THE MICHIGAN D.AFILY ,AGE' PictresSome Reasons For Enthusiasm News Uf The World As Illustrated In Associated Press Pictures She stn Of Thusas I About The Stjdv Of The R1 ihlP L- 1. .s., aav i v ._,+* u .. .. . . ..,'.r i h 1l. .:\. Will Inaugurate Summerl Program Of Dramatics, Music, Physical Culture The Women's Education Club is supplanting its regular meeting this week with an invitation to all men and women students of the Summer Session to attend the Country Dance which will be given at 7:15 p.m. to- morrow in the League Ballroom, it was announced yesterday by Prof. Mabel E. Rugen, faculty sponsor of the club.' The dance will inaugurate the Club's summer program, which aims to promote recreation in the fields of music, dramatics and physical edu- cation, and to cooperate with other grdups in gaining these ends. Other events on the program which will be open to the entire campps are "Bo- hemian Night," a social gathering featuring arts, crafts and games to be given Monday, July 18, in the League, and a cabaret supper to be held Aug. 2 in cooperation with the League. July 22, the club will aid the Chinese students and the Ann Arbor Inde- pendents in holding an ice cream social in the Rackham Building which all students may attend. The social is being given in connection with Chinese relief. - July 27, the club will hold its ann- ual joint meeting 'with -Pi Lambda Theta in the University Elementary School Library, and on Aug. 8 the club will sponsor an evening of music and dramatics. All women enrolled in the Summer Sesson are automatically eligible for membership in the Women's Educa- tional Club. Members of the planning committee for the Summer Session are Mary Eliza Shannon, Marian Ruth Sherwood, Helen Cromwell, Candance Roell, Ann Finlayson, F'rances Quigley, Edith Steele, Dr. Helen Taylor, Mrs. Connie Jones, Jean Hosafros, Gladys Atwell, Gladys Wilks. Mrs. E. Hamilton, Mary D. Michael, Vivian Reynolds, and Gladys Simo~nds. 1 This was the wreckage of a Northwest Airlines plane which crashed as it was taking off from the Billings, Mont., airport. Mrs. N. S. Mackie, Evanston, Ill., died in a hospital shortly after she was thrown from the ship. Nine other persons aboard the plane escaped death, although seveil were hurt. (Continued from Page 2) lives of men and determine the des- tiny of the great. Such is the nature of religion in the Holy Scriptures. Finally in scripture, there is phi- losophy backed by experience and verified by the results which always wait upon time. Judaism, Christian- ity and Mohammedanism are based on this Biblical record. Our wes- tern civilization has fed upon it. (1) God's justice was not always as- sumed. In fact, the history of such an idea is long. It took its rise in dreams. (2) Likewise, man's broth- erhood, not at all a modern notion, has passed through various stages of debate, speculation and suffer- ing. (3) That one man should not enslave another comes out of hiding in the dim past as an ideal, both the story of democracy as revealed in the evolution of the Jews and the Chris- tians in scripture has been a casual fact down to our own later stages of social progress. (4) That each should have the freedom to worship as he chose is young indeed and "a right." But how to worship at /all, what God was like, how to experience the Deity, -these and kindred problems find their fullest treatment anywhere in written form within the 66 books we know as the Bible. Furthermore, so gripping have been the ideas, so inspiring have been the. ideals, and pageantry of the New Testament that the Christian world sustains great universities to study the issues raised, and the story of the. translations of these scriptures reads like a sacred history of mankind. Mahny Translations The first complete English Bible was that of Miles Coverdale (1535). Coverdale's Bible is based upon the Swiss-German version (Zurich, 1524- 29). It represents the work of a scholar who could use available ma- terial. Luther's Bible, the Vulgate, and Tyndale's work were drawn upon. The so-called Great Bible, a re- vision of Matthew's Bible (John Rog- ers) was completed in London (1539). In 1557 the English exiles who had found refuge in Geneva during the reign of Mary, produced a version of the New Testament, with preface by Calvin, and in 1560 the whole Bible. This is known as the Geneva Bible. A New Testament was issued by the English Catholic College at Rheims, in 1582, and the Old Testa- ment in 1609 at Douai. These re- vised the great work of St. Jerome, the Latin version of the Bible, whose date was 383-405 A.D. This is now used, with some modifications, as the authorized version of the Roman Catholic Church. The Sistine edi- tion of the Vulgate (1590-1593) is the source of the Douai version, in use throughout the Catholic Church. In 1604 James I. appointed a con- ference at Hampton Court. The sug- gestion of a new translation made by Rainolds, was taken up by the King and six committees were appointed to do the work. The version. known as the Authorized Version, appeared in 1611 and has become the most famous English translation. Done at a time when the language itself was pe- culiarly rich and expressive, it has not only taught Religion but exercised a commanding influence on English diction and literature from that day to the present. The Convocation of Canterbury in 1870 entertained a plan for the re- vision of the Authorized