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    Twenty Years at Montana State College
    (Montana State College, 1931) Herrick, Una B.
    Provides a history of women's activities at Montana State College from 1910-1931. "In unfolding the awakening desires of our college women-desires which step by step, day by day, year by year, at last reached their fulfillment in increased numbers of women students, in carefully chosen vocations, and in effective organization she has, in a measure, painted a miniature of the whole woman's movement. Skillfully she has correlated woman's development at Montana State College with woman's development everywhere. The keynote of the woman's movement has been a desire for self-expression, an expression of self which would lead to real service to her fellowmen. It has been a golden thread which has wound in and out through every forward step in her advancement. The work of Dean Una B. Herrick at Montana State College merits the highest commendation. She has fulfilled a duty which she most sincerely and devotedly felt that she owed to the women students of Montana State College. She has laid broad and enduring foundations, which, however, altered and remodeled to suit changing conditions, will n ever crumble. The undergraduate women and the alumnae of Montana State College owe her the deepest gratitude."
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    Montana State College, 1893-1919 : a preliminary sketch
    (Montana State College, 1943) Burlingame, Merrill
    This brief sketch was prepared in 1943 at the time the Montana State College observed its 50th Anniversary. At that time each Department and organization was asked to prepare statement of its historical development, and this outline was prepared to provide information on major events in the early years.
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    Witness for the Prosecution: The Civil War Letter of Lieutenant George Taylor
    (1989-09) Scott, Kim Allen
    /X prosecutor must present the jury with evidence against the defendant which is believable beyond a reasonable doubt. Testimony based on hearsay or the recollections of a witness several years after the crime are always subject to damaging critique by the defense. To bolster a case based on a stale reminiscence, the prosecution may use corroborating evidence: the same story told by two different parties. However, if a sharp defense attorney can show that both sources are of equal antiquity, the corroboration strategy can still be easily defused. The best testimony for substantiating old stories is a witness deposition taken immediately after the crime was committed. The introduction of such evidence can confirm the truth of the dated accounts and win the case for the prosecution.
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    Body Lice
    (Camp Chase Publishing Co., Inc., 1989) Scott, Kim Allen
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