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Subject:
From:
Anita Cohen-Williams <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 31 May 2002 00:41:35 -0700
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (68 lines)
Edited for content. (Sorry about the lateness of this, but I just got back
from Baja California Sur.)

>Southwestern Archaeology, Inc. (SWA)
>" Got CALICHE ? " Newsletter
>Archaeology, Anthropology, and History of the Greater Southwest!
>
>Tuesday May 28, 2002
>
>*****************************************
>
>TEXAS
>
>http://www.borderlandnews.com/updates/0527-socorro.shtml
>The Socorro Mission will turn a few heads when the last mud pack is put
>into place next year. Pat Taylor of Cornerstones Community Partnerships,
>project coordinator, will accept an award from the Texas Historical
>Commission
>at 11 a.m. Tuesday at the mission.
>
>UTAH
>
>http://www.thespectrum.com/news/stories/20020527/topstories/392041.html
>The Parowan Cemetery is a museum of artistry and elegance. There were seven
>stonecutters in Southwestern Utah during the 1850s and each was known for
>signature works -- John Price, Elias Morris, John Perry, Thomas Hugo Hickman,
>John Wilkerson, Nathan Benson, and James Boyter. The first person buried
>in the Parowan Cemetery was a Mrs. Swarthart who was with a wagon train
>traveling to San Bernardino in 1851. She died three days after giving birth
>as the caravan neared Cedar City. The group turned around and buried her
>in Parowan.
>
>ARIZONA
>
>http://www.yumasun.com/artman/publish/story_1724.shtml
>The origins of the Yuma date industry here can be traced to a man who arrived
>in Yuma in 1854, Hall Hanlon. Carpenters were needed at Fort Yuma to rebuild
>structures destroyed in an 1852 fire, and Hanlon arrived at the Army post
>on Sept. 1, 1855 where he was hired as a carpenter.
>
>ANTHROPOLOGISTS
>
>http://www.business2.com/articles/web/0,1653,40786,FF.html
>Paco Underhill's retail anthropologists discovered the now-infamous
>"butt-brush
>effect" by studying videotapes of Bloomingdale's shoppers. When shoppers'
>backsides were brushed by other customers passing by, they dropped whatever
>they were looking at and headed somewhere else. Relocating displays so
>that butts didn't get brushed translated into higher sales.
>
>*****************************************
>
>Contact the Newsletter Editor:
>
>[log in to unmask] (e-mail)
>
>www.swanet.org (url)


Anita Cohen-Williams
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