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CONTRIBUTORS
GLEN D. CARTER received his BA from Humboldt State College and his MA in fish and wildlife from Oregon State College, where he did fieldwork in the early science of using biological indicators for evaluating the effects of water pollution. He worked for thirty-two years in the Oregon State Sanitary Authority and the Department of Environmental Quality on statewide water control issues and retired in 1988.
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SHELLEY CURTIS is directing curator of Art About Agriculture in the Oregon State University College of Agricultural Sciences. The program recognizes innovations and investigations by contemporary Pacific Northwest artists and rests upon a tradition of building community among diverse rural and urban audiences. She holds an MA and MFA from the University of Iowa in photography and sculpture.
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ROBERT M. EISINGER is chair of the Political Science Department at Lewis & Clark College and the author of The Evolution of Presidential Polling (Cambridge University Press, 2003).
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RICHARD H. ENGEMAN has held several positions at the Oregon Historical Society, most recently that of public historian. He is a graduate of Reed College and holds master's degrees in librarianship and history and has done additional graduate work in historic preservation.
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DOUGLAS W. LARSON is an adjunct professor in the Department of Environmental Resources at Portland State University and a water quality consultant. He received PhD in limnology and fisheries from Oregon State University and a bs in biology from Jamestown College. He worked for the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality in 1971–1974 and as Oregon's Clean-Lakes coordinator in 1992–1994. He retired from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in 1991 and has published over fifty papers in refereed scientific journals. He is co-author of Springer, a book on post-eruption ecological response and recovery at Mount St. Helens.
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LAWRENCE M. LIPIN is professor of history at Pacific University in Forest Grove, Oregon. He received his PhD from UCLA and has taught at Pacific University for fourteen years. He has written two books, Producers, Proletarians, and Politicians: Workers and Party Politics in Evansville and New Albany, Indiana, 1850–87 (1994) and Workers and the Wild: Conservation, Consumerism, and Labor in Oregon, 1910–1930 (forthcoming, University of Illinois Press).
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DMITRI PALMATEER is the legislative director for the House Democratic caucus in the Oregon legislature. He received his doctorate in labor history from SUNY-Binghamton and was awarded the Donald J. Sterling Research Fellowship from the Oregon Historical Society. He teaches occasionally at Willamette University and lives in Salem.
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| GREGORY PAYNTER SHINE, a fifteen-year veteran of the National Park Service, is the chief ranger and historian at Fort Vancouver National Historic Site and the Vancouver National Historic Reserve. He is also an adjunct faculty member in the History Department at Portland State University, where he instructs graduate students in the public history field school. Shine earned ba from Wabash College and MA in U.S. history from San Francisco State University. He lives in Portland. |
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