OCR Text |
Show ¦«l . * ; ¦.:¦ '¦¦'..' Mi 1*1 ! • B '< '¦ t •"*. if4 r*<M James Taylor Harwood HBSH^^Si .>*'" j Benjamin Roland Lewis aTAH is fortunate in having a professional artist, Professor Harwood, at the head of the Art Department, Professor Harwood having followed art as a profession from 1886 until the time of his coming to Utah to take charge of the department. As a student he traveled all over Europe, spending five years in France, England, Holland, Belgium, and Switzerland. He holds three certificates in art from academies in these countries. While at the Academy Julien and the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, Professor Harwood won a gold medal and a scholarship prize for special proficiency. At the California School of Design his skill also won a prize medal. QROFESSOR LEWIS, one time head of the Department of English at the University of Utah, has specialized in the drama, writing a number of critical works and textbooks in this field. Excluding magazine articles, Professor Lewis' works include "The Development and Decline of the Epilogue and Prologue in English Dramatic Literature," "The Technique of the One-Act Play," "Contemporary One-Act Plays," "Effective Writing," "The Principles of English Poetry," "Shakespearean Comedy," "Anglo-Saxon Poetry," and "Shakespeare's Use of Bi-lingualism in Othello." CROFESSOR NEFF came to Utah from the North Texas Teachers' College this year to assume his new duties as executive head of the Department of English. As a student Dr. Neff attended the University of Missouri, Yale University, from which place he obtained a Master of Arts degree, and Harvard University, where he secured both an A. M. and a Ph. D. He also studied at the Sarbonne in Paris, during his European travels. Dr. Neff has been a professor of English at a number of colleges and universities over the country-Colby College, the New Mexico College of Agriculture and Mining, Washington and Lee Universities. CROFESSOR PACK, head of the Department of Geology, besides contributing extensively to such magazines as the "Scientific American," the "Pan-American Geologist," and others, and preparing a geological work on "The Economic Aspect of Structural Geology," which is now on the press, has found time to write two books outside the field of geology. These are "Science and Belief in God," and "Tobacco and Human Efficiency." At the present time he is engaged in what he expects to be the culmination of all his years of study and research among the geological formations of Utah, a reference work on "The Geology of Utah." >;« Sherman Brown Neff & Frederick Jerusalem Pack *ieiei*i»ieieirierei#iiei*iei»ieiB:iVT«:ai#!»iieiei»ti»<i*i^i^!»i^irieiF' [43] |