This was in the Atlanta paper, so this man must be a well known person. Colorado Blackburn, reformer Clark Waring Blackburn, 94, of Aurora, Colo., who led efforts in the 1960s to get social welfare agencies to provide education and job training in addition to traditional family counseling, died Jan. 18. >From 1952 to 1974, he was general director of what is now the Alliance for Children and Families. He prompted professional counseling as the key to families' well-being and was co-author of the 1968 book "How to Stay Married." He weighed in on the top issues of America after World War II as families moved to the suburbs, televisions became household centerpieces and schools were racially integrated. He led studies on the rise of teenage marriages in the 1950s. article from New York Times printed in the Atlanta Journal Constitution Jan. 27, 2003