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Fall, 2005
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Oregon Historical Quarterly

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      Cary C. Collins teaches Pacific Northwest History to ninth graders at Tahoma Junior High School in Ravensdale, Washington. He is the editor of Assimilation's Agent: My Life as a Superintendent in the Indian Boarding School System (University of Nebraska Press, 2004), by Edwin L. Chalcraft, and with SuAnn Reddick is writing a history of the Isaac Stevens treaties negotiated in western Washington.  
      Robert E. Ficken, an Oregon native and current resident of Washington, is the author of many books and articles on Pacific Northwest history. His most recent works are Washington Territory (2002) and Unsettled Boundaries: Fraser Gold and the British-American Northwest (2003), both published by Washington State University Press.  
      Clark Hansen was an oral historian for the Oregon Historical Society for more than sixteen years. He did his undergraduate and graduate work at American University. He began doing oral history work at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles, later studied oral history with Charles Morrissey, and has taught oral history at local and national conferences.  
      Alexandra (Sasha) Harmon, a 1972 graduate of Yale Law School, advised and represented Indian tribes in Washington state for approximately fifteen years. In 1988, wishing to explore questions that arose in her legal work, she began graduate study in history at the University of Washington (UW). Since earning a Ph.D. in 1995, she has been on UW's American Indian studies faculty and has published Indians in the Making, a history of Indian–non-Indian relations in the Puget Sound region.  
      SuAnn M. Reddick is the historian for Chemawa Indian School in Salem, Oregon, and is currently researching the history of the school and its place in the Pacific Northwest. With Cary Collins, she has written several articles concerning Native American history and has contributed previously to the Oregon Historical Quarterly. She lives in McMinnvillle, Oregon.  
      Kent Richards lives in Ellensburg, Washington. His publications on northwest treaties include a biography of Isaac Stevens.  
      Clifford E. Trafzer is Professor of American Indian History at the University of California, Riverside, where he is also Director of Public History and Graduate Studies Advisor. His recent books include Native Universe: Voices of Indian America, As Long As the Grass Shall Grow and Rivers Flow, and The People of San Manuel. He won a Native Writers Award for Death Stalks the Yakama and the Washington Governor's Book Award for Renegade Tribe: The Palouse Indians and the Invasion of the Inland Pacific Northwest.  
      Marjorie Waheneka, Et-twaii-lish, is exhibits manager at Tamástslikt Cultural Center in Pendleton, Oregon, and is a member of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla.  
      Jacqueline B. Williams is the author of Wagon Wheel Kitchens: Food on the Oregon Trail and The Way We Ate: Pacific Northwest Cooking, 1843–1900. She researches, writes, and lectures on Pacific Northwest culinary history.  
      Fronda Woods, a graduate of Harvard Law School, is an Assistant Attorney General with the Washington Attorney General's Office, where she specializes in Indian law and fisheries. She represents the State of Washington in United States v. Oregon and United States v. Washington and is a contributor to the Conference of Western Attorneys General, American Indian Law Deskbook, 3rd ed. (University Press of Colorado, 2004).  


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