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CONTRIBUTORS
C.L. BROWN earned her Master's degree in Counseling Psychology from the University of Oregon in 1976 and retired in 200 6 after thirty years in the community mental health system. Her interests include natural and cultural history, painting, and gardening.
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JOHN D. BURNS lives near his boyhood home, Condon, Oregon, where he operates the Dunn Brothers Sheep Company. He is a former president of the Oregon State Senate and a graduate of Notre Dame University and Georgetown Law School.
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SCOTT B. COHEN's current research focuses on the rivers of the Pacific Northwest and Portland, Oregon's, transportation history. He completed his M.A. at Portland State University in 2005 and currently works on transportation management and policy development at the City of Portland Office of Transportation. The article published in this issue is adapted from his Master's thesis.
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GREG HALL earned his Ph.D. at Washington State University in 1999. He is the author of Harvest Wobblies: The Industrial Workers of the World and Agricultural Laborers in the American West, 1905–1930 (Oregon State University Press, 2001). He also has published several essays on labor history in the West and numerous book reviews. He is an associate professor of history at Western Illinois University, where he specializes in teaching American West, Illinois, and American environmental history.
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DAVID A. HOROWITZ teachers United States twentieth-century and cultural history at Portland State University and is author of The People's Voice: A Populist Cultural History of Modern America (Sloan Publishing, 2008).
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SARAH BAKER MUNRO graduated from Pitzer College, Claremont, California, with a B.A. in Art History and Anthropology. She obtained a Master's in Folklore from the University of California, Berkeley, and worked at the Oregon Historical Society as an intern. She has been active with Friends of Timberline since 1975, coauthored and coedited Timberline Lodge with Rachael Griffin, and has written a forthcoming book on the history of art and craft of Timberline Lodge.
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DEBORAH M. OLSEN teaches history at Linfield College, where she also serves as Competitive Scholarships Advisor. Some of her earlier work, which has appeared in the Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society, the Oregon Historical Quarterly, and the History of Education Quarterly, has focused on Richard Champion (eighteenth-century English merchant, porcelain manufacturer, and friend of Edmund Burke), the music of the nineteenth-century Aurora Colony in Oregon, and promotional literature at women's colleges in the 1940s. Olsen is a graduate of Mount Holyoke College and holds an M.A. in history from Boston University.
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| WILLIAM G. ROBBINS is Emeritus Distinguished Professor of History at Oregon State University and author and editor of several books, including Landscapes of Promise: The Oregon Story, 1800–1940 (1997); Landscapes of Conflict: The Oregon Story, 1940–2000 (2004); and Oregon, This Storied Land (2005). With Katrine Barber, he is completing a short history of the Pacific Northwest in the twentieth century. |
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