

After her retirement in 1980, she served in many volunteer capacities, including providing transportation to cancer patients and tutoring English as a second language to new immigrants. She married her husband in 1953 and they moved to Walnut Creek, California, where she worked for Contra Costa County as the supervisor of the social services department at County Hospital in Martinez.

She entered Reed after serving in the Air Force during World War II. Eleanor Borman Thompson ’52Įleanor Regina Borman Thompson ’52, April 1, 1998, in Contra Costa, California, after a long illness. She is survived by three sisters, a brother, grandmother, uncle, four nieces and nephews, and her partner, Cameron Flint ’87. She also worked for several years in the Center for Medical Consumers, founded by Arthur Levin ’57. After graduating from Reed, she cofounded the Women’s Health Education Project in New York City with Stephanie Stevens ’86 and Susan Davis ’88. She was awarded two prestigious fellowships in her field: the Bourse Chateaubriand Fellowship and a Fulbright Fellowship for work towards her dissertation in Paris. She was a PhD candidate in the Humanities Center at Johns Hopkins University. Maggie Brown ’88, April 12, 1998, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, of breast cancer. He is survived by his wife, three sons, a sister, and six grandchildren. He also served on the board of directors of Holladay Park Hospital from 1961 to 1981 and chaired the hospital board from 1976 to 1978. Active in the Junior Achievement program for 22 years, he received the organization’s Bronze Leadership Award in 1981. He retired as vice president and general counsel for Georgia Pacific in 1981. During World War II, he served as an air intelligence officer with the 20th Bomber Command Intelligence Section in India and Guam. After attending Reed from 1934 to 1935, he earned a bachelor of science degree in business administration from the University of Oregon in 1937 and a law degree from Yale Law School in 1940. Breuer ’38, February 8, 1998, in Lake Oswego, Oregon. She was past president of the Oregon Cow Belles and a former trustee of the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry.

She owned and operated a cattle ranch east of Mitchell, Oregon. Blann ’34, April 11, 1998, in Beaverton, Oregon. Survivors include his wife, three daughters, a brother, four grandchildren, and a niece, Ann Botsford Phillips ’70. After retiring, Charles was a lobbyist for corporations and individuals in Washington, D.C. Air Force, where he served as legislative affairs officer until his retirement in 1965. Botsford, director of physical education at Reed College for many years. Botsford ’34, May 3, 1996, in Alexandria, Virginia. She is survived by her two sons, a brother, and two grandchildren. She also volunteered for the Edmonton Learning Centre. She was an active volunteer, and was a member of the Canadian Voice of Women for Peace, Edmontonians for a Non-Nuclear Future, and the Council of Canadians.

For much of her life she was a homemaker, but she later was employed as a newspaper editor. in 1961, the family moved to Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. She married Charles Sanford Brant ’41, in 1946 in Portland, and the couple had two sons. Jane Ada Dredger Brant ’40, March 22, 1995, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Hubert (Hugh) Chrestenson Ī B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Results for "B"
