ii-heDaSfly Nebra VOL. XV. NO. 17. UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 191E. PRICE 5 CENTS. 1L DR. BESSEY WAS -PIONEER J BOTANY A SHORT HISTORY OF HIS WON DERFUL INFLUENCE IN WEST GREATEST WORK AS TEACHER Introduced Compound Microscope In West Attracted Students From All Quarters of the Globe Inspired Teacher To few public servants Is given a ereater potentiality of directing the thought and moulding the careers of ' men and of nations than to the col lege professor. After .all possible has been said of the many goodly Imprints left by this great man we must con clude that Dr. Bessey's greatest and most enduring service to mankind was rendered through the medium of the classroom or laboratory, tie a " ' ways been known and will ever be known first as a great and inspiring teacher. To be sure he was also ad mitted first rank among able adminis trators and' furthermore he was a suc cessful investigator of diverse botani cal .' problems. His publications in 'Science are many. But most of all he was great as a teacher and the publi cations which have reached most pro foundly upon the public mind within and beyond the confines of botany are his textbooks. Dr. Bessey entered the field at a time when the facts and theories of his chosen subject and profession were in a very chaotic and unsatisfactory state. Thus the very conditions of the time offered him a glorious oppor tunity to collate and prepare important scientific materials and to crystallize pedagogical methods for the benefit of those who chose to sit in nis Classes. To Dr. Bessey more than to any other botanist must be given the credit for wisely laying the foundations from which has risen the carefully planned and polished botanical curricula which are now so prominent in many- Ameri can colleges and other institutions. He performed this work especially in the line of developing the botanical text book and laboratory much as Sachs had done In Germany. He was the man who introduced the botanical laboratory with its compound micro scopes and other important apparatus into our western schools. lie used to tell with much pleasure of reminis cence how he "carried the first com pound microscopes to the University of Minnesota," and how so many of the now) common methods of instruc tion were "modeled" after the Bessey prototype. As a teacher and research guide his Infectious enthusiasm was sure to at tract students from all quarters of the globe. During the first few years of his half-century professorship the stu dents were naturally few. Colleges were small then ard botany was scarcely yet recognized as an Import ant scientific subject apart from the general science of the college course. Those were the days when the classics, mathematics and history held undis puted control of college curricula! The botanist was merely the "lover of flowers" or "flower fanatic," a man who dealt especially with horticnl- (Continued on Last Column) 4. V'4. 1 8M$ ...f." C. E. BESSEY BESSEY MEMORIAL SERVICES TODAY LABORATORIES CLOSED TO EN ABLE STUDENTS TO ATTEND DEAN A, F. WOODS TO SPEAK Prof. Q. E. Barber and Regent E. P. Brown Will Give Addresses Musical Numbers Included In Memorial Hall CONVOCATION EXERCISES IN MEMORY OF CHARLES EDWIN BESSEY Memorial Hall, Thursday, October 7, 11 0 'Clock STRINGS AND ORGAN "Prelude" Reinecke RESPONSIVE READING Chancellor Samuel Avery ' The Lord is my Shepherd: I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures. He leadeth me beside the still waters. He restoreth my soul. ir i .j.ii. nti,D nf TMfrMprmsnesa fnr His names sake. Yea though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: For Thou are with me: Thy rod and Thy staff they comfort me. Thou preparest the table before me in the midst of mine enemies. Thou annointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over. Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: And I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever. ADDRESSES Professor Grove Ettinger Barber Regent Edward Urovost Brown Dean Albert F. Woods, University of Minnesota A memorial service In honor of Dr. Edwin Bessey will be held at Convo cation this morning. Classes will be excused and all laboratories closed in order to allow the students to attend. Addresses and music are planned. Dr. Bessey spent his last and best service to Nebraska and Nebraska stu dents when he could have held much more remunerative positions and it is in appreciative memorium of his love and devotion that this Convocation is held. Prof. G. E. Barber, Dean Albert Woods of Minnesota, and Regent Brown will give short addresses. Two musical numbers will be given by the stringed orchestra. The second orchestra number, "An dante Cantoblle," from the Fifth Sym phony, Tschaikowsky, is in special memory of Dr. Bessey. He was pre siding at vespers when it was played for the first time at the University and was very enthusiastic in his ap preciation of the beautiful andante. STRINGS AND ORGAN "Andante Cantabile" Tschaikowsky THE LIFE OF DR. BESSEY Chronology . n. aiw 91 lfUr on a farm near Milton, Wayne County, Ohio. SraSuated" from the Michigan Agrieulhual College in 1869 with the degree of Bachelor f deceived his Master' of Science degree from the same college in 1872. Studied raider Dr. Asa Gray at Harvard in 1872, 1873 and 1875. : Received his Doctor of Philosophy degree from Iowa University m 1879. -Was professor of Botany at the Iowa State CoUege from 1870 to 1884. SellSSt 1884I(Td !T1 College of ApM. Came t0 iNeP"SRa . University of NebNraska from 1884 until his death. Wat lltTvTlt VNebraA. in 1888-91, in 1899 and in 1909. Was dean of deans from 1909 until bis death. Died at Lincoln, Nebraska, February 2o, 1915. Scientific Honors President of the Society for the Promotion of AprMture, 1889-91. President of the Botanical Society of America, 1895-b. IrlTdZ of the department of Natural Science of the National Educational Associa- St of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, 191012. President of the Nebraska Academy ui tural features and who knew the tech nical names of plants. But as the years passed on Dr. Bessey's students were numbered by the dozen, then by the score and finall by the hundrel during the later years when our grac ious leader enjoyed most highly the fruition of his long years of strenu ous service. This enjoyment was espe cially pleasant to him because; he saw many of the theories and conten tions of his earlier days accepted by the great body of botanists, and most of all was the pleasure deepened as he saw one after another of his stu dents taking place in the front rank of that body. One of Dr. Bessey's major delights was to look over the lists of former students of his depart ment and to picture them, oftentimes in distant lands, preaching and teach ing as he h&A taught and contributing of their thought to the world accumu lation of knowledge. He was never too busy to drop everything for a cor dial greeting and boyish chat with his "boys," when they dropped in upon him as they chanced to be In Lincoln for a few hours. Hundreds of instructors in American schools and scores of investigators in various offices of many institutions of learning and research owe their very life-ambition to the initial boost ad ministered by Dr. Bessey at the criti cal moment. This is true not only for botanicaliy Inclined young people but also for hundreds of others whose pri mary inclination has drawn them into other fields of accomplishment. This was the work that he enjoyed most,the work which kept him young and in this he fulfilled a divine com mission to a degree to be coveted by at least every college professor. RAYMOND J. POOL. H.. ' ' ' ' ' "" . 4