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  <title>List of Records in Colorado College Oral History Collection Collection - Digital Archives of Colorado College</title>
  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/</link>
  <description>Digital Archives of Colorado College</description>
  <language>en</language>
  <generator>Fez </generator>
  <docs>http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss</docs>
   				  	      
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	  <title>Andrews, Julie Irene Ashenhurst</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3054</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Julie Andrews (CC class of 1971) attended Colorado College from 1967 to 1969, then spent her junior year with the Scandinavian Seminar. She returned to Colorado College in the fall of 1970 and was a member of Phi Beta Kappa her senior year. Graduating with a B.A. in philosophy, cum laude, she worked in a variety of capacities. At the time of the interview, she was a freelance journalist and contributor to the Colorado Springs Sun. She reflects on student life, social unrest, the Block Plan.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-19 11:32:26</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Arnest, Bernard Patrick</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3066</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Professor Bernard Arnest, a Denver native born in 1917, was a professor of art at Colorado College from 1957–1982. He was Chairman of the Art Department for 17 of those 25 years. A noted painter whose works have been exhibited at various galleries throughout the country, Arnest received his formal training at the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center School of Art from 1935 to 1939.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-22 15:58:41</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Atencio, Dolores S.</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3027</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Dolores S. Atencio (CC class of 1977) graduated from Colorado College with a degree in Political Science. She attended the University of Denver College of Law, and was admitted to the Colorado Bar in October, 1981. A native of Pueblo, Colorado, Ms. Atencio discusses her strong Chicano heritage and her perspectives as a minority student at Colorado College. She actively participated in MECHA (Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano Aztlan), the Chicano student organization on the campus. In 1979, she, along with her former husband, Randy Serna (CC class of 1974) founded the Colorado College Chicano Alumni Association.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-08-24 16:00:05</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Barnes, Otis Avery</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3001</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Professor Otis Barnes taught chemistry at Colorado College from 1925-1962. He was active in the formation of the athletics policy at Colorado College, and also, along with his wife, endowed the Barnes Chemistry Scholarships for students who are chemistry majors at Colorado College. Barnes discusses the department, the curriculum, the faculty and the effect of WWII on the campus. He gives a brief history of the hockey program including star players at the time and the involvement of El Pomar and the Broadmoor.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-07-20 13:41:34</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Beidleman, Richard Gooch</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3071</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>A prolific writer, a much sought-after speaker, and a highly respected professor, Richard Beidleman is one of Colorado College&#039;s most notable faculty members. He taught zoology from 1957-1968 and biology from 1968-1988. His research interests centered on the role of natural scientists in frontier America and Australia, and he helped author high school and junior high school biology textbooks, among approximately 250 other published works. The Colorado Springs community knows him best as a dedicated environmental activist who fought for many years for such causes as the preservation of the White House Ranch and the Garden of the Gods Park, the prevention of strip mining along Front Range quarries, and the successful League of Women Voters lawsuit against the City of Colorado Springs regarding the Palmer deeded parks. He served on the Colorado State Parks Board for eight years, including three and a half years as its chairman and succeeded, among other things, in obtaining Muehler Ranch as a state park. The Beidleman Environmental Center at Sondermann Park was established in his honor by the City of Colorado Springs.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-29 15:45:32</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Boddington, William Gile &quot;Tim&quot;</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3058</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>William Gile “Tim” Boddington (CC class of 1972) was born and grew up in Colorado Springs. He attended Lake Forest College in Illinois during the 1968-69 academic year but transferred to Colorado College in the fall of 1969 and graduated with a B.S. in geology. His interview includes his reflections on academic, athletic and social life at Colorado College during the early 1970’s.