: BY LAWS ; OF THE } YOUNG LADIES LYCEUM, ' ; Tisk Universty, NASPPITE 2. TENNESTIN 1286, BY LAWS. 1. No member of the societv shall be absent from any meeting without permission from the President, except in .case of sickness or absence from the school. Two violations of this law in one school year shall forfeit her mem- bership. 2. ayxcuses from exercises shall be referred to the President and Chairman of the Executive Committee. Nomen- ber of the society failing twice in one year without excuse from the proper persons, shall longer be called a mem- ber of the society. 3. No member of the society shall leave the room during a meeting with- out an excuse from the Chairman of the meeting. A violation of this law shall forfeit her membership. 4. The Secretary shall read the minutes at the end of the meeting in which they are taken and at the next meeting after adoption they shall be read from the Secretarys book. After the adoption of any by-law or amend- ment to the constitution, such by law oramendment shall be read from the Secretarys book at next meeting. 5. The report of the Executive Committee shall be prepared and read two meetings ahead at every meeting and the committee shall put the pro- gramme in sight at least a week before. 6. The Secretary shall have her books, containing the constitution, by- laws and minutes at every meeting. HERALD Frint. FISK WOMEN AFTER GRADUATION SUSAN M. HARRIS was one of the three members of the first graduating class of the Normal Department of Fisk University thirty-seven years ago. This young woman married and began housekeeping. About the same time two blind negro children were left charges of the State of Tennessee. As no provision had been made for such unfortunates, the officials undertook the difficult task of getting the children cared for ina negro home. When this effort proved a failure, this young Fisk woman, true to her training, assumed the care of the children until a home could be found. But, instead of finding a home for the two, there were four others brought to her. Then the State purchased a house in which to place these and similar children, and until a suitable person should be found to permanently take charge of it, persuaded Susan Harris to assume those duties. That was thirty-one years ago, and she is still at the head of that work, being designated now as Principal, Colored Department, School for the Blind, Nashville, Tenn. Besides book knowledge, she gives these ' blind children manual training courses, and has sent out hundreds of them to live happy and useful self-supporting lives, Another graduate, class 1887, MINNIE L., SCOTT-CROSTWAIT, has given almost her whole life to the service of others, Up to 1879, the negro schools of Nashville were taught by white teachers. At that time some of those who had passed through those schools were Freshmen at Fisk University. This attracted attention, and encouraged the Board of Education to see what the negro would do in the school- room with his own children. This young Fisk graduate was the first to qualify and pass the examination, and with two Fisk men was ap- pointed, being therefore one of the first three colored teachers to teach in the Nashville schools. After fourteen years of service in the city schools, and a few years in a training School in another city, this young woman was made Principal of the Normal Department of Fisk University, in which capacity she has made hundreds efficient in school management, and imbued them with her own spirit of seif-sacrificing service for others. In the City of Mobile is another one of those brave, energetic women, ROSA L. SHEP- PARD-CALDWELL, of the class of 1883. She, too, is a wife, mother, teacher and social worker. Her life has been a benediction to many of the unfortunates in her city. This graduate has given considerable time and attention to juvenile rescue work. The city authorities for some years maintained a telephone in her residence, and when a youthful negro offender was brought before the Court, instead of his being sent to prison, he was turned over to this Fisk woman who was secretary of a club which took the responsibility of placing miscreants under wholesome influences. For years that work was carried on by her until it grew to such propor- tions that the State had to take it in hand. Then - this woman was made a Probate Officer for negro boys. This same graduate, with the help of the club referred to and several churches in Mobile, established and maintains a Home for Aged and Homeless Negro Women. 