THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1935 U 1 . Team Of Missouri Students Wins 4-H Judging Honors Library Exhibit Commemorates .400th Anniversary Of Printed English Bible Myles Coverdale Edition, Published In 1535, Is Featured In Display By I. S. SILVERMAN Marking the national commemo- raticn of the 400th anniversary of the printing of the first complete English Bible, the current General Library exhibit in the cases of the front hall is dedicated to Bibles. The exhibit has been prepared by Miss The earliest manuscript of the Greek Orthodox Bible extant shown in the display is the Codex of Epis- ties of Paul. Part of this extremely important document is owned by the ! University of Michigan and the re-, imainder is in the possession of the British Museum. The page shown of this manuscript has turned brown with age, and the outline of the sheet is almost indiscernible, being torn about the edges. Hovere, in spite of the difficulty of reading this man-# One versio Testa Chris impor on wc form and su the so ledge. Pro repres Guten The University of Missouri team won the intercollegiate livestockj livestock exposition in Chicago. Its members, shown abcve, are, left t Thiemen, Vernon Jelley, Spencer Bakan, Robert Kaye, Claude Willett, a More Talkative' Engineers Is Aim Of Campus Organization Society Evolved Six Years Ago Under Direction Of Professor Brackett By WILLIAM SHACKLETON Intensive persuading, cajoling, or threatening were once the only means by which the taciturnity of the tech- nical man was disturbed. Today the time is in view when every engineer or architect will be as publicly vocal as are now the members of the legal or journalistic professions. And if that time ever does actually arrive, it will be to an organization founded on the campus six years' ago that a considerable part of the praise, or blame, if you prefer your engineers silent - will have to be ac- corded. Began Six Years Ago Six years ago there were in the engineering and architectural col- leges 10 students who decided that something should be done to enable the technical man to explain pub- licly his methods, objects and ideals in a clear, understandablenand in- teresting fashion. Taking their idea to Prof. Robert D. Brackett of the engineering Eng- Dates Announced For Hillel Plays The date for the presentation of three one-act plays by the Hillel Players was set yesterday for Dec. 17. The plays will be given in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Casts for the three productions were also selected. Ada Zolla will direct Lawrence Langner's "Another Way Out." The cast will include Stella Blum, '38, Phyllis Diamond, '38, Sylvia Guterman, '36, Leonard Kasle, '38, and William Wolfner, '38E. The satire "Sham" will be directed by Louise Samek, '38, whose cast is made up by Morley Baer, '37, Louis Goldberg, '37, and Irene Jaskulik, '38.1 The third play, "The Finger of God" by Wilde, will include Bob Fish- grund, '37, Marguerite Merkel, '37, Richard Rome, '36. Frank Heyward Consults Professors On Forestry Frank Heyward, '29, of the United States southern experimental branch station located at Lakeville, Florida, is visiting and consulting members in the School of Forestry and Conserva- tion today and tomorrow. He is in- terviewing the faculty in regard to some of the work being conducted by the department£ in the South, Prof. Dow V. Baxter of the forestry school announced. Heyward has done a great deal of investigative work on the affect of forest fire on long leaf pine forests and is the author of the bulletin, "The Effect of Forest Fires on Long Leaf Pine Soils." lish department, they evolved an honorary speech society which they called Stump Speakers' Society. Later this name was freely trans- lated into Greek, and from the initial letters of the Greek words was de- rived the name Sigma Rho Tau. Constitution Set Up When the preliminaries of setting, up a constitution and officers had been dispensed with, the new society got down to the serious business of talking. Other engineering students found themselves talking in the so- ciety, too. Before long, through the efforts of Prof. F. N. Menefee of the engineering mechanics department, the Associated Technical Societies of Detroit became actively interested in the society's progress. With the aid and sponsorship of these technical societies, chapters of the organization