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-20 15:16:25</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Boucher, Paul Edward</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:2999</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Professor Boucher (CC class of 1918), Department of Physics, came to Colorado College as a student in 1915, initially borrowing tuition money from President Slocum. He describes the lab facilities in Palmer Hall and his work with wireless radios and soldiers on campus during WWI for radio school. After serving one year in the Army in the Signal Corps, Boucher went to graduate school, returning to his alma mater to teach physics from 1921 to 1924. Following a year as instructor at Rice University, he came back to Colorado College in 1925 and taught until his retirement in 1961. Professor Boucher is especially well known for his work in the field of photography. Professor Boucher talks about the Depression&#039;s effect on the College, salary cuts, building of Shove Chapel, Saturday Knights, Manly Ormes, Arthur Blakely, and Earl Bryson. He also discusses the publishing of his photography books and photographic travel.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-07-14 10:49:14</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Bowers, Wilber Lamb</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3028</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Mr. Wilber &quot;Bill&quot; Lamb Bowers was a well-known Colorado Springs photographer. His maternal grandfather was Henry Lamb, a pioneer chemist and assayer who taught in the Colorado College Chemistry Department and who was the photographer of the famous early Cutler Hall photo. Bill Bowers&#039; mother also taught in the Chemistry Department, and his father, Clarence Bowers, taught in the College Conservatory of Music from 1896 to 1905. Bill Bowers was a 1927 graduate of the University of Arizona, served in the U.S. Army during World War II, and, after the war, established a photography business in Colorado Springs with his brother-in-law, Lloyd Knutson. Knutson-Bowers Photographers had a long association with Colorado College.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-08-26 11:29:04</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Boyce, Wallace Campbell</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3063</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Professor Wallace Boyce was a faculty member in the Romance Languages Department at Colorado College from 1950 until his retirement in 1979. He received his B.A. from Williams, his M.A. from Middlebury, and his Ph.D. from Princeton in 1956. Before coming to Colorado College, Boyce served in the Army at Camp Carson in the 1940s, and was an intelligence officer in the European Theater in the Second World War. He also coached the Colorado College tennis team from 1953 to 1958, sang in the Colorado College choir for many years and was chairman of the Romance Languages department between 1958 and 1967.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-22 12:52:41</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Bradley, Richard Crane</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3073</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Professor Richard C. Bradley received his B.A. in Physics from Dartmouth College in 1943. Following wartime service in the U.S. Naval Reserve, he completed a Ph.D. in Physics at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1953. From 1953-1961 he was a researcher and faculty member at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. In 1961, he came to Colorado College as Associate Professor of Physics, and was promoted to Full Professor in 1966. He retired from a long and distinguished career at Colorado College in 1987, including six years as Dean of the Faculty and Dean of the College from 1973 to 1979. Active in environmental politics both at the local and national level, Bradley served as president of the Springs Area Beautiful Association from 1971 to 1973, and as a trustee of the National Parks Association from 1966 to 1976. An avid cross-country skier, he is also noted for his interest in music as a long-time member of the Colorado Springs Chorale, the Colorado Opera Festival Board, and as a composer of some note.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-03 10:58:54</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Brannon, Grace Berkley</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3006</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Grace Brannon arrived in Colorado Springs with her parents in 1916 and attended Columbia grade school and Colorado Springs High School. As a student at Colorado College, she majored in romance languages (CC class of 1927). Mrs. Brannon describes the importance of social and athletic activities during her time as a student at Colorado College: attitudes towards sex (1920&#039;s), the Bruin Inn, Minerva Society, cars, alcohol, dances, clothing, athletics, homecoming, and Colorado College songs. She talks about memorable professors: Charles Latimer, Rebecca Hartness, Robert F. Snyder, Ralph J. Gilmore. Administrators whom she remembers were: Manly Ormes, President Charles Mierow, Mabel Barbee Lee. She reflects on her work as an alumni trustee from 1958 to 1964. Other interests discussed are the League of Women Voters and the Democratic Party.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-07-22 11:01:23</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Brooks, Glenn E.</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3051</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Born in Kerrville, Texas in August 1931, Professor Brooks received his B.A. and M.A. degrees at the University of Texas, and his Ph.D. at Johns Hopkins University in 1960. He joined the faculty of Colorado College&#039;s Political Science Department in the fall of 1960, was promoted to Assistant Professor in 1961, to Associate Professor in 1964, and to Full Professor in 1970. Brooks was the chief architect of Colorado College&#039;s Block Plan, which went into effect in the fall of 1970. From 1979 through 1987, he served as Dean of the College, and from 1991 to 1993 as Director of Strategic Planning. His principal interests in public policy and in curricular and managerial reform in higher education led him to international consultancies in Africa and at the Universidad de Puebla, Mexico.