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CONTRIBUTORS
CHRISTINE CURRAN is an architectural historian with the State Historic Preservation Office, where she coordinates the National Register of Historic Places program. She received her undergraduate degree from Lewis and Clark College and her M.S. from the University of Oregon's historic preservation program. Her research interests include historic hydroelectric facilities and Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
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REBECCA J. DOBKINS is Curator of Native American Art at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art and Associate Professor of Anthropology at Willamette University. She is the author of Rick Bartow: My Eye (Hallie Ford Museum of Art, 2002). In addition to her collaborations with Native artists in the Pacific Northwest, Dobkins also works with Toi Maori, an indigenous arts collective from Aotearoa/New Zealand.
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DAVID J. JEPSEN is a doctoral candidate at the University of Washington, where he studies the history of the American West and the nineteenth-century United States. He received his M.A. from the University of Washington in 2005. A thirty-year marketing communications professional, Jepsen lives in Gig Harbor, Washington.
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ROBERT L. JOKI is owner of the Sovereign Gallery in Portland, Oregon. He specializes in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century American and European art, with an expertise in regional art. He is the co-curator of the Oregon Historical Society's ongoing permanent exhibit, Northwest Artists Gallery.
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KIMBERLEY MANGUN is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Utah. She holds a Ph.D. from the University of Oregon's School of Journalism and Communication. In 2004, she was a recipient of the Oregon Historical Society's Donald J. Sterling Jr. Research Fellowship. Mangun thanks the Society for its generous support of her research on Beatrice Morrow Cannady.
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LEWIS L. MCARTHUR is the author, with his father Lewis A. McArthur, of editions four through seven of Oregon Geographic Names. He is retired from his career with U.S. Steel, is active in various preservation projects, and serves on the Oregon Geographic Names Board.
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R. GREGORY NOKES retired from the Oregonian in 2004 after forty-three years in journalism. A native of Portland, he also worked for the Medford Mail Tribune and for the Associated Press, including four years as a foreign correspondent in Latin America and fifteen years in Washington, D.C. He lives in West Linn, where he is working on a book about the events at Chinese Massacre Cove.
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| RICHARD YATES is retired from his work as a librarian and works as a volunteer archivist in the Special Collections of the Knight Library at the University of Oregon in Eugene. |
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