419 other women graduates from Fisk with interesting personalities and fine minds to be home makers, teachers, missionaries, doctors, nurses, etc.. Among them was Marcarer J. Murray (Mrs. Booker 'T. Washington ), Super- intendent Girls Industries, Tuskegee Institute ; Vircinta Exiza Wacker, Secretary Womans (Baptist) Missionary Board and Teacher Home Missionary Institute; Atraea M. Brown, Mis- sionary, Africa, under Southern Presbyterian Board ; Ceceria H. Hottoway, National Secre- tary Y. W.C. A.; Grayce V. Frank, Teacher Domestic Science Episcopal Settlement House ; Resecca L, Turner-Furr, Principal Newport News Domestic Training School and Kinder- garten. The influence of their earnest Christian lives cannot be measured, inasmuch as the record of their sacrifices and contributions to humanity have not been kept. It is known, however, that every one is serving, and where, with the determination that every negro man, woman and child who comes under her influence shall be raised to that high standard of industrious and moral life set by her teachers at Fisk University. She has not hesitated to take upon her shoulders any burden that would help in the uplifting. She could be wife, mother, cook, and nurse at home, and, besides, a teacher and social worker for the community in which she lived. If she did not marry she has always been able to earn, with mind or hands, an honest and useful living, and at the same time be reaching and striving for the best and most beautiful that life has to give, both for herself and her race. It promises well for the future of the negro race if influenced by Christian women of such endowments and aspirations. Fisk University, Nashville, Tenn. Fisk UNIVERSITY Fisk. University aims to give its students the best possible equipment for success in their life work. It is considered that a high standard of Christian manhood and womanhood must go with the best possible education in order to se- cure this equipment. The rules embodied in this pamphlet have been found necessary to the suc- cessful administration of this) University, and they have been put into printed form that all might have an opportunity of becoming familiar with them. This statement is not intended to in- clude all the minor rules of the institution, nor such special rules: as may be needed from time to time. Any young persons who persistently refuse to conform to these requirements will be obliged to withdraw, as their continued presence here would be opposed to the best irfterests of the majority. GENERAL REGULATIONS. 1. Every student should be present on the first day of the school year and continue until its close. New students and old students having con- ditions must appear for examination and classi- fication on Monday and Tuesday of the first week of the year. The regular recitations will begin on Wednesday, and students not registering on or before that day will be charged an extra fee of one dollar, unless previously excused. A similar charge will be made in case of tardiness at the beginning of the second or third terms of the year.. 2. Day students are expected to observe in general the same regulations respecting deport- ment, habits of study, and attendance upon re- ligious services as those living in the Boarding Department. They are expected not to visit the dormitory rooms except by specia! permission from the officers in charge. 3. The following practices are strictly for- bidden: Profanity, betting, and gambling; the use of ardent spirits as a beverage, and the use of tobacco; also card-playing and dancing. 4. All students are subject to the discipline of the University for unworthy conduct during ab- sence from the institution. 5. Proper care of the grounds and buildings of the University is enjoined upon all. Injuries to buildings or other property of the University must be paid for by the persons responsible. Quiet and orderly deportment is required in all of the buildings. 6. No student is allowed to keep or use pistols or other weapons or any fireworks in or about the University. BOARDING DEPARTMENT. The Boarding Department is conducted as a Christian home, and the rules are only those which are universally considered necessary for the training of cultured men and women. 2 SS i ite oy a ee 1. Studetits are expected to study carefully the schedule of bells by which the periods are marked, and to cultivate promptness at all exer- cises. It is especially important that at meal-time the students be prompt in coming and in going. Per- sistent tardiness will be considered a cause for discipline. 2. No promise of student aid is made for more than one year. Such aid is given in return for extra work, and will not be continued if the student falls below the standard in scholarship or deportment, or does not do the assigned work in a manner satisfactory to the officers of the University. 3. Boarding students are required to attend the University Sunday morning church services, the Sunday school, mid-week prayer meeting, ~ and daily chapel devotions, or exercises substituted for any of these. 4. On account of danger from fire, all lights in dormitory rcoms must be extinguished when the occupants are absent for any considerable time. The use of gasoline, or any similar in- flammable substance as a cleaning agent, is pro- - hibited in any of the buildings of the University. 