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<body class='hmmessage'><div dir='ltr'><h5 class="_5pbw" data-ft="{"tn":"C"}"><div class="fwn fcg"><span class="fwb fcg" data-ft="{"tn":";"}">Tom is a facebook friend and he posted this.<br><br><br><a id="js_10" href="https://www.facebook.com/thomas.f.king.9" data-hovercard="/ajax/hovercard/user.php?id=536611161">Thomas F King</a></span></div></h5>Thanks
to its author, I just got a copy of John Sprinkle's Crafting
Preservation Criteria: The National Register of Historic Places and
American Historic Preservation (<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Crafting-Preservation-Criteria-National-Register/dp/0415642566" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">http://www.amazon.com/Crafting-Preservation-Criteria-National-Register/dp/0415642566</a>).
This book is certainly a must-have for cultural resource management
(CRM) and historic preservation practitioners in the U.S.. It appears
to put what I fear is something of a happy face on the Register, but
that's only to be expected. The main thing is that it compresses a
great deal of otherwise more or less inaccessible history between two
covers, and makes some of the Register's obscure concepts somewhat
understandable in historic context. Highly recommended.<br><br>Dr. Leland Gilsen<br>
www.oregon-archaeology.com<br>
www.echoes-in-time.com<br>
<br>
"My glass is neither half full nor half empty because it has a head of quantum foam." (2009 Leland Gilsen)<br>
<br>
"My glass is empty, could I have another please?" (2010 Dale Coleman)<br>
<br>
"All the best ideas are at the bottom of a beer can." (Jim Riggs)<br><br>My motto: "Theory comes and goes, but data is forever. "<br> "However data without information is sterile"<br> </div></body>
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