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Fall, 2007
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Oregon Historical Quarterly

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CONTRIBUTORS


ROGER DORBAND is an artist-photographer residing in Astoria, Oregon. He has published two books of his photography —Blue Moon Over Thurman Street, a collaboration with writer Ursula K. LeGuin about Thurman Street in northwest Portland (1993, Newsage Press, Portland, Oregon), and The Rogue, Portrait of a River, a coffee table photographic book with original text (2006, Raven Studios, Portland, Oregon).

 
MICHAEL HELQUIST is an independent scholar and historian with a BA in history from the University at Albany, State University of New York. He has worked as a medical columnist and has edited four books on health communication. In 2006 he was a guest lecturer for the History of Medicine series at the Oregon Health and Science University and a lecturer at the San Francisco Public Library. Helquist is writing a full-length biography of Dr. Marie Equi. He is a Portland native, now living in San Francisco.

 
ADAM J. HODGES holds a B.Sc. from the London School of Economics and Political Science and a Ph.D. from the University of Illinois. He has published articles in Planning Perspectives, Pacific Northwest Quarterly, and the Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. He is currently an assistant professor of history at the University of Houston–Clear Lake and is completing a book titled World War I and Urban Order: The Local Class Politics of National Mobilization.

 
KIMBERLY JENSEN received her Ph.D. in history from the University of Iowa and is a professor of history and gender studies at Western Oregon University. Her book Mobilizing Minerva: American Women and the First World War will be published late this fall by the University of Illinois Press. She is working on a biography of Esther Clayson Pohl Lovejoy.

 
JOANNE B. MULCAHY teaches at The Northwest Writing Institute, Lewis and Clark College in Portland, Oregon. She is the author of Birth and Rebirth on an Alaskan Island, a biography of an Alaska Native healer. Her essays have appeared in numerous journals and anthologies, among them The Stories that Shape Us: Contemporary Women Write about the West and These United States. Her awards include fellowships from the Oregon Institute of Literary Arts, the New Letters nonfiction award, and grants from The British Council, the Alaska Humanities Forum, and the Oregon Council for the Humanities. She is currently completing a book about the life of Eva Castellanoz.

 
JASON PIERCE is the Distinguished Doctoral Fellow at the University of Arkansas under Elliott West. Pierce received his M.A. from Portland State University in 2000. His current research focuses on the influence of white supremacy and scientific theories of race on nineteenth-century Western settlement.

 
DONALD J. SEVETSON of Portland is a retired minister of the United Church of Christ. He has served as an adjunct professor for denominational history and polity in three seminaries. He is now completing a biography of George H. Atkinson.  


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