have been formed at Detroit Institute of Technology, Michigan State College, the College of the City of Detroit, and Wayne University. Meanwhile the original 10 in the University had grown to well over 100 individuals desirous of learn- ing through actual experience and example the best means by which to keep tongue and brain operating simultaneously. Several Forms Used This learning to speak was and is accomplished in several different manners. Debates are, of course, a part of the speech program, but play a comparatively minor role in the society. Exposition of engineering topics is carried on at length; com- mendatory - or otherwise - discus- sions of the accomplishments of fa- mous engineers are encouraged; con- ferences are held between the various chapters; and the art of telling a good story in a professional manner is practiced. In addition to the students, this society numbers among its members President Alexander G. Ruthven', Dean-emeritus Mortimer E. Cooley, Dean Herbert C. Sadler, Dean W. L. Coffee of the College of the City of Detroit, and Dean H. B. Dirkes of Michigan State College. YOU IDEA OF A REAL MEAL! ! e Ella Hymans, curator of the Rare uscript Prof. Henry A. Sanders, chair- greatE Book Room, man of the speech department of the a cop The volumes and manuscripts are University, published in April . an was p arranged to show the transmission important book on the Epistles of enber of the Bible and the gradual devel- Paul, based on this specimen. books opment of the English Bible, with Greek Bible Displayed know Associated Press Photo descriptive notes about each. The Many of the volumes of the Greek Moi judging cont(st at the international feature of the exhibit is the Myles Bible are huge and explain the steps ed in o right: Coach H. C. Moffett, Homer Coverdale edition, the first English in the understanding of the Bible ster, nd Jewett FulkersoenBible to appear in print, published by scholars and the people although the k in 1535. It is possibly a revision of the the latter were not able to read, which Tyndale edition and shows marked much less own a copy of the Bible matic influence of the Latin and German until medieval times. Several of pugns M ark Twain Is translations.these Greek texts are shown in fac- - Tyndale Bible Featured simile and are beautifully illustrated i Em bodim ent Of Of almost equal importance is the with clever designs hand set. Tyndale Bible, a translation of the Two of these are the Codex Aber- " New Testament into English, appear- andrinus, the first of the great Bible ational Genius ing in 1525, which is thought to manuscripts to be made accessible have contributed more to the famil- to scholars and presented to the king iar form of the New Testament than of England by the patriarch of Con- (continued from Page i) ___ all others combined, and was the stantinople and the Codex Vaticanus uel Clemens' personal unhappiness, basis for many future translations. of fourth century which is considered and are not examples of the best work This edition, however, was burned by the most valuable of all manuscripts done by the artist Twain. It is for- the English bishops and Tyndale of the Greek Bible. tunate, he said, that most of the was condemned for heresy and was The work of Robert Estienne is anger and bitterness which experience burned. prominent in the exhibit and is im- produced in Samuel Clemens did not The display features several English portant for it was Estienne who di- bound off from the surface of the volumes for which it is indebted to vided the chapter divisions of the man, but by passing through Mark William C. Hollands, who gave these Bible into the smaller units of ref Af Twain's personality appeard trans- Bibles as a memorial to his son erence, verses, making a total of figured as one of the most completely William Tinker Hollands, '13. The 7959 divisions. Although this was satisfactory combinations of humour most valuable of these is the massive done for convenience and facility in and satire that literature offers. This, King James Version, a revision of reading, it also broke up the contin- A he added, was not the result of the the Bible, in which nine-tenths of uity of the Bible into independent sale of his soul to his environment the New Testament had been written thoughts and truths. Ie and his public, but the inevitable re- by Tyndale. Others are the