5. All clothing intended for the University laundry must be distinctly marked with the owners name. 6. Bedding and clothing hung from the win- dows for airing must be taken in before 8:30 a.m. No articles will be allowed to stand in window- sills except drinking water pitchers, or plants in suitable pots or boxes. : REGULATIONS FOR YOUNG WOMEN IN JUBILEE HALL. 1. The west door and stairway must be used by the young women during school hours (8 a.m. to 4 p.M.), and the north stairway for the passage to and from meals. 2. The young women are not allowed to enter the basement unless their work requires them to do so, nor the dining-room except for work, for meals, or for piano practice. The reception room is to be used only for the purges of receiving visitors, 3. On school days no young woman shall enter anothers room before 8 a.m. or after 7 P.M.; on Sundays before 10 A.M. or after 7 p.M., without permission from the proper officer. Each student must remain in her room during the quiet hour on Sunday. 4. At 9 p.m. the bell rings for the close of study hour, and fifteen minutes are given for recreation. At the ringing of the 9:15 bell each young woman must be in her room for the night. The 9:30 bell is the signal for putting out lights and retir- ing for the night. 5. The young women are allowed to go to the city once a month in charge of a responsible person, and those whose homes are in the city are allowed to spend Saturday at home once a month. : 6. The young women are ensaus to attend the regular religious services and the free lec- tures provided by the University, 7. Permission should be secured by a student for receiving in her room a lady visitor. No + student is permitted to receive a visit in her room from a gentleman, nor are students allowed to receive visitors on the Sabbath. Young women who are considered of the proper age are allowed to receive in the reception room, between 4:30 and 5:20 p.m., one call a fortnight from a gentle- man, and also to accept company to. rhetoricals and to other specified entertainments. No young woman is allowed to receive a call from a gentleman other than a student of the University, except by permission previously secured from the Lady Principal. 8. Written excuses for absence from school exercises must be secured from the health officer, if on account of illness; for all other reasons, from the Lady Principal. 9. Young women who desire to return to Jubilee Hall from school, except for regular work or music, must secure permission from the teacher in charge of the school room. 10. All young women will be required to con- form to the special regulations in regard to dress. HOUSE REGULATIONS FOR YOUNG MEN. 1. The study hours of the day include all school hours except those taken up in recitations ; those of the night are regulated and announced by the officers in charge of the hall. The young men are expected to spend the study hours in their own rooms, save as some other = has been appointed. 2. At the ringing of the bell at 9: 50 p.M. the young men must go to their own rooms and prepare for retiring. At the 1o p.m. bell they are 5 required to put out their lights and retire for the night. 3. The young men are expected to go to their meals regularly and promptly, but not to start before the ringing of the tower bell. For each meal brought over to a students room an extra charge of ten cents will be made, except in cases of severe illness. 4. The young men must not loiter in or about Jubilee Hall or grounds at any time, nor use those grounds as a thoroughfare. 5. Young men desiring to leave the grounds of the University during school hours, or after 7 P.M., must secure permission. An exception is made in the case of college students on Friday and Sunday nights, provided they return before the time for retiring. 6. The young men are expected to observe the calling regulations of Jubilee Hall. They are forbidden to accompany the young women board- ers, Or young women day students, while in the vicinity of the University, to and from school or any other University exercise, except as other- wise provided. (See Jubilee Hall Regulations, No, 6.) SCHOOL REGULATIONS. 1. Attendance upon chapel prayers is required from all students. 2. For absence from any required duty, stu- dents must present to the teacher or officer con- cerned a written statement of their reasons. If this excuse is not satisfactory, the absence will be counted against the students deportment or scholarship, as the case may be. If illness is the 6 cause of the absence, the excuse must be ob- tained by a boarder from the. health officer in charge, and by a day student from parent or physician. : 3. Any student in the collegiate grades who has been absent from a regular examination with- out previous excuse from his teacher, or who requires more than the regular examination, can take such examination only on presenting a per- mit secured from the Treasurer of the University by payment of a fee of fifty cents. _ 4. Any student who desires to leave the grounds during school hours must secure per- mission beforehand from the proper officer. Such permission does not constitute an excuse for absence from recitation. 