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CONTRIBUTORS
KATRINE BARBER is an assistant professor of history at Portland State University and the director of the Center for Columbia River History (www.ccrh.org). In 2005, the University of Washington Press published her book, Death of Celilo Falls.
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FREDERICK L. BROWN is a historian with the National Park Service's Pacific West Regional Office in Seattle and a doctoral candidate at the University of Washington.
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CHARLES DAVIS graduated from the University of Southern California with a B.S. in accounting. He settled in Portland, where he worked for many years for ElectroScientific Industries. He also served as public utilities commissioner for Oregon during the governorships of Robert Straub and Neil Goldschmidt and as interim director of the Multnomah County Library.
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CLAY JENKINSON is a humanities scholar, author, and social commentator. He is the Theodore Roosevelt Scholar in Residence and Special Assistant to the President at Dickinson State University in Dickinson, North Dakota, and James Marsh Professor-at-Large for the University of Vermont. Jenkinson was executive director and co-narrator of the OPB radio series "Unfinished Journey: The Lewis and Clark Expedition."
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ELIZA ELKINS JONES is production editor at the Oregon Historical Quarterly. She earned a B.A. at St. Mary's College of Maryland and a M.A. at Portland State University. She is an oral historian whose research interests include the histories of peace activism and of communities focused on the production and appreciation of art.
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JAMES J. KOPP is director of the Aubrey R. Watzek Library at Lewis &; Clark College in Portland. His primary research interest is utopian studies, particularly Oregon's utopian heritage, and he enjoys writing stories related to family history and growing up in eastern Oregon. He lives in Aurora.
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JEFFREY KOVAC received a B.A. from Reed College and a M. Phil and Ph.D. from Yale University. He is professor of chemistry at the University of Tennessee and director of the Tennessee Governor's School for the Sciences. An interdisciplinary scholar, Kovac has published more than seventy-five articles in journals and is the author or co-author of three books, including The Ethical Chemist: Professionalism and Ethics in Science (2004).
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GABRIELLA RICCIARDI received her Ph.D. in comparative literature from the University of Oregon in 1992. She has worked as a professor of languages, cultures, and literature in institutions of higher education in the United States, France, Italy, and South America. Ricciardi is currently director of Skidmore Center in Paris.
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NICK SHEEDY is a native of John Day, Oregon, and a 1996 graduate of Linfield College. He has prospected with his father in Oregon, Idaho, and Montana and is currently working on a book about the life and times of John Day. Sheedy and his wife live in Montgomery County, Texas.
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JEREMY SKINNER is Rose Tucker Fellow at the Oregon Historical Quarterly and is completing his M.A. in history at Portland State University. He also works in the Archives and Special Collections at Lewis & Clark College, where he has collaborated on two books relating to the Lewis and Clark Expedition, The Literature of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (2003) and Jefferson's Western Explorations (2004).
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| CHRISTOPHER ZINN was executive director of the Oregon Council for the Humanities from 1997 to 2006. He was an assistant professor of English and Humanities at Reed College and a Fulbright Senior Lecturer in American Studies in Turkey. He has taught cultural history at the Oregon College of Art and Craft, and he writes and lectures frequently about American literature and culture. |
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