LOIS E. EGASTI ’77

LOIS E. EGASTI, a human resources executive who founded and was president of the Hurricane Voices Breast Cancer Foundation, died of breast cancer Apr. 15, 2003. She was 47. After receiving a master’s degree in public and private management from Yale University, she worked in human resources at Cummins Diesel Engine Company, Wellesley College, and Lotus Development Corporation. She started the Foundation to make a difference in the search for a cause and a cure for breast cancer. Survivors include her husband, Jeffrey L. Shames ’77, a daughter, two sisters, and a brother.

RUSSELL G. “TOBY” D’OENCH III ’77

RUSSELL G. “Toby” D’OENCH III, 58, an attorney and partner in Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, LLP, and founder of the North Star Fund, a nonprofit organization that supports grassroots groups fighting for equality, economic justice and peace, died Jan. 23, 2012. Known as Toby, he received his law degree from Columbia University Law School in 1992, where he was both a James Kent Scholar and a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar. He clerked for the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York before entering private practice. A member of Skadden’s Financial Institutions Group, he handled mergers, acquisitions, equity offerings and other transactions, both public and private. In 1977 he founded the North Star Fund, a nonprofit organization that supports grassroots groups fighting for equality, economic justice and peace, and he served as the organization’s executive director until 1983. The son of the late Ellen G. D’Oench ’73, he is survived by his wife, Tani Takagi, two children, his sister, and his brother, Peter G. D’Oench ’73.

WILLIAM F. AYER ’72

An environmental activist and politician, died Feb. 13, 2013, at age 63. A 33-year resident of Fountain Valley, Calif., he was a member of the City Council and later served as the city’s mayor. Survivors include his wife, Verna Ayer, his parents, two sons, and three siblings.

DENNIS M. DUBIN ’71

Dennis M. Dubin, a child advocate in the Philadelphia court system, died Nov. 12, 2008. He was 58. A College of Letters major at Wesleyan, he initially worked as an actor in New York and Hawaii after graduation. In the 1980s, he began his second career, earning a law degree from the University of Pennsylvania in 1988 and serving as a child advocate until his death. He had been undergoing treatment for bladder cancer. Survivors include a sister.

WARD T. DEWITT ’70

WARD T. DEWITT, who retired as second-in-command of the New York State prison system and who went on to be the executive director of the Martin Luther King Jr. Institute for Nonviolence, died June 12, 2010, at age 62. A member of Eclectic, he began his career as counselor and then became a criminal justice adviser to the New York State Governor. He served on the Albany, N.Y., school board for five years, including as chair, and he helped to lead the board of the New Covenant Charter School, Albany’s first charter school. Survivors include his wife, Mary Ferguson DeWitt, four children, two grandchildren, three sisters, and a large extended family.

NORMA B. BOURDEAU ’75

NORMA B. BOURDEAU, 69, who retired as a visiting lecturer at Frostburg State University, died Feb. 7, 2010. She matriculated at Wesleyan 14 years after graduating from high school in New Jersey, and after receiving her degree worked for the Travelers Insurance Company, where she was the assistant director of training. She also taught writing courses part–time. In 1994, she received a master’s degree in theology from Holy Apostles Seminary in Cromwell, Conn., and then joined the faculty at Frostburg. She also lectured on various aspects of the Underground Railroad and in 2003 led the reorganization of the Allegany Branch of the NAACP, serving as its president. Among those who survive are her husband, Ray Bourdeau, five stepchildren, her daughter–in–law, two grandchildren, and numerous cousins.

GEORGE T. BRUBAKER ’64

GEORGE T. BRUBAKER, a founding partner of the law firm of Hartman, Underhill, & Brubaker, LLP, died of cancer on Aug. 1, 2006. He was 64. A member of Delta Kappa Epsilon and a history major as an undergraduate, he received his bachelor’s degree with honors. He attended the University of Pennsylvania Law School, earning his doctorate of jurisprudence, magna cum laude. He held a federal clerkship before returning to Lancaster, Pa., where he served in the office of the District Attorney and then entered into private practice. He developed a special expertise in municipal and school law and was active in his firm until his death. He is survived by his wife, Margot Lasher Brubaker, a daughter, a son, Theodore Brubaker ’93, and two grandsons.

PHYLLIS R. BRUCE ’77

PHYLLIS R. BRUCE, an accomplished musician, writer, and administrator, died Nov. 8, 2010. She was 69. After receiving an associate’s degree from Mattatuck Community College, she earned a bachelor’s degree in music and a master’s degree in American studies from Wesleyan. As a performer and scholar, she is best known for her work with the songs of American women, particularly in the 19th and early 20th centuries. She is the author of several short articles in the Grove Dictionary of American Music. Her master’s thesis was on the life and work of composer Carrie Jacobs Bond. For many years she worked on a biography of Mrs. Bond, left unfinished at the time of her passing. She was also well-known for her performances of the music of her husband, Wesleyan Professor of Music and American Studies Neely Bruce. She sang in major premieres of works by many American composers. The late John Cage considered her performance of his Song Books definitive. She was the associate director of the Graduate Liberal Studies Program at Wesleyan from 1976 to 1984, and she also worked in real estate and property management. Since 1997 she served as co-director of music at South Congregational Church in Middletown and with her husband wrote a series of three church musicals. Among those who survive are her husband, seven children, 12 grandchildren, her mother, four sisters, a brother, and a large extended family.

DANA ELIZABETH BRAMLETTE ’71

DANA ELIZABETH BRAMLETTE died of a heart attack Sept. 26, 2004, in Tuscon, Ariz. She was predeceased by her father in 1974, and is survived by her mother, Joan Docherty Bramlette Howell of Dallas, Texas; two sisters; and a brother.

FATIMAH ALI ’78

FATIMAH ALI, a radio host and Philadelphia Daily News columnist, died Jan. 23, 2012. She was 56. Known for her views as an advocate of social justice, she was also associated with a newspaper written and edited by the homeless. Survivors include her former husband, State Senator Vincent Hughes; her most recent partner, Natu Ali; five children; two grandchildren; and her sister. Her second husband, A. Brahin Ahmaddiya, predeceased her.