.

.
.

Friday, March 27, 2015

Linfield loses lifelong supporter Charlotte Filer (N-R 3/27/2015) .... and obits


By Starla Pointer 
McMinnville News-Register Staff Writer
 March 27, 2015  

Linfield loses lifelong supporter Charlotte Filer

Charlotte Filer, who inspired hundreds of students during her many years teaching journalism, died Tuesday at a McMinnville retirement home. She was 83.
....
Photo cutline
Charlotte Filer stops to smell the lilacs. Raised in Dayton, she taught journalism at Linfield College for many years and was active in groups such as the Daughters of the American Revolution. Submitted photo/Tom Barreto
.....

A memorial service is slated for 11 a.m. Friday, April 17, at the Dayton Pioneer Evangelical Church. Burial is planned in the Dayton Odd Fellows Cemetery under the direction of Macy & Son Funeral Directors.

Filer graduated from Linfield College, then returned to teach there. In addition to journalism, she developed an abiding interest in history and genealogy. She was active in her church and the Yamhill Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution.

“Charlotte was a beautiful woman with a real sense of history,” said fellow DAR member Beverly Treneman.

Filer served as the local DAR chapter’s historian, publicity chair and, most recently, chaplain.

Whatever she agreed to take on was handled extremely well, Treneman said. “Charlotte was a little bitty thing, but she was strong,” her friend said.

She was born to Emmett and Lena Filer on March 7, 1932, in McMinnville.

She grew up in Dayton, where her parents worked for, then owned, Miller’s Mercantile until 1945. It later became Putt’s Market.

Filer followed her older sister, Audrey, to Linfield.

In 2007, she recalled her college days for a News-Register story about the Linfield Old Ladies, known as LOL, who met regularly for coffee and conversation. She said the first class she took on campus was a one-credit health course taught by Roy Helser in Cozine Hall.

After graduating cum laude in 1954 as a budding journalist, she went to work for the News-Register. In later years, she would be a frequent contributor to the paper’s letters to the editor section.

She returned to Linfield when one of her professors, Jim Milligan, asked her to join the Linfield News Bureau. She took a year off in 1960 to earn her master’s degree from the University of Iowa, then returned to teach in Linfield’s journalism department.

In addition to simultaneously teaching and directing the news bureau, Filer edited the college’s alumni publication and served as faculty adviser for its yearbook, student newspaper and Pi Delta Epsilon journalism honorary.

After 19 years at Linfield, she left to become public information director at another small liberal arts college, Pacific University in Forest Grove. Both Pacific and Linfield went on to establish scholarships in her name.

Although she retired from the Forest Grove school in 1989, she always remained “loyal to old Linfield.” In keeping with that, she helped raise money for her alma mater through the Partners in Progress campaign for many years.

Edith Reynolds of McMinnville was a senior at Linfield when Filer enrolled. Later, they served on the faculty together and became fast friends.

“There were not too many young, single women on the faculty at that time,” Reynolds recalled.

Since neither had a 10 o’clock class, they made a habit of meeting for coffee at that time. They continued their coffee get-togethers throughout the decades as part of the LOL group and with other friends.

Filer, who described herself as “thrifty,” always made sure to get her coffee card punched so she could get the free cup she’d earned.

They even were in an investment club together, Reynolds said. “We didn’t make any money,” she said, “but we had fun anyway.”
……….

McMINNVILLE NEWS-REGISTER
Go to
Then, search for Charlotte's name or Obituary 3423593


SALEM STATESMAN-JOURNAL

OREGONIAN

MACY & SON, McMINNVILLE