Version. The work was done by two committees, the one British, the other American, the latter being advisory only. Each committee was divided into an Old' Testament and a New Testament and a New Testament company. After long and painstaking labor the Re- vised New Testament was published in 1881 and the whole Bible in 1885, by the University Presses of Oxford and Cambridge. The sale of the Re- vised New Testament was at first immense. Many unauthorized re- prints appeared in America. It is estimated that in less than one year after this issue, due to its popularity on both sides of the Atlantic, fully 3,000,000 copies were sold. The most recent work known as "An American Translation" is by Goodspeed, Smith and Waterman. Any literature vital enough to sur- vive such changes, any book dynamic enough to influence various civiliza- tions, any series of situations com- pelling enough to be translated again and again, may well create wonder and occasion excitement on the part of persons either devoted to culture or concerned about religion. 10 Benson Deplores Jimmy's Actions Ford Factory To Be Held Excursion Wednesday (Continued from Page 1) similar to Douglas Fairbanks jr.'s going into the moving pictures with the advantage of a drawing-cerd name, certainly a perfectly ethical procedure. The type of financial reward se- cured by James Roosevelt from his insurance business, which has been common among political circles, should be eliminated, Professor Ben- son said, if the honor and prestige of public office is to be maintained. With government and business be- coming more and more closely inter- twined, the practice is potentially dangerous, he added, because oppor- tunities for it will be more prevalent as there will be more political offices with which busines will find it de- sirable to keep on friendly terms. Perhaps the best solution to the problem would be the development of a code of ethics governing the rel- atives of important positions. Such codes were developed in the civil ser- vice of the old German Empire, Pro- fessor Benson pointed out, and sim- ilar ones exist in various branches of Donald Marr Nelson (above), of Chicago, vice-president in charge of merchandising of Sears, Roe- buck and Company, has been of- fered the post of administrator of the new wage and hour law by President Roosevelt. Nelson was formerly active in NRA admniis- tration. Fifth in the series of University conducted excursions will be the trip to .the Ford Motor Company's River Rouge plant at 12:45 p.m. Wednes- day. Spedial busses will conduct the University party to and from its des- tination and guides will be provided for the tour of inspection through the automobile manufacturing p 1 a n t I DANCING Class & individual in- struction in all types of dancing. Teachers' course. Open daily dur- ng Summer Session, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Phone 9695 2nd Floor Terrace Garden Studio Wuerth Theatre Bldg. , TODAY 1:00 TO 11:30 P.M. 1 Call To Southerners All Southern students interested in working,on committees for the annual Watermelon Cut which will be held for the Southerners and their friends at 7 p.m., July 15, in the Garden of the League are asked to attend a meeting at 7 p.m. Monday outside the Horace H. Rackham School of graduate Studies. John T. Norris, Grad. is general chairman of the affair. the United States government. The Supreme Court for example, has de- veloped a practice whereby a justice having any possible interest in the outcome of a case, voluntarily refuses to sit for it. "Perhaps a Congressional investi- gation to determine the truth of the charges and to set up advisory ethical standards would be a good thing," Professor Benson concluded. In contrast to the bitterness between Count Court Haugwitz-Reventlow and his wife, the former Barbara hunton, is this friendly stroll in London July 1 by their .Attorneys, Norman Birkett (left), for the Count, and Sir Patrick Hastings, for the Countess. They're shown leaving court after Count had been charged with threatening his wife. Bridge Lessons Start Wednesday At League A series of six bridge lessons will be given by Conway S. Magee from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. every Wednesday at the League. All those interested were urged to sign up at the League desk for the classes. There will be a charge for the series. Webster To Show Movies Of '36 Olympics At Union Randolph Webster, director of Physical Education Activities for the Summer Session, will show his sound movies of the 1936 Olympics and travel pictures of his trip to the games at the next meeting of the Men's Education Club to be held at 7:15 p.m. Monday in the Michigan Union Ballroom. All men in the Summer Session are urged to attend. Designed in theTropics Made in the Tropics is Classified Directory I er ® SILVER LAUNDRY-We call for and deliver. Bundles individually done, no markings. All work guaranteed. Phone 5594, 607 E. Hoover. 3x DRESS MAKING and Alterations. Mrs. Walling. 118 E. Catherine. Phone 4726. ^ 34x COMPLETELY furnished apartment with private bath and shower. Al- so large double room. Garage avail- able. Phone 8544. 422 E Washington. 28x TYPING: Neatiy and accurately done. Mrs. Howard, 613 Hill St. Dial 5244. 2x LAUNDRY: 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 5x ANTIQUES bought and sold. Open evenings. 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