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-14 16:02:31</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Bryson, Arthur Earl</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:2989</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Arthur Bryson was both a graduate (CC class of 1911) and an alumni trustee of Colorado College from 1948-1949. Following a 34-year career as an investment banker for Halsey Stewart and Company in Chicago, he retired in Colorado Springs in 1946, where he founded the Colorado Springs Charter Association, and the Springs Area Beautiful Association. His second wife was the former Dorothy Printup Hulbert Wing. During his time as a student at Colorado College, he was the editor of both The Tiger and The Nugget.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-07-08 13:37:57</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Bryson, Dorothy Printup</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3029</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Dorothy Printup Hulbert Bryson was an instructor at Colorado College in Greek and Latin from 1921-1925. In 1923 she married history professor and noted historian Archer Butler Hulbert who became head of the Stewart Commission on Western History. After his death in 1933, she carried on as editor of the Commission until 1941. She returned to Colorado College between 1951 and 1960, working in various capacities: as head resident, summer school secretary, and part-time English instructor. She was active in many community organizations including the Women&#039;s Educational Society. She received an honorary doctorate of humane letters from Colorado College in 1989. Her third husband was A. Earl Bryson (CC class of 1911).</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-08-26 14:45:50</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Calvert, William Mark</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3030</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>William M. Calvert (CC class of 1944) attended Colorado College from 1940 to 1943, and received his Bachelor of Arts in political science in absentia in 1944. When the Navy V-12 unit arrived on the Colorado College campus in 1942, Calvert was automatically a member, for he had enlisted in the Naval Reserves shortly after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. He served in the Pacific Theater in World War II. Calvert entered the University of Colorado School of Law in 1946, and received his Juris Doctorate in 1948. In 1961, he was elected District Judge, and he held that post until his retirement in 1981. Judge Calvert was a member of the Saturday Knights, the prestigious Colorado Springs hiking club.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-08-27 13:06:39</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Carle, Gerald C.</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3077</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Gerald C. “Jerry” Carle first came to Colorado College in 1948 as assistant football coach and head basketball and baseball coach. Recalled to military service during the Korean War in 1951, he was rehired by Colorado College in 1957 as head football coach and Athletic Director. He held the latter job until 1982, but continued as football coach and golf coach until his retirement in 1990. During his 33-year tenure at the College, he was involved in planning many changes in athletic facilities, including the building of Honnen Ice Rink, Schlessman Pool, and El Pomar Sports Center, as well as policies and programs, including the growth of intramural soccer and women&#039;s sports.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-04 10:17:23</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Carter, Harvey Lewis</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:2975</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Professor Carter joined the faculty in the Department of History at Colorado College in 1945. Carter talks about people who were at the college during that time (Hershey, Abbott, Malone, Worner). Many of the students were WWII veterans. Because faculty salaries were very low (highest salary was $3600), Carter organized the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) chapter and worked with President Gill to draft salary ranks and faculty tenure policies. Carter talks about the effects of the McCarthy era on the Colorado College campus, and President&#039;s Gill&#039;s defense of those targeted. He resigned as History Department Chair in 1959. Carter was curator of the Hulbert Collection of Western Americana. He talks about his own writing: western fur trade, Hafen sketches of mountain men, Kit Carson, limerick writing, and his philosophy of teaching.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-06-15 16:41:14</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Caunt, Kay Lynn Niederhut</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3055</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Kay Niederhut Caunt (CC class of 1972) came to Colorado College from her home in Denver, Colorado, and graduated with a B.A. in history. Her interview focuses on campus life as a married student, campus attitudes toward the Vietnam War, and her early involvement in politics. She was a state legislative candidate in 1974, a member of the Colorado Democratic Party&#039;s executive committee and rules committee and worked with the Colorado Springs-El Paso County CETA Manpower Planning Council.