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Monday, June 18, 2012

Tennis Camp

Ready for a change of pace this summer? Bailey and Spencer High are planning a tennis camp for kids. The tennis camp is on June 25-28. That's a Monday-Thursday. The camp will go from 8:30-10 each morning at Vista Ridge High School. They will charge $40 for the first kid and then $10 extra per kid per family.
Please let Bailey know ASAP if you are interested.

Saturday, June 16, 2012

King James Bible Exhibition @ UT Campus


Interested in the King James Bible?

Julie Jackson is organizing a group tour of the “King James Bible, Its History and Influence” exhibit at the Harry Ransom Center – The University of Texas

A family exhibit guide that you could use in FHE is available at

http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/exhibitions/2012/kingjamesbible/

Date: Wednesday, July 11
Meet at Julie’s home, 1919 Plantation Dr., at 9:30 am. We will try to arrange carpools to reduce campus parking challenges.
Cost: We will visit the Ransom Center (free admission) and then go to lunch at a restaurant near the university.
Please email Julie jj32@txstate.edu if you are interested.

Additional Information…
Four centuries after its first printing, the King James Bible (1611) remains one of the most influential books in the English language. The Harry Ransom Center, with the Folger Shakespeare Library and the Bodleian Library of the University of Oxford, presents the compelling story of how this translation came into being and its profound effect on our language and culture.
This exhibition traces the history of the King James translation, from the influence of earlier English Bibles to the work of a committee of scholars who spent over six years poring over the text word by word. When the project was complete, printing such a massive work proved a daunting task. A host of type-setting errors led to the infamous "Wicked Bible," "Unrighteous Bible," and "Judas Bible." Ultimately, the text of the King James version appeared in a wide variety of forms: Bibles with blank pages for family histories, pocket Bibles for soldiers to carry into battle, and richly illustrated editions for display.

The language and imagery of the King James translation has had a remarkable influence on English-speaking cultures and literature, from John Milton's Paradise Lost to the poetry of Phillis Wheatley to Norman Mailer's The Gospel According to the Son. The language of the King James Bible permeated the Civil War-era writings of Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln, and both pro- and anti-slavery advocates. It provided the title for Walker Evans and James Agee's Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, a landmark work on sharecroppers hard hit by the Depression, and even inspired the tattoos for Robert De Niro's character, convict Max Cady, in the film Cape Fear. This wide-ranging influence can be seen across the Center's literary, film, photography, and art holdings

The exhibition also features other notable Bibles from the Center's collections and some of the finest examples of modern book design featuring biblical texts. From the beginning of printing, the Bible was regarded as the ultimate challenge for artists, designers, and printers. Perhaps no single object embodies this better than Gutenberg's 42-line Bible, on permanent display at the Center. Many other monuments of classic fine printing, ranging from an early Nicolas Jenson illuminated Bible to the Christopher Plantin Polyglot Bible to an eighteenth-century folio Bible printed by John Baskerville, are on display.

The King James Bible: Its History and Influence is the most comprehensive display of Bibles and related materials in the Ransom Center's history.