THE DAILY NBRRASKAN DR. BLANCHE NORTON IS CONVOCATION SPEAKER Describes Experiences in Near East Relief Work to Small Crowd. nr. Ulanche Norton spoke to a email crowd at convocation Tuesday on her experiences in the hospitals and orphan:ip;es cn the Wack Sea and in Constantinople. Dr. Norton Is be ing sent on a tour throiiRh the coun try by the Near Kast Relief organiza tion formed in 1915. nr. Norton said that the Turks,.re exterminating Armenians every day. Some people wonder why the Red Cross does not go into this field. The Red Cross and Crescent cannot work together. The star is the insignia of the Near East Relief organization. nr. Norton vividly described the terrible conditions of the Armenians in the servitude of the Turks created a feeling of sympathy and desire to help in the minds of the hearers. Books of coupons are in the hands of a number of students. These coupons sell at Jl each. Only fo will keep one child one monlh. and ?60 will keep one child for one year. The broader cultural needs of teachers will be met in a number of ways. A dally convocation will be held at which educational topics and subjects of general will be discussed by qualified speakers. Dr. John Hol land Rose of the University of Lon don will lecture for part of the sum mer session. The libraries, laboratories, museum, historical society, art gallaries, gym nasium, tennis courts and athletic field will be open to summer students. Dormitories and cafeteria will also remain open. ' There will be special training for agricultural and home economics teachers In a Smith-Hughes schools Some of the courses offered are agri culture, education, languages, sci ences, dentistry, One arts, dramatics, ecolution, music, geology and geog raphy, history, physiology, politic sci once, shorthand and typewriting. Congregational Church Dr. D. K. Thomas, Congregational student pastor, entertained the Con gregational student members of the Committee of 200 at a May morning breakfast at the First Congregational church Sunday. A ihree-course break fast was served in the churcr dining room at tables decorated with red car nations and ferns. Impromptu talks were given by Doctor Thomas, Hen riette Stahl, Taul Halberslebe-n, Mary Brawnell, Dwight Sprecher, Agnes Lauritsen, H. K. Addison, Marcia Staton, Merle Loder and Naomi Buck. The breakfast was in honor of the siten senior members and the new members who will serve nest year. SUMMER SESSION PLANS COMPLETE (Continued from Tage 1.) athletics. This year the physical de partment has been able to retain the services of Coach Henry F. Schulte. Courses will be offered in the theory and practice of coaching of football, basketball and track and field ath letics. This is an unusual oppor tunity for the high schools of Ne braska to secure aid in ihis important field. In answer to a solicitous inquiry from a customer we wish to say that the buds of the Dunlap Hat Tree were uninjured by the late freezezs $10 Other hats $4.00 and up. Quality Clothes Quality Clothes I1 (, I? mmm What Makes the Firefly Glow? 7"OU can hold a firefly in your hand; you can boil Y water with an electric lamp. Nature long ago evolved JL the "cold light." The firefly, according to Ives and Coblentz, radiates ninety-six percent light and only four percent heat. Man's best lamp radiates more than ninety percent heat.. An English physicist once said that if we knew the fire fly's secret, a boy turning a crank could light up a whole street. Great as is the advance in lighting that has been made through research within the last twenty years, man wastes far too much energy in obtaining light. This problem of the "cold light" cannot be solved merely by trying to improve existing power-generating machinery and existing lamps. We should still be burning candles if chemists and physicists had confined their researches to the improvement of materials and methods for making candles. For these reasons, the Research Laboratories of the General Electric Company are not limited in the scope of their investigations. Research consists in framing questions of the right kind and in finding the answers, no matter where they may lead. What makes the firefly glow? How does a firefly's light differ in color from that of an electric arc, and why? The answers to such questions may or may not be of practical value, but of this we may be sure it is by dovetailing the results of "theoretical" investigations along many widely separated lines that we arrive at most of our modem "practical" discoveries. What will be the light of the future? Will it be like that of the firefly or like that of the dial on a luminous watch? Will it be produced in a lamp at present undreamed of, or will it come from something resembling our present incan descent lamp? The answers to these questions will depend much more upon the results of research in pure science than upon strictly commercial research. General Office any Schenectady, N.Y. -JIllUl.iiillUllllllHll.l.l tUiliiiltlt.tlilimlllllUUUtUiUli 1 1 ibu l U ttiU lit HUuUuiU I u i w tl liil 1 1 ulit .mi WlwUiluluUlluUili limn Ui b.iiiUiiUNtlitt.ljiiiuiJUlllUkJl:! When you go home in June you will want to take something with you. Nothing could be better than a Book of Photogravure Campus Views of your University. Why not buy one of these Books now when you can get them at cost. Prices Reduced until Saturday Night Buy One Today FACING THE CAMPUS STORE 96-382 D