5. During school hours, and at the close of school, the young men of the Collegiate depart- ments are expected to use the north or south stairs in Livingstone Hall, and not the central stairs, nor the east or west central doors and steps. 6. The pianos of the Department of Music are to be used only by music pupils doing regularly assigned work, and no other persons are allowed in these rooms. 7. New students will be classed in the cata- logue according to the general average of their acquirements as accepted by the professors in their several departmentsthat is, a student hav- ing a years work accepted in any study in ad- vance of a given class, but behind that class 2 year in one other study, will be catalogued with that class. Thereafter, to entitle a student to regular advancement with his class in the cata- 7 logue of any year, all deficiencies must be made upas far as the beginning of the winter term of that year. Seniors will not be allowed to do extra work during the spring term, therefore all their deficiencies must be made up before that time. 8. Any student whose scholarship is entirely unsatisfactory will be required to withdraw from the school at the close of the term. 9. No student will be allowed to represent the University on any athletic team who does not maintain throughout the year a satisfactory record in scholarship and deportment. ssc Sena tat sD pails Stas SECOND ANNUAL x MEETING OF -THE WHITE CROSS LEAGUE OF FISK UNIVERSITY, Nashville, enn. APRIL 19TH, 1801, LIVINGSTONE HALL, L380. Pi ME My strength is as the strength of ten, because my heart is pure. y : A PRAISE GOD FROM WHOM ALL BLESSINGS FLOW. PRAYER. ANTHEM. SCRIPTURE READING. PRAYER. HYMN. ADDRESS, H. H. WRIGHT, Pres. W. C. L. Fisk University. PRAYER. HYMN. BENEDICTION. NAMES OF MEMBERS. ORIGINAL MEMBERS, 22. ope Obit yy DM a F D. Porter, . J. Watkins, ed, Sl Hom: Proctor, Lanier, se Fortson, . W. Virtis, mae Blake, ge J. D. McCall, Je lis Murray. wWw.S. Ellington, Wim. Woods,* W. J. R. Whitsett, S. P. Cole, L. B. Moore, James D. Miller, S. H. Webb, Cc. W. Driskell, Mac Turner, N. J. Anderson, J. J. Scott, W. L. Johnson, J. R. Trotter, . F. Scott, sa. Smith, - U. Goin, J. E. Perkins, ae E, Brown, od a. Inborden, Ww. Stokes, D. W. Dunn, J. W. Holloway, Geo. H. Terral, * Deceased. B. H. Morrell, J. A. Lester, J. N. Calloway, D. W. Sherrod, E B. FE Darrell, eis Barbour, I. H. Anthony, T, 2. Barris, Cc. O. Hunter. F. B. Coffin, S. S. Willis, Wm. Davis, a. 15; Thomas, Edward Graves, A. P. Neill, Alex. Whitfield, Thos. W. Talley, Jno. Q. Johnson, s. A. D. McClellan, C. K. Chase, J. T. Warren, S. Garner, wm. Bia sy Geo. . Alexander, Chae. Parham, | OR = Calloway, Philip Gray, Of; Garrett, Gentry Maury, Baker DePugh, Jonas Gentry, Henry Bailey, Wm. Burnett, S. A. Chase, Pe os Wiley, C. R. Lewis, SILVER CROSS BRANCH, Eddie Harper. W. E. Benson. | WHITE CROSS PLEDGE. PROMISE BY THE HELP OF GOD 1.To treat all women with respect, and endeavor to protect them from wrong and degradation. 2.To endeavor to put down all indecent language and coarse jests. 3.-To maintain the law of purity as equally binding upon men and women. 4.To endeavor to spread these principles among my companions, and to try and help my younger brothers. 5.To use every possible means to fulfil the command, Keep THYSELF pure. WILE Cros Wace OPA, TUTEV7 (38 lap Feo+tt-) 8 en 3 oe CANE OS ystanyor- , G09. Skt fad I, ile hin ALLIED FISK CLUBS MEETING Temporary Officers Rev. Henry H. Procror, Chairman Brooklyn, N. Y. Washington, D.C. Dr. W.E. B. Du Bois, Ch. Ex. Com. New York, N. Y. Tuesday, August 25, 1925 WABASH AVENUE Y.M.C.A. Chicago, Illinois Her Sons AND Her DauGutTers ARE EVER ON THE ALTAR Program 2.00 P.M.Welcome in behalf of Fisk Clubs of Chicago, Mr. L. L. Foster 2.10 P.M.Response in behalf of Allied Fisk Clubs, Mr. A. C. Allison, Hart- ford, Conn. 2.20 P.M.Address by Chairman 2.35 p.M.Report by Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, New York City 2.50 P.M.Business 3.30 P.m.Address, The Outlook at Fisk, _Rev. P. E. Baker, Nashville, Tenn. 3.45 P.M.Discussion 4.00 P.M.Address, Student Activities, Rev. J. C. Olden, Washington, BD: C. 4.15 P.M.Discussion 4.30 P.M.Address, The Trustees and the Alumni, Mr. W. H. Baldwin, New York City 4.45 P.M.Discussion 5.00 p.M.Address, Alumni Representa- tion on Board of Trustees, Capt. A. C. Boutt, New York City 5.15 P.M.Discussion 5.30 P.M.Address, The Presidency of Fisk, Prof. H. A. Miller, Colum- bus, Ohio 5-45 P.M.Discussion 6.00 p.M.DINNER 7.00 P.M.Address, The Financial Cam- po eee _paign, Dr. F. A. Stewart, Nash- ie Ten, pee ee 4.15 P.M.Discussion 8.00 P.M.Summary of Findings, Mr. John Marquess, Philadelphia, Pa. 8.15 P.M.Discussion 8.30 p.M.Unfinished Business 9.00 P.M.In Memoriam Mrs. Booker T. Washington, Mrs. Mame Stewart Josenberger, Fort Smith, Ark. 9.30 P.M.Adjournment NOTES Each Club is entitled to one representative for every ten members. For local information communicate with Mr. Lemvuet L. Foster, President, Chicago Fisk Club, 3621 South State Street; telephone Victory Life Insurance Company, Overton Building. Wuerever Fisk Men Are, THERE IS Fisk