In Memoriam
MILTON WEXLER

Milton Wexler, psychoanalyst in Los Angeles for over fifty years,
founder of the Hereditary Disease Foundation, beloved father of
Alice and Nancy, mentor, friend, advisor, "the elder of our
tribe," died at home on March 16, 2007, at the age of ninety-eight.
Born in San Francisco in 1908, Milton grew up in New York City
where he trained as a lawyer, before becoming a psychoanalyst
in the 1930s.
In 1946 he joined the staff of the Menninger Foundation in Topeka
Kansas and, in 1951, moved to Los Angeles, where he practiced
psychoanalysis and psychotherapy for over fifty years. Following
his wife's diagnosis with Huntington's disease in 1968 he started
the Hereditary Disease Foundation, serving as Chairman of the
Board for nearly forty years. This organization spearheaded the
location of the Huntington's disease gene in 1983 and its final
isolation in 1993. A great admirer of both artists and scientists,
he drew on his therapeutic experience with artists to develop
an innovative scientific workshop program that served as a model
for biomedical research far beyond the world of Huntington's disease.
A memorial will be held in the spring. In lieu of flowers, contributions
may be sent to the Hereditary Disease Foundation at 3960 Broadway,
6th Floor, New York, New York 10032.
Published in the Los Angeles Times on 3/20/2007.
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