dibner Award for Distinction in History of Science and Technology from MIT in 1994 and la Médaille Alexandre Koyré from the Académie Internationale d’Histoire des Sciences in 1985. In 1972 he was elected to membership in the American Philosophical Society, America’s oldest learned society. He received honorary Doctor of Science degrees from Wesleyan in 1971, from Lafayette College in 2001, and a Doctor of Humane Letters degree from Princeton in 2011. His wife, Emily Clapp Gillispie, predeceased him.

CHARLES F. BELL ’40

CHARLES F. BELL, a retired pharmacist, died Jan. 20, 2015. He was 96. A member of Psi Upsilon, he was the brother of Albert M. Bell of the class of 1935, the nephew of Harry W. Bell of the class of 1912, and the cousin of Warren F. Bell of the class of 1943. He received his bachelor’s degree from the Brooklyn College of Pharmacy after serving in the U.S. Navy during World War II. Previously the president of Bell and Halpern Pharmacy, Inc., after his retirement he became the outpatient pharmacist at St. Francis Hospital in Roslyn, N.Y. Predeceased by his first wife, Castine Swanson Bell, and by a daughter, his wife of 32 years, Bess Herdt Bell, survives, as do two children, two step-children, six grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.

ROBERT E. PORTER ’38

ROBERT E. PORTER, an attorney, died Feb. 4, 2016, at age 100. A member of Alpha Chi Rho, he received his degree with honors and with high distinction in government. He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, received his law degree from the University of Pennsylvania Law School, and then served in the U.S. Army during World War II. After the war he returned to legal practice in Wayne, Penna., with the firm of Greenwell and Porter, later Greenwell, Porter, Smaltz, and Royal, until he retired in 1985. Active in his community as well as professional associations, he was an original trustee of Valley Forge Military Academy. His wife of 74 years, Doris Ray Porter, survives, as do two daughters, six grandchildren, four great-grandchildren, and his sister.

CARL E. SCHORSKE

Carl E. Schorske, who taught at Wesleyan from 1946–1960 before moving to UC Berkley and eventually Princeton, died Sept. 13, 2015. He was 100 years old. A scholar whose essays centered on Vienna at the turn of the 20th century as the site of the origin of modernist thinking, he returned to Wesleyan in the 1970s as a visitor at the Center for Humanities. He won a Pulitzer Prize for general nonfiction in 1981 for his collection of essays, Fin de Siècle Vienna: Politics and Culture (1980), and was the recipient of a MacArthur fellowship, or “genius grants.”

Other books include German Social Democracy, 1905–1917 (1955) and Thinking With History: Explorations in the Passage to Modernism (1998).

Wesleyan president Michael S. Roth ’78 recalls that he had signed up for “Carl’s Vienna seminar” in the spring semester of his first year at Wesleyan.

“Carl was an extraordinary teacher—erudite, humane and sensitive to the different ways that students learned,” writes Roth. “He was an activist, a scholar and a pedagogue. These aspects of his personality all seemed to work together in his intellectual practice as a scholar-teacher. When he was teaching a subject he was deeply engaged with as a scholar, he said he ‘was really cooking with gas.’ He took culture seriously, and he took enormous pleasure in it, too. That seriousness and capacity for pleasure was something that his students were so fortunate to share in.”

Among those who survive are a daughter, three sons, three grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren. He was predeceased by a son, Stephen, in 2013, and his wife of more than 70 years, Elizabeth Rorke Schorske, died last year.

EUGENE KLAAREN

Eugene Klaaren, former associate professor of religion, passed away Oct. 17, 2015, at the age of 78. Gene taught at Wesleyan from 1968 until he retired in 2006.

His courses introduced students to central Christian thinkers in the history of theology and philosophy, from Martin Luther to Søren Kierkegaard, John Calvin to David Hume and Jonathan Edwards, and Friedrich Schleiermacher to Friedrich Nietzsche. Over the years he broadened his academic interests, regularly visiting Africa to study indigenous African religions as well as Christian theological formations that combined political action and religious belief and practice. But his great passion was in showing the forms of belief that sustained secularity and the vitality of the theological discipline from the early modern through the postmodern age. This dynamic intertwining of secular sciences and the religious imagination is captured in the title of Gene’s highly regarded book, Religious Origins of Modern Science: Belief in Creation in Seventeenth Century Thought.

Klaaren’s friend, Rick Elphick, Professor of History, Emeritus, who co-taught with him and worked with him in numerous academic settings, says: “Gene was a profoundly thoughtful teacher. He had a near-encyclopedic command of many literatures. When asked a question in the classroom, a seminar, or after a lecture, he would fall silent for 30 seconds and then come forth with an answer masterfully weaving insights from far-flung regions of his inner archive.”

He leaves his wife of 54 years, the Rev. Mary Decker Klaaren, two sons, a daughter, two sisters, a brother, seven grandchildren, and numerous nieces and nephews.