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Spring, 2004
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Oregon Historical Quarterly

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Contributors


      Peter Boag, a native of Portland, is Professor of History and Senior Scholar in the Women's Studies Program at the University of Colorado, Boulder. He received his B.A. at the University of Portland in 1983 and his Ph.D. at the University of Oregon in 1988. He is the author of Same-Sex Affairs: Constructing and Controlling Homosexuality in the Pacific Northwest (University of California Press, 2003) and Environment and Experience: Settlement Culture in Nineteenth-Century Oregon (University of California Press, 1992).

 
      Sarah R. Caylor, a former employee of the Oregon Historical Society, recently completed an M.A. in art history (history of photography) from the University of California, Riverside. She currently lives in New York, where she is a Helena Rubinstein Fellow in the Whitney Museum of American Art's Independent Study Program in Critical Studies as well as a Curatorial Intern at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. She will enter Duke University's Ph.D. program in art history in the fall.

 
      Bob DenOuden, a native Pacific Northwesterner, has a B.A. in math and geography from the University of Oregon and an M.A. in geography from the University of Idaho. He is currently a Senior Analyst at Lane Council of Governments in Eugene. His article on the Heppner flood originated as a graduate student project in a course on the history of the Pacific Northwest taught by Carlos Schwantes at the University of Idaho.

 
      Gary Dielman has a master's degree in German from the University of Iowa. He is the author of many articles about Baker County history and has been the curator of the Baker County Library's historic photo collection for over twenty years. He is retired in his hometown, Baker City, where he lives with his wife, Eloise, who assisted in the difficult task of transcribing James W. Virtue's often small and faint handwriting

 
      David Michael Liberty is a father, husband, and enrolled member of The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. After a thirteen-year career with the U.S. Forest Service as a journeyman core drill operator, he studied anthropology at Linn-Benton Community College, Oregon State University, and the University of Oregon. He lives in Hood River, Oregon, and is employed by the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission in Portland, where he works as a Library Technician on CRITFC's StreamNet Library.

 
      Joseph E. Taylor III is a Canada Research Chair in History and Geography at Simon Fraser University. His first book, Making Salmon: An Environmental History of the Northwest Fisheries Crisis (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1999), won the George Perkins Marsh Prize for best book in environmental history. He is currently writing a history of Yosemite rock climbing and conducting research for a series of studies on the fisheries of the northeast Pacific.  


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