after she died, cissy i think would have been horrified to discover colonel maccormack bought the paper from her executive. but the executive sold it does even though they were sticking to her formulas, circulation just seem to drop very quickly and she had been running it in the black. but her executives couldn't maintain that some maccormack bought it and try to squeeze it in to the tribunal which didn't go over in washington very well. and then finally it was sold to the post in 1954 and actually through the watergate act, "the washington post" published "the washington post" in large type and in much smaller type, and diminishing type over the course of time the herald. and it just sort of wasted away like that but anyway she struck me as a really interesting woman who, to go from being called probably the most powerful woman in the united states in 1946 to being forgotten by the beginning of the next century struck me as amazing, so that is how i got interested in her. >> that's right, have allowed boys. i have read the works of martin and alice haag and so i am familiar with cissy