http://www.geocities.com/dewardt/year2004/haney_medal.html
Thanks
TheDimeMan
--
*
/?\
/___\
-O=O-
^
AS & His Magic Hat
A conclusion is simply the place
where you decided to stop thinking.
"TheDimeMan" <dew...@earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:Eoded.5818$ta5....@newsread3.news.atl.earthlink.net...
It might be James Parton Haney, a painter.
BLReed
To e-mail me, remove the obvious spam trap.
For collector coins and supplies at fair prices: http://tinyurl.com/pt9r
Cool things and Bust Coin Forum: http://www.byronreed.com
No, that was Mr. Kimble. Mr. Haney was the con artist that
sold Mr. Douglas the farm and tried
to sell him many other things over the span of the show.
Trivia: The guy that played Mr. Kimble also played one of the
Olympic athletes in the Marilyn Monroe movie "Gentlemen prefer
blondes".
> Mr. Haney was the Hooterville County Agricultural Agent.
Nope, Hank Kimball was he County Agent. Eustace Haney (played
by Pat Buttram) was the guy who sold "the old Haney place" to
Oliver and Lisa Douglas ...
(Courtesy of Google and especially some guy named Dave ...)
http://members.aol.com/Dave7373/GreenAcres.html
--
Ken Barr Numismatics k...@kenbarr.com
P. O. Box 32541 website: http://www.kenbarr.com
San Jose, CA 95152 (souvenir cards, MPC, Hickey Bros tokens)
408-272-3247 Next show: Peninsula CC 10/31 Napredak Hall (no table)
ADVANCED NOTICE: ANA World's Fair of Money, San Jose, CA 7/27-31/2005
Alvy Moore!!! (IMDB is your friend!)
James Parton Haney was an art educator. He is associated with the
School Art League of New York City.
He had at least one exhibition of his own drawings in Chicago March
15 thru April 2, 1917. He edited a book in 1908 titled: "Art
Education in the Public Schools of the United States." He placed an
article of his own in the work, summarizing the history of art
education: "The Development of Art Education in the Public Schools."
This book is considered a key event in art education in America.
According to Ask Art Dot Com you can see Haney's work at the John H.
Vanderpoel Art Association 9625 S. Longwood Drive (Ridge Park)
Chicago , IL 60643 (773)445-9616.
In the words of Dr. Mary Ann Stankiewicz (Penn State) in theCaucus on
Social Theory and Art Education maillist newsletter: "...our
colleagues over a century ago had begun to see themselves as an
emerging profession, distinct from artists and from educators in
general. My evidence for this claim would include the formation of
professional organizations, establishment of journals specific to art
instruction, the emergence of male experts like Frank Alvah Parsons
and Henry Turner Bailey and James Parton Haney who believed they had
qualifications that insured their superiority over female teachers of
art and art amateurs, and, most importantly, contests over the
"territory" of art education. Such contests included public debates in
Boston's newspapers, ca. 1898-99, over who should teach art--artists
or graduates of Massachusetts' Normal Art School; an investigation of
art education in that Commonwealth by the legislature; and tensions
between textbook publishers and art supervisors over control of the
art curriculum.
(http://www2.tltc.ttu.edu/kkb/_disc2/00000001.htm)
Michael
Roger deWardt Lane
Hollywood, Florida
"TheDimeMan" <dew...@earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:Eoded.5818$ta5....@newsread3.news.atl.earthlink.net...
Dale
"TheDimeMan" <dew...@earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:nvled.5276$5i5....@newsread2.news.atl.earthlink.net...
TheDimeMan
http://www.geocities.com/dewardt/year2004/haney_medal.html
"TheDimeMan" <dew...@earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:Eoded.5818$ta5....@newsread3.news.atl.earthlink.net...