KARL D. HARTZELL ’27

KARL D. HARTZELL, who in 1962 as executive dean in the Albany office of the Central Administration of the New York State University system was sent on assignment for a year as acting chief administrative officer and dean of Arts and Sciences at the new University Center at Stony Brook, and who remained there until his retirement in 1971, died Dec. 6, 2008. He was 102. A member of Beta Theta Pi, he was the nephew of Robert C. Hartzell of the Class of 1902. He received a bachelor’s degree in philosophy from Wesleyan and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. After receiving a Ph.D. in history at Harvard University he taught at several colleges before joining the New York State War Council, which led to the publication of his book,The Empire State at War: World War II. He then joined the administrative staff at the then–new Brookhaven National Laboratory and from there returned to higher education as a college dean before becoming executive dean of the New York State University system. At Stony Brook he performed the duties of president for three years while a search for a permanent head was continuing, and he remained as administrative officer in the office of the president until he retired, successfully guiding the structure and substance of the new university campus and the development of a comprehensive health sciences center there. After he retired, he concentrated on specialized areas of human thought and experience, which culminated in the publication of his last book, The Laws of the Living: American Values in Action. His first wife, Anna Lomas Hartzell, predeceased him. Survivors include his wife, Elizabeth Farnum Guibord; three sons, including K. Drew Hartzell Jr. ’60 and Richard L. Hartzell ’65; a granddaughter; and two great–granddaughters.

OSCEOLA CURRIER McEWEN ’27

OSCEOLA CURRIER McEWEN, M.D., former dean of New York University School of Medicine, world-renowned rheumatologist, and international award-winning hybridizer of Siberian and Japanese irises, died June 23, 2003 at age 101. A member of Delta Kappa Epsilon, he received his degree with honors and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He received a medical degree from New York University School of Medicine; he also received honorary degrees from Wesleyan and from Marietta (Ohio) College. During World War II he served in the U.S. Army, establishing hospitals for wounded Allied soldiers and serving as chief consultant in medicine for the European Theater of Operations. Initially a researcher at the Rockefeller Institute, he joined the faculty at the New York University School of Medicine in 1932 and served in both clinical and administrative posts. During this time he established the Rheumatic Disease Study Group at the school, a pioneering interdisciplinary research effort that helped to usher in the era of modern rheumatology. He not only served as dean of the medical school, but also as director of NYU’s University Hospital and of Bellevue Hospital. After his retirement as professor of medicine in 1970, he continued to see patients pro bono in various parts of Maine. During one of his trips to northern Maine, his wife, Kay Cogswell McEwen, was killed in a tragic automobile accident. In Maine he did most of his hybridizing and maintained his flower gardens, developing registered new varieties. Until his late nineties, he continued to make cross-hybridizations in his garden, as well as to write books and journal articles, both about medicine and about Japanese and Siberian irises. Among those who survive are his wife, Elisabeth Fulkerson McEwen, three daughters, a son, six grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren

MILTON ALEX ’27

MILTON ALEX ’27 died Dec. 21, 2002 at age 97. The recipient of a bachelor’s degree from Harvard University, he served in the U.S. Army during World War II. He retired as a manager for the State of Connecticut Records Center and had previously owned a shoe store. Survivors include his wife, Minnie Weisman Alex, a daughter, two grandsons, a brother, and a sister.

OSCEOLA CURRIER McEWEN ’23

OSCEOLA CURRIER McEWEN, M.D., former dean of New York University School of Medicine, world-renowned rheumatologist, and international award-winning hybridizer of Siberian and Japanese irises, died June 23, 2003 at age 101. A member of Delta Kappa Epsilon, he received his degree with honors and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He received a medical degree from New York University School of Medicine; he also received honorary degrees from Wesleyan and from Marietta (Ohio) College. During World War II he served in the U.S. Army, establishing hospitals for wounded Allied soldiers and serving as chief consultant in medicine for the European Theater of Operations. Initially a researcher at the Rockefeller Institute, he joined the faculty at the New York University School of Medicine in 1932 and served in both clinical and administrative posts. During this time he established the Rheumatic Disease Study Group at the school, a pioneering interdisciplinary research effort that helped to usher in the era of modern rheumatology. He not only served as dean of the medical school, but also as director of NYU’s University Hospital and of Bellevue Hospital. After his retirement as professor of medicine in 1970, he continued to see patients pro bono in various parts of Maine. During one of his trips to northern Maine, his wife, Kay Cogswell McEwen, was killed in a tragic automobile accident. In Maine he did most of his hybridizing and maintained his flower gardens, developing registered new varieties. Until his late nineties, he continued to make cross-hybridizations in his garden, as well as to write books and journal articles, both about medicine and about Japanese and Siberian irises. Among those who survive are his wife, Elisabeth Fulkerson McEwen, three daughters, a son, six grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.

MELVIN STRAUSS

MELVIN STRAUSS, Adjunct Professor of Music, Emeritus, died Sept. 5, 2012, at age 83. He received his bachelor’s degree from Rutgers University and his master’s from New York University. He also attended the Juilliard School of Music. He worked with Leonard Bernstein at the Tanglewood Music Center, where he was involved with the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s Contemporary Music Weeks, and came to prominence in contemporary music circles. He was appointed conductor of the Fromm Players at Tanglewood as recipient of the prestigious Fromm Fellowship in Contemporary Music, and also received the Koussevitsky Conducting Prize by the Boston Symphony. After serving as President of Seattle’s Cornish College of the Arts from 1975 to 1985, he came to Wesleyan, where he directed and conducted both the University Orchestra and Concert Choir, and served as director of the Private Music Lessons program, which he helped to rejuvenate. He also served as Associate Conductor at the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, and taught at SUNY-Buffalo, the University of Pennsylvania, and Rutgers. He co-founded and conducted the Orquesta Filarmónica de Bogotá and in 1998 led the Wesleyan Symphony Orchestra during the “John Cage at Wesleyan” festival, one performance of which was publicly released as a CD. Survivors include his daughter, Jamie Strauss Cohon, and two grandchildren. and Rutgers. He co-founded and conducted the Orquesta Filarmónica de Bogotá and in 1998 led the Wesleyan Symphony Orchestra during the “John Cage at Wesleyan” festival, one performance of which was publicly released as a CD. Survivors include his daughter, Jamie Strauss Cohon, and two grandchildren.

