About the Author:
Waterville native EARL H. SMITH has held a variety of positions at Colby College for more than forty years, including dean of students, dean of the college, secretary of the corporation, and as an assistant and advisor to three Colby presidents. For the past three years he has served as the college's historian.
Review:
"Smith's narrative is scholarly, meticulous, and wordy, making this a complete reference book of Colby history, but it is also funny and interesting, offering unique insights into campus politics, struggles with growth, finances, and strong personalities. Amidst stories of campus expansion, construction, and finances, Smith also tells wonderful anecdotes about its contentious co-ed transition and fraternity management, Colby's 'highway war' with the Maine DOT, its strange feuds with the CIA and Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, the ugliest building on campus, the surprise of nitroglycerin, and the school's rivalries with Bates and Bowdoin colleges."--Kennebec Journal
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