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Contributors
William Alley, a Certified Archivist and historian, has written a number of articles on early filmmaking and movie houses in southern Oregon. His final article on this subject is tentatively scheduled to appear in the Fall 2005 issue of Pacific Northwest Quarterly.
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Lisa Blee graduated from Lewis and Clark College in Portland, Oregon, in 2002 and is currently a Ph.D. student in American History at the University of Minnesota. She is interested in American Indian histories, the production of public history, and expressions of collective memory.
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R. Scott Byram has been doing archaeological research in Oregon for fifteen years. His Ph.D. research at the University of Oregon focused on traditional Native fishing practices on the Oregon coast. He currently does consulting for the Coquille Indian Tribe and state and federal agencies.
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Eliza Elkins Jones is currently completing her second year as Rose Tucker Fellow at the Oregon Historical Quarterly and will receive a M.A. in history from Portland State University in June 2005. She earned a B.A. in English Literature from St. Mary's College of Maryland in 1998, where she was a founding co-editor of SlackWater: Oral Folk History of Southern Maryland, a journal of the Southern Maryland Documentation Project. Her research and writing interests include public and oral history, twentieth-century peace activism, and the post–World War II San Francisco Renaissance.
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Ronald H. Limbaugh is an Idaho native and graduate of the University of Idaho (Ph.D. 1967). He retired in 2000 after thirty-four years teaching American history at the University of the Pacific. A western regional specialist, he has written a number of books and articles on a variety of topics, including territorial politics, mining, John Muir, and family history.
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Clarence A. Oster is a native Oregonian who was educated in Oregon public schools. After receiving an M.S. in mathematics from the University of Oregon, he spent one year in the Pasadena area of southern California before moving to southeastern Washington. He was an adjunct faculty lecturer in mathematics at the Joint Center for Graduate Studies (now WSU Tri-Cities) for more than twenty years. He retired after more than thirty-eight years as a mathematician/computer scientist on the Hanford Project.
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William F. Willingham served as a historian for the Portland District and North Pacific Division of the Army Corps of Engineers from 1981 to 1996, where his work involved cultural resources management responsibilities as well as the history program. He has published several histories of Corps districts in addition to Water Power in the "Wilderness": A History of the Bonneville Lock and Dam. He also co-authored The Classic Houses of Portland Oregon, 1850–1950. Currently he is a consulting historian, focusing on water resources development, cultural resources management, and architectural and community history. He recently completed Starting Over: Community Building on the Eastern Oregon Frontier, to be published by the Oregon Historical Society Press in fall 2005. |
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