SATURNINO SALAS

SATURNINO SALAS, assistant professor of mathematics from 1960 to 1965 (and father of Wesleyan’s Director of Strategic Initiatives Charles G. Salas MA ’85) died June 2, 2012. He was 81. After attending Princeton University, he served in the U.S. Air Force for four years and received a Ph.D. in mathematics from Yale University in 1959. In addition to teaching at Wesleyan he taught at Yale University and at the University of Connecticut before retiring from academia to devote himself to the writing of mathematics textbooks. Predeceased by his wife, Judith Eckart Salas, he is survived by his four children, 11 grandchildren, two great-grandchildren, two brothers, and a sister.

STEVEN B. BUTTNER

STEVEN B. BUTTNER ’61, 72, a management consultant and former dean at Wesleyan, died Aug. 1, 2012. He was a member of EQV. He received a master’s in Russian Studies from the University of Wisconsin and was a Ph.D. candidate at Columbia University in Eastern European and Russian Medieval History. After teaching at Queens College, he joined the administration at Wesleyan, where he was a lecturer in history and Dean of the Class of 1974. He subsequently built his career as a management consultant, specializing in leadership assessment and coaching. Survivors include his wife, Jeri Butler Buttner; his two children and their mother, Doreen Buttner; his brother; and a large extended family.

MARK BARLOW

MARK BARLOW, dean at Wesleyan from 1957 to 1965 and former Trustee of the University, died June 23, 2012, at age 87. After serving in the U.S. Navy during World War II, he received his degree from Wesleyan. A member of Eclectic, he received a master’s degree from Colgate University and a doctorate of education from Cornell University. In 1957, he became Dean of Students at Wesleyan and later Dean of the University. Because of his age, the students dubbed him “the boy dean,” but he quickly developed a reputation for handling student academic and disciplinary issues with a sense of humor and an appreciation for individual personalities. He supported selected students who participated as Freedom Riders in the South during the civil rights era. In 1965 he returned to Cornell as vice president for student affairs and subsequently became Vice Provost. He received a Distinguished Alumnus Award from Wesleyan in 1981 and a Wesleyan University Service Award in 2011; he had served as Trustee from 1968 to 1971. He is survived by his wife, Jane Atwood Barlow, three children, and four grandchildren.

ROBERT H. WHITMAN

ROBERT H. WHITMAN, professor of Russian, emeritus, died May 1, 2008, in Berkeley, Calif. He was 78. Whitman was trained as a linguist. He earned a BA from Hamilton College and a PhD from Harvard University, and he joined the Wesleyan faculty in 1959. He left Wesleyan in 1963 and spent a year in the USSR, then at Cornell, the University of Indiana, and the University of California at Berkeley, before returning to Wesleyan in 1971. He was a visiting professor at Yale for one semester, served as chair of the Educational Policy Committee, and taught courses in Old Russian literature and the history of the Russian language. Whitman founded a program in linguistics, with the participation of members of the anthropology, philosophy, English and psychology departments, and for many years taught popular courses in general linguistics, directing numerous honors theses written by students who went on to become professional linguists. He retired from the Wesleyan faculty in 1997. His former colleague, Professor of Russian Priscilla Meyer recalls that “Bob had an extraordinary ability to inspire students to do sophisticated work, both in tutorials and in class, giving students confidence in their insights by exploring the most fruitful dimensions of what they had to say. He enlivened department meetings with his love of linguistic play, and was enormously generous with his time to colleagues as well as students.” She adds that in 1975 he took over a five-days-a-week Russian language class for a month to replace an incapacitated colleague. Professor Whitman is survived by his wife, Fran, of Berkeley, Calif., his daughter, Julie Zai, and two grandchildren.

WILLIAM WARD

William Ward, professor of theater and design emeritus, died June 14, 2010. He was 79 years old. Ward came to Wesleyan in 1956, as instructor in art, and he taught at Wesleyan for 42 years, becoming professor of theater and design in 1969. He retired in 1998. He had designed sets for more than 100 plays and concerts at Wesleyan, and he also created graphical and other design work for more than 25 exhibitions and publications. He was one of the principal faculty involved in proposing the Center for the Arts complex, for which he served as design consultant. In a 1995 interview, Bill explained that his vision for the CFA had the pedagogical goal of fostering conversation: “We wanted a cluster of buildings that would surround a central area of interaction, where to walk to the Music Department you would run into art people because they would be out in the middle as well.” Ward relished teaching, saying that it kept him young and inspired, and because “you learn along with your students. You pull, push, cajole, and encourage. But when you see that production happen, you get your reward.” His approach to teaching was interactive: he was a constant presence in the scene shop, working with his hands, teaching students to use woodworking tools and fabricate sets. His home was an extension of his classroom; he and his wife, Mary, frequently hosted gatherings of students and faculty. His departmental colleague and friend, Professor of Theater Emeritus William Francisco, described Ward as “one of the best people I’ve ever worked with, a very good designer. We did difficult productions and they looked great.” Ward is survived by his wife, Mary Ward, of Middletown, their three daughters, and seven grandchildren.