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-19 13:11:31</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Clark, Earl Harry</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3007</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Earl H. &quot;Dutch&quot; Clark, (CC class of 1930) who graduated from Colorado College as a biology major, remains CC&#039;s most famous athlete. A Pueblo, Colorado native, he became the first football player from the state of Colorado to be named All-American in 1928. He is a charter member of the Intercollegiate Football Hall of Fame, Rutgers, the National Professional Football League Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio, the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame, and the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame. He was chosen as an all-pro quarterback for six consecutive years. Following a career as a professional football player (Portsmouth Spartans and Detroit Lions) and coach (Detroit Lions, Cleveland Rams, Detroit University), he later worked at the Michigan Tool and Die Company.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-07-22 13:02:54</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Copeland, William D.</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3008</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>William D. Copeland (CC class of 1919) served as instructor in English and secretary of the College from 1920 to 1935. He later served as president of Lincoln College in Lincoln, Illinois, vice president of Lake Forest College in Illinois, president of Rocky Mountain College in Billings, Montana, and pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in Polson, Montana. Copeland gives his impressions of Colorado College both before and after World War I, including memories of Presidents Slocum, Duniway, Mierow, and Davies. He talks about the effects of the Depression,&quot;straight-laced CC&quot; in the 1920&#039;s, athletic teams, fraternities, and the San Luis School. Faculty mentioned in the interview: Cajori, Schneider, Parsons, Blum, Parrish, Hills, Howe, Hulbert, Gilmore, Strieby, and Okey.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-07-23 11:03:44</pubDate>
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													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Corley, Fern Pring</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3009</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Fern Pring Corley came to Colorado Springs in 1907, attending Garfield Elementary School and Colorado Springs High School. Corley (CC class of 1922) majored in chemistry. Her father, William J. Pring, was a pioneer rancher in the Pikes Peak region, and her husband&#039;s father, Mr. W. D. Corley, built the Corley Mountain Highway, now called the Gold Camp Road, on the roadbed of the old Short Line Railroad to Cripple Creek. Mrs. Corley describes student life at Colorado College including tuition, the Bruin Inn, student jobs, football, women&#039;s sports, freshman hazing, pranks, campus buildings, literary societies and Monument Valley Park. Included in the interview are descriptions of her early childhood in Colorado Springs, her family&#039;s early history in the area, and her husband&#039;s businesses.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-07-23 13:44:54</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Drea, William Francis</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3010</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Dr. William Drea was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts on September 5, 1885. Dr. Drea arrived in Colorado Springs in 1917 as a tuberculosis patient, having been a faculty member of the Harvard Dental School before becoming ill. A dentist and a radiologist, he was a lecturer on X-ray in the physics department at Colorado College from 1922 through 1960. From 1928 through 1952 he was also Associate Research Director at the Colorado Foundation for Research in Tuberculosis. At the time of his interview, Dr. Drea was 91 and still a frequent visitor to Tutt Library. He was known for his lively conversation and keen sense of humor which made him a favorite among the library staff. He always wore a fresh cut flower in his coat lapel. He describes Colorado College faculty and administrators: Professor Cajori, Manly Ormes, Louise Kampf, Professor Tileston, Presidents Duniway and Mierow, along with memories of the Cragmor Sanitorium.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-07-28 10:34:16</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Fagan, George V.</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3047</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>A native of Philadelphia born in 1917, Dr. George V. Fagan received his B.S. and M.A. degrees from Temple University, his Master of Library Science degree from the University of Denver in 1957 and a Ph.D. in History from the University of Pennsylvania in 1954. A World War II veteran, he served as librarian of the United States Air Force Academy for 15 years before his retirement from the Air Force in 1969 with the rank of Colonel. From 1969 to 1983 he was head librarian at Colorado College&#039;s Tutt Library. During his tenure, he added more than 100,000 volume to the library, established the Special Collections Division, created the Lincoln Room and CC Room, oversaw the planning and construction of the 25,000 square-foot addition to the library, and established the Friends of the Library. In 1988 Dr. Fagan authored a book entitled, The Air Force Academy: An Illustrated History.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-07 11:58:06</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Fischer, William Alfred</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3032</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>William A. Fischer was a faculty member in the Geology Department at Colorado College from 1949-1982, becoming department chair in 1978. In 1959, commissioned by the United States National Park Service, he conducted a study of the disastrous earthquake in Yellowstone National Park. This study resulted in a series of articles entitled, &quot;Yellowstone&#039;s Living Geology.&quot; Professor Fischer recalls colleagues, presidents, and changes in the campus, including the transition to the Block Plan.