Bishops' or sult of his temperment. Bible which appeared in 1568 and the "Mark Twain," said Prof. Camp- Douay edition which was the English p bell, "distilled laughter from almost Roman Catholic translation from the all of his experiences. Thus he looked Latin Vulgate, the official Bible of or back upon his boyhood, or upon ex- the Catholic church. periences traveling in Europe, and Wycliffe Translation Included was able to laugh. The Wycliffe translation in English "For Mark Twain is the most per- is also included in the exhibit. Wy- d feet embodiment of one aspect of our cliffe was suposed to have translated national genius which the west has the Vulgate into English as early NEW LOW PRICE on D contributed to the fullness of Amer- as 1382. E ER -'TROASTER ican life," stated Prof. Campbell. His Of equal importance and probably EVERHC ROASTER spirit, he said, was that of the men greater interest are the volumes and ELECTRIC - Fully Automatic who created the spectacle in which manuscripts in Greek, Latin and He- Prepare an entire meal at oneime. A perfect Christmas gift he lived, and which he so colorfully brew which formed the basis and for the home and accurately pictured. He ap- foundation for the later English fothhme peared to regenerate American liter- Bibles.The Hebrew scrolls on calf Now $14.95 ature at a time when it was being skin and vellum especially command smothered by the proprieties of the attention for their antiquity and genteel tradition. value. Scholars of Biblical manu- SCH LEN KERSt "His work," said Prof. Campbell, in scripts generally believe that many Hardware Company closing, "has contributed a powerful of these manuscripts were written 213-215 W. Liberty Tel. 8575 antidote to the strong infection of on papyrus and sheepskin. - conformity, cowardice and other forms of spiritual weakness which periodically threatens American let- ters. Would that Samuel Clemen's courage, independence, power of ut- tering the liberating words with un- mistakeable directness and good humour -in short, would that his western virility dominated all phases of American life on this the 100th an- niversary of his birth. e volume contains the metrical n of large portions of the Old ment history and the life of t. These religious poems were rtant as the earliest Angio-Eax- orks presenting scripture in any and the poems were learned rng by common people and were ole source of their Bible know- bably the most famous book sented in the exhibit is the nberg Bible, the earliest and est book in the world, of which y is shown. The first edition printed at Mainz by Johann Gut- rg in 1445. It is one of the rarest extant, only 45 copies being n. re recent Bibles are also includ- the exhibit as the Noah Web- of dictionary fame, revision of King James Bible in 1833, in he removed archaisms, gram- al errors, and "expressions re- ant to modern taste." F JEA. A 6 AN 1 Ve want to give the alvotion Army 100 )iscorded- Suits and )vercoots .. . n allowance of $5.00 will made for your old suit overcoat toward the urchase of any new suit overcoat. Make your purchase to- ay as this offer expires ecember 10. Mild & Co. tate Street on the Campus _" # v 4 I . More Shopping ays ___ till School Closes- -- . J. HOME MADE CHICKEN PIES .. 25c Pancakes Always On Order. OPEN 7 A.M. to 8:30 P.M. Table and Counter Service Aunt Het's 513 EastWilliam "You can't eathe them unless you use bait." DAILY CLASSIFIEDS This year inasmuch as the students do not leave Ann Arbor until the 20th it will be necessary for them to do their usual Christmas shopping be- Dial 2 -1214 IY t U> f fore going home. q CALK INS-FLETCHER, realizing this, have assembled the largest and wid- est selection of Christmas merchan- dise in their history, from Exquisite imported perfumes to the latest in Eastman's Cine Kodaks. Y' i ) LEATHER GOODS for CHRISTMAS -- I For Christmas We Are Offering An Excellent Stock of LEATHER MERCHANDISE, including BRIEF CASES which we have priced at $2.50, $5.00, $7.50, $10.00. $3.50, WATCH OUR DAILY GIFT SUGGESTION ADS. r C ;STRIKE ..siaanr;> i J 11 THREE FRIENDLY STORES ZIPPER CASES at $2.50, $3.00, $4.00, $5.00, and $7.50. ZIPPER NOTEBOOKS at $2.50, $3.50, $5.00 and $7.00. - - CALKINS-FLETCHER 818 S. State 324 S. State 201 S. Fourth Also Some Attractive Values in: Leather Book Covers, :, Letter Cases, Bill Folds, etc. .._ .... /j J/ - AMIM ; F . 1 I II 11