Obituary

Deaths

MARCH 1991
Obituary
Deaths
MARCH 1991

This is a listing of deaths of which word has been received since the previous issue. Full notices, which are usually written by the class secretaries, may appear in this issue or in a later one.

Everett B. Taylor '21 • March 3, 1990 Richard F. Johnson '22 • Nov. 26 Albert B. Turner '22 • Dec. 6 Clarence E. Goss '23 • Jan. 21 George H. Trafton '24 • Oct. 29 " George D. Green '25 • Dec. 7 Francis A. Leach '25 • May 23, 1986 Daniel S. Slawson '25 • July 29, 1990 Harold E. White '25 • Aug. 22 Dimon W. Benson '27 • Nov. 22 Justin J. Doyle '27 • Dec. 14 Allan D. Gould '27 • April 1989 Norman F. Page '27 • Dec. 20 John Sloan Dickey '29 • Feb. 9 Milton L. Patterson '30 • June 10 Lloyd F. Bowen '31 • Jan. 23, 1990 James H. Wakelin Jr. '32 • Dec. 21 William B. Lewis Jr. '33 • Dec. 27 Donald E. Legro '34 • Dec. 21 William B. Clark '35 • Oct. 25 Owen D. Collins '37 • Nov. 27 William C. Vaughan '39 • Nov. 5 William F. Broer '41 • Oct. 8 Harry L. Broh '41 • Oct. 22 Charles W. Carleton '41 • Jan. 4 Sanford D. Palmer Jr. '41 • Nov. 6 Robert M. Pratt '42 • Feb. 23, 1989 George F. Caswell '46 • Oct. 18 John H. Wolfe '46 • Dec. 4 Joseph E. Scandore '47 • Nov. 30 Charles A. Yardley '49 • November Calvin G. Bauer '50 • Nov. 3 Charles W. Carpenter '50 • Sept. 19 Gilbert T. Austin '53 • August 4 Stuart K. Gord '58 • Dec. 14 Edward A. Pollitz Jr. '59 • April 4, 1990 Max L. Epstein '73 • Dec. 14 Howard W. Anderson '82 • Dec. 16

1922

Harold Emerson Fraser

esteemed member of the Vermont Congregational Conference, died September 23 in his home, Jubilee Farm, Waterbury, Vt.

Hal served in the Student Army Training Corps and was a member of the gym team, the football squad, and Cosmos. He received his masters degree from Tuck in 1923.

For many years he worked and became superintendent at a Peabody, Mass., leather manufacturing company. In 1954 he and his wife purchased their 285-acre dairy farm.

Hal and Mable were were especially admired for providing a loving home for five destitute children.

Hal maintained active interest in the College throughout his life. He contributed to the Dartmouth Alumni Fund for each of his 68 years since graduation.

Mabel died in 1985. Hal is survived by his daughter Deborah.

1925

Robert Jay Misch

died November 7 in New York, N.Y. He went into advertising in New York and continued most of his active life as an advertising consultant, but with many other side activities for which he became well-known and eventually famous. He wrote and published extensively in national periodicals and newspapers and lectured at Yale, Harvard, Dartmouth, Amherst, Columbia, and other institutions. In later years he was noted as a wine connoisseur and a writer and lecturer. His many books involving guides to wines, famous recipes, cheese, and similar subjects were known world wide. France honored him with its medal of the Comité National des Officiers en L'Ordre du Merite Agricole. He also was Chairman of the Wine Writers Circle. He was the first to teach classes on wines in New York and else- where in the Eastern U.S.

Harold E. White

died August 22 in Danbury, Conn. Harry attended Harvard Law School briefly after Dartmouth, then commenced a series of positions including Hyde Park Gift Shop, Montgomery Ward, Dupont, and then pianist and entertainer. He travelled extensively in this country, performing in hotels, nightclubs, restaurants, and at private parties until his retirement in 1985. During the day he often studied in libraries researching entertainment in past times, old songs, jokes, etc. He was a member of many clubs and organizations, including the Harvard and Dartmouth Clubs of N.Y. and the Lion's Club, and he published numerous magazine articles, speeches, and college lectures.

His wife, Katherine, died in 1954.

1926

Albert Ely Morris

died September 5 in Aiken, S.C. Born on Nantucket Island, he grew up in Boston and graduated from English High School. At Dartmouth he was Phi Beta Kappa and a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa and Gamma Alpha. He studied medicine at Dartmouth and then Harvard. He and his family made their home in Reading, Mass., where Al spent 14 years in private practice. After the onset of war he spent 23 years in the medical corps of the navy, retiring as a captain in 1968.

Sadie, his wife of 58 years, died in 1989, and he is survived by his sons George '54 T'59 and Edward '59, a sister, nine grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren.

1935

George Arthur Boylston

of Portland, Ore., died on June 3. George left Dartmouth to pursue medicine at Northwestern University. He served in the U.S. Army as an expert in tropical medicine, after which he entered practice in Portland. George leaves his widow, Wilma, and four children, including Patrick '74.

Galo Putnam Emerson

died October 8 at the Cooley-Dickenson Hospital in western Massachusetts. He made his home in Amherst.

Galo served in the Army Air Corps in World War II. He founded Putnam Paulry in Danvers and served as president of New England Retail Confectioners Association.

He is survived by his wife, Ruth, four sons, and ten grandchildren.

1943

Dustin Cole Lewis

died September 30 from a heart attack in his home in Canton, Ohio. Dusty entered Dartmouth from Lebanon (Ohio) High School and was a member of Theta Chi. He went to Tuck School and then joined the navy. In 1946 Dusty joined the Edward R. Hart Company of Canton, and he became its president in 1970. He suffered a severe heart attack in 1981, forcing him to retire and to give up his many Canton community affairs.

He is survived by his wife, Florence, and two children.

1951

Robert Caterson

died of kidney failure on April 27 at the Bridgeport (Conn.) Hospital. He is survived by his mother and his brother Wayne. At Dartmouth Bob majored in English, was a senior fellow and a member of the French Club and the Italian Club.

In 1957 he was awarded a James B. Reynolds scholarship to pursue his language studies at the Sorbonne. In his teaching career, Bob was a language specialist who taught for many years in New York and New Jersey public schools. During his summer vacations he traveled extensively in Europe. Prior to his death, Bob had retired to his home in Stratford, Conn.

1955

Thomas Dexter Hubbard

of Brooklyn, N.Y., died July 19 of severe viral pneumonia. Tom came to Dartmouth from Chagrin Falls (Ohio) High School and was a Government major. He was a member of Kappa Kappa Kappa, the Army ROTC and was active in the DCU, serving as secretary his senior year.

Tom served as a lieutenant in the army from 1955-1957, with an overseas assignment in Korea. In 1959 he received a master's degree in foreign affairs from the University of Pennsylvania. For many years Tom was in wholesale sales of interior furnishings in New York City, and held the position of sales manager for Miele Inc. At the time of his death he was on the staff of Alcoholics Anonymous World Services in New York. Tom never married and is survived by his mother, Madge Hubbard, two brothers, and several nieces and nephews.

1961

James Edward Crandall

died on August 18 of an apparent heart attack in his Toledo, Ohio, home one day short of his 29th wedding anniversary. An architectural draftsman for Toledo area architects and contractors, Jim had been on the verge of getting his architect's license.

His speciality was doing prospectis for projects, and he last worked for Art Association.

He came to Dartmouth after graduating from Burnham High School in Sylvania, Ohio. He majored in art architecture, and for several years attended the Washington University, St. Louis, architecture program. He is survived by his wife, Judith, and three daughters.