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-09-16 14:13:39</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Fisher, Alan</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3020</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Alan Fisher (CC class of 1968) grew up in Wichita, Kansas attending Wichita State for one year before transferring to Colorado College in 1965. Graduating with his Bachelor of Arts in Political Science in 1968, he served in the U.S. Army until 1971. He received a Master of Library Science in 1972 from Denver University, and a Master of Arts in Business from the University of Nebraska in 1976. He served as reference librarian at Tutt Library from 1977 to 1983. Alan describes campus life and attitudes during the late 1960&#039;s.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-08-16 13:15:56</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Frazier, Effie Evelyn Stroud</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3062</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Effie Stroud Frazier, (CC class of 1931) was one of the first African-American women to attend Colorado College and one of seven members of the well-known Stroud family to attend Colorado College. She was the first recipient of the Sachs scholarship. In her interview, Effie Frazier discusses race relations in Colorado Springs during the Depression and her experiences as a minority student at Colorado College.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-22 11:22:28</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Friedman, Bradley Alan</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3064</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Bradley Alan Friedman (CC class of 1982) was born in Denver, Colorado in 1959 and graduated from Cherry Creek High School in 1978. He attended Colorado College from 1978-1982, graduating with a B.A. in History/Political Science. He was a member of the Alpha Lambda Delta honor fraternity, Chavarim, Phi Delta Theta fraternity, and the Colorado College Campus Association, of which he served as president. His interview took place during his senior year at Colorado College and focuses on campus organizations and activism during the early 1980’s.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-22 14:08:50</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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	  <title>Gamer, Carlton</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3049</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>A noted composer and music theorist, Professor Carlton Gamer received his Bachelors in Music from Northwestern University in 1950, and his Masters from Boston University in 1951. He came to Colorado College first in 1953 as an accompanist for the dance program. From 1954 through 1960, he was a full-time instructor in the music department. He became assistant professor in 1960; associate professor in 1966; and served as a full professor from 1974 until his retirement in 1994. Besides his talents as a composer and teacher of music, Professor Gamer also has had a great interest in Asian culture and philosophy and mathematical thought. As a conscientious objector, Professor Gamer counseled many young men about the draft.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-13 13:40:16</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
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		  <item>
	  <title>Gordon, Joseph Tulloch</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3052</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Born in St. Louis in 1930, Professor Gordon received his B.A. from St. Louis in 1955, a second B.A. from DePaul University in 1958, his M.A. from Colorado University in 1960 and a Ph.D. from Pennsylvania State University in 1967. A specialist in American literature, Professor Gordon came to Colorado College as assistant professor of English in 1964. He was promoted to associate professor in 1970 and to full professor in 1977. In 1970, he became both the creator and director of Colorado College&#039;s Southwest Studies Program, a position that he held most of the time until his retirement in 1994. One of his chief accomplishments was the establishment of the Colorado College Baca Campus in 1987. Joe Gordon was also an avid tennis player, skier and fly fisherman.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-15 13:44:01</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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	  <title>Hamilton, Mary Alice</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3080</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Dr. Mary Alice “Pinky” Hamilton first came to Colorado Springs in 1947 with her sister, Sally, and brother-in-law, Robert M. Stabler, at the time he joined the Colorado College faculty as a zoologist. A 1933 graduate of Elmira College, New York, Hamilton received her Ph.D. in physiology from Columbia University and from 1939 to 1941 did research at the University of Michigan Medical School. Hamilton became the associate lab director for the Colorado Foundation for Research in Tuberculosis from 1947 to 1952. She began to lecture in zoology at Colorado College in 1950, becoming assistant professor in 1958, associate professor in 1963, professor of biology in 1972, and retiring as professor emerita in 1977. She also assisted her brother-in-law, Robert Stabler, with research projects related to trichomoniasis in pigeons and falcons.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-04 15:14:49</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Haney, John Donald</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3082</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Donald J. Haney (CC class of 1933) was originally from Mississippi, but later grew up in Colorado Springs when his family moved to the city for his father’s health. Haney talks about the social life at the College, his role as a cheerleader, a golf team member, campus athletics, professors, friends who have become prominent citizens and college supporters, his beloved wife, Gratia Belle Blackman,whom he met at Colorado College, the library and librarian, and being a musician in dance bands at Colorado College. After graduating he moved to Chicago to become a professional musician, but Miss Blackman and Colorado’s blue skies soon brought him back to Colorado Springs. Mr. Haney attended law school at the University of Colorado and practiced law with his brother in Colorado Springs until he retired.