Gordon Colby is again serving as Alumni Fund class chairman. He notes that last year the following had contributed in each of the 68 years since graduation: Chuck Baker, Chuck Brewster, Dud Bonsai, Gordon Colby, Stu Ensigner, and Dow Mills. Close behind with more than 60 years of giving were Ken Anderson, Seth Besse, Rog Bury, Tom Gillespie, John Hough, Ed Jacob, Merritt Joslyn, Bob Long, Dick Mooney, Steve Osborn, Jonathan Rintels, Warren Smith, Norman Smith, and Jack Thees.
The past year has been a tough one for 1927. Our class secretary, Dr. StephenDow Mills, who has been writing this colto Ruth Baker, widow of Horace EdwardBaker. They went to Dow's winter home in Arizona and on December 24 he suffered a stroke and died December 27.
Dr. Rolfe M. Harvey, former chief of the radiology department of Bryn Mawr Hospital, retired to Sarasota, Fla. He died April 24 at a rest home in Marietta, Ga.
Dudley Bonsai, retired senior federal judge in New York City, died July 22. He became the most prominent of the 17 of us who went on to Harvard Law School, having been president of the NYC Bar Association 1958-61.
Kenneth Yeaton, real estate and insurance, was nominated in 1971 by the Flemington Association of Realtors for Realtor of the Year by the New Jersey Association of Realtors. Upon his retirement he moved to Naples, Fla., where he was living at the time of his death July 31.
Jack Thees, one-time advertising director of the New York Herald Tribune, died September 30 in Houston, Tex.
Dr. Thomas Anglem, class valedictorian, died at his home in New Orleans November 26. He taught, treated, and practiced cancer surgery in the Boston area. He carried on a debate in the cancer magazine with Dr. Crile of the Cleveland Clinic about partial mastectomy versus radical, which Dr. Anglem advocated. 13 Wintergreen Hill, Painesville, OH 44077