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-05 13:56:59</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Hochman, William R.</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3085</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Professor William R. Hochman was born on August 28, 1921 in New York City, and received his B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees from Columbia University. He served in the United States Navy during World War II. Professor Hochman joined the Colorado College faculty as instructor of history in March, 1955, was assistant professor from 1955 through 1960, associate professor from 1960 to 1965, and professor of history from 1965 until his retirement in 1998. He served as Chair of the Department of Education for four years, beginning in 1964 and as Chair of the History Department from 1970 to 1983, and Dean of the Summer Session from 1990–1998. He also served on innumerable campus committees and as faculty marshal for many years. Notable for his compelling public speaking, Professor Hochman was long active in local, state and national Democratic party politics but he is best known as an outstanding teacher by his many former students, particularly the alumni of Freedom and Authority.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-05 16:03:15</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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	  <title>Honnen, Edward H.</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3076</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Edward H. Honnen was born in Pueblo, Colorado on April 17, 1899, and grew up in Colorado Springs. In the midterm of 1917, he entered Colorado College, where he excelled in three sports: basketball, track, and especially football, for which he was named the Rocky Mountain Conference&#039;s All Conference Tackle. When his father died in 1920, Honnen assumed control of the family&#039;s construction business. Over the years, he became a highly successful general contractor, involved in many important regional projects such as the building of Ft. Carson, Peterson Field, and various aspects of the Denver and Colorado Springs water systems. Around 1949, he became President of the McCoy Caterpillar Company, until his retirement in 1965, when he pursued team roping in the Old Timer&#039;s Rodeo Circuit. He is a member of the Cowboy Hall of Fame and the Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame. His many philanthropies have included: Colorado College Ice Rink, the donation of Western Art to the Fine Arts Center, and the Orchid House at the Denver Botanical Gardens. From 1946 to 1950, he served as a Colorado College Alumni Trustee and then as a Charter Trustee from 1960-1983. He received two Honorary Degrees from Colorado College, the first in 1960 and another in 1983. His autobiography, Tally Ho, contains further details of his life and many accomplishments.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-03 16:30:22</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Jackson, Helen</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3015</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-08-05 16:08:43</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Johns, Gilbert R.</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3048</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Professor of Psychology Gilbert R. Johns, who received his Ph.D. from the University of Indiana, came to Colorado College in 1962, following a teaching appointment at Ohio University. His specialties have been in sensory psychology and perception and the history of science and psychology. Professor Johns served as the Dean of the Colorado College Summer Session for 15 years, from 1965 to 1981. He was director of the Colorado Opera Festival from 1970 to 1978. From 1982 to 1992 he was critic at large for the Colorado Springs Gazette Telegraph. He retired in 1996.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-13 09:55:46</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Johnson, James Alan</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3050</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Professor Johnson (CC class of 1956) graduated with a major in economics. He was hired as an instructor in the Business Administration and Economics Department immediately following his graduation. After receiving his M.A. in Economics from Stanford University in 1959, he was promoted to assistant professor in 1961, associate professor in 1969, and professor in 1980. Professor Johnson&#039;s most notable contribution to the college was as registrar from the implementation of the Block Plan in 1970 to 1990. During his tenure, he initiated computerization of student and course records, an innovative point system, and a writing program across the curriculum. Following his retirement in 1995, he continued to serve as the coach of the Colorado College Forensics Team, a position he held for over 40 years.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-14 13:22:01</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Jones, Jean Armstrong and Jones, Gerald L.</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3031</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Jean Armstrong Jones (CC class of 1944) graduated with a B. A. degree in English and her husband, Gerald L. Jones, a member of the Naval V-12 Unit, was assigned to Colorado College from 1943-1945. Jean Armstrong Jones has a particularly long association with the college. Both of her parents graduated from Colorado College in 1899. Her father, Willis R. Armstrong, for whom Armstrong Hall is named, served as a trustee of the college from 1903 until 1956, and numerous members of her family also attended Colorado College. Gerald Jones has been associated with the Colorado Springs National Bank since 1946. Jean Jones provides memories of her childhood in Colorado Springs. Both Mr. and Mrs. Jones describe life on campus during World War II.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-09-14 13:38:12</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Jones, Raymond Dean</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3060</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Raymond D. Jones (CC class of 1967) was born in Pueblo, Colorado on November 30, 1945. While at Colorado College, Jones was the first African-American president of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity. After graduating from Colorado College, he received his law degree from Harvard University in 1971. At the time of this interview he was a judge in the Denver District Court, appointed by Governor Richard Lamm. Jones’ interview focuses on campus life in the 1960’s, attitudes about civil rights in Colorado Springs, and experiences from the perspective of a minority student.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-22 10:45:44</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Joyce, Mary Barkalow Holt</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3083</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Mary Barkalow Joyce (CC class of 1938) came with her sister and widowed mother to Colorado College from California in 1934 when her mother was offered the position as Head Resident of Bemis Hall. As an entering freshman, Miss Barkalow was offered a job as a “hasher” in Bemis. She talks about her enjoyment of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority; her professors, particularly her female professors as role models; her introduction to social work, which became her profession; campus social life; campus athletics; Murray’s Drug Store; classes; chapel attendance; and her career in social work. She compares her college experience to that of her granddaughters who attended Colorado College. Grace Berkley Brannon (CC class of 1927) contributes to this interview.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-05 14:58:38</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Keener, Helen Lennox</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3021</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Helen Lennox Keener graduated from Cutler Academy in 1913 and then from Colorado College (CC class of 1917). Mrs. Keener&#039;s family, the Lennox family, was one of the prominent pioneer families of the Pikes Peak region. With her husband, George Keener, she owned and operated for many years the Plaza Hotel (now Spencer Center) at the southwest corner of Cache la Poudre and Tejon streets. Her interview describes life at Cutler Academy and the academic and social life at Colorado College between 1913-1917.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-08-17 09:40:58</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>King, Jackson F.</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3011</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Jackson F. King (CC class of 1927) majored in economics, and then went on to a successful career in investments and banking. While a student at Colorado College, he was a member of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity, the business manager of the student yearbook, the Nugget, the treasurer of the senior class, and voted Most Likely to Succeed by his classmates. He was also employed at a theater on Pikes Peak Ave where he ran the motion picture projector. He talks about fraternity activities and student life. He recalls professors Jacob Swart, Ralph Gilmore, Lewis Abbott, A.P.R. Drucker, Dean of Students Charlie Brown Hershey, and President Mierow.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-08-05 10:56:07</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Krutzke, Frank A.</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:2998</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Professor Krutzke was a member of the English department at Colorado College from 1939-1971. He talks about his impressions of professors Daehler, Ellis, McCue, Bramhall, Abbott, and Gilmore. Krutzke discusses life at Colorado College during World War II, including student Bert Stiles, a pilot in the war who wrote a well known book, Serenade to the Big Bird. He gives impressions of the administration after the war and his involvement with the formation of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) chapter at Colorado College. He also discusses the changes that President Benezet brought to the College, the McCarthy era, Colorado College students from 1939 to the 1970s, and the Block Plan.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-07-13 15:48:51</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Kutsche, Paul</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3045</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Professor Paul Kutsche, &quot;Buzz,&quot; was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan on January 3, 1927. He received a B.A. from Harvard College in 1949; his M.A. in Anthropology from the University of Michigan in 1955; and his Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University of Pennsylvania in 1961. Kutsche came to Colorado College in the fall of 1959 as an assistant professor of sociology and anthropology. He is credited with creating a separate Anthropology Department in 1964. He was named professor in 1970, and finally professor emeritus in 1993. Author of many articles in professional journals, he also co-authored, with John Van Ness, a book entitled Canones. He has been an active advocate of homosexual rights in Colorado and around the country.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-06 16:29:47</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Liddle, Evelyn Berdine Johnson and Liddle, Edward B.</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3033</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Dr. Edward B. Liddle (CC class of 1943) and his wife, Evelyn Johnson Liddle (CC class of 1943) were both natives of Colorado Springs. Dr. Liddle was born on July 11, 1922, was a member of Phi Gamma Beta fraternity while at Colorado College, and graduated with a degree in biology. Dr. Liddle has been a general and thoracic surgeon in Colorado Springs since 1955. Mrs. Liddle was born on July 27, 1921, was a member of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and the Koshare drama club while at Colorado College, and graduated Phi Beta Kappa and Magna Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Arts in psychology. Among the topics they discuss was the impact of the outbreak of World War II on the campus.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-09-17 13:38:41</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Lindeman, Elizabeth Van Valkenburgh</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3018</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Elizabeth Van Valkenburgh Lindeman (CC class of 1946) describes her perspective as a student during the turbulent and unsettled years of World War II. While a student at Colorado College, Elizabeth Lindeman was a psychology major, a member of Gamma Phi Beta, president of the Associated Women Students, a member of the Quadrangle Association, the Joint Student/Faculty Emergency Council, and numerous other college activities.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-08-06 13:05:07</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Lipsey, Julia Frances Hassell</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3013</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Julia Frances Hassell Lipsey (CC class of 1917) was a life long resident of Colorado Springs; her father operated the Hassell Ironworks and was known for his fine wrought iron fences. Prior to attending Colorado College, Mrs. Lipsey graduated from Cutler Academy in 1913. She married John J. Lipsey in 1924, and with him operated a small antiquarian book dealership, specializing later in books on Western history. She discusses college life for women in in the early part of the 20th century.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-08-05 13:38:26</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Madruga, Herving</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3046</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Professor Herving Madruga, a native of Cuba, joined the Colorado College Romance Languages faculty in 1958. He received his B.A. (1952) and M.A. (1954) from Harvard University, a Certificat de Phonetique from the University of Paris, France in 1954; and his Ph.D.,from the University of Colorado in 1965. Professor Madruga was one of the founding faculty and the early director of the Program in Comparative Literature at Colorado College. He is also known for his French theater productions. He retired in 1994.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-07 10:41:10</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Makepeace, J. Tyler</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3059</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>John Tyler Makepeace (CC class of 1969) was born on October 25, 1947, in Waterbury, Connecticut. He attended Washington and Lee University for one year before transferring to Colorado College in 1966. After graduating with a B.A. in political science, he studied law at the University of Colorado and received his degree in 1972. From 1972 to 1977, Makepeace was senior deputy district attorney. From 1975 to 1977, he was also chief juvenile division district attorney. He was the founder of CHINS-UP in 1975 and an unsuccessful legislative candidate for District 18 in 1978. During the time of this interview he was a member of the Colorado Commission on Higher Education and was in private practice with his partner, Dan Winograd, (CC class of 1970).</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-10-22 10:17:49</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Mashburn, Mary Gaston</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3034</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Mary G. Mashburn (CC class of 1983) graduated with a major in political economy. She was active in student publications: editor of the Catalalyst, 1980-1981; and editor of the Critique, 1981-1982. Ms. Mashburn&#039;s interview focuses on student life at Colorado College during the 1980&#039;s.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-09-20 15:50:02</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
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		  <item>
	  <title>McCue, Lillian de la Torre Bueno</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/coccc/fez/view/coccc:3072</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Lillian Bueno McCue, whose pen name is Lillian de la Torre, was born in New York City on March 15, 1902, received her B.A. at New Rochelle College in 1921, an M.A. from Columbia University in 1927, and another M.A. from Harvard in 1933. Her field of study is 18th Century English literature. Her husband George McCue, whom she married in 1932, taught English at Colorado College from 1935 to 1962. Lillian McCue was a well-known mystery writer of several novels, numerous short stories, and 12 plays, most notably Goodbye, Miss Lizzie Borden. She referred to herself as a histo-detector, researching unsolved mysteries of the past, particularly using the 18th century characters of Dr. Sam Johnson and his friend Boswell as central figures.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-02 16:09:09</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Finley, Judith Reid, 1936-
										</author>
		  </item>
  </channel>
</rss>