At Your Door Three U Fifteen Hundred Sum- Eveogo a Week, l mer Session Student; VoL. III. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1912. No. 20. i! ' HERE'S THE POSER OF THE CENTURIES "Whatl" is Easy, "Howl" Not Hard; But"Whyl"IMust Have Stumped Solomon. P1IILOSOPHY SEARCHES ANSWER "There are in the alphabet six let- ters," said Professor R. M. Wenley in his lecture "Why?", last night, "which may be combined so as to make three fundamental questions, 'What?' 'How?' and 'Why?' These questions nave been asked from time immemorial, and they will 'be asked to the end of the chapter. The 'What?' question is an easy one to frame; it is possible to ask 'What?' about anything. 'How?', too, may be asked of anything. The 'Why?' question is more difficult. The reason is that every 'Why?' turns out in the end to be a 'What?'or a 'How?' " Professor Wenley stated that these questions all spring from a common root. The distinetions which we make are between what seems to be and what is; between appearance and re- ality. In science the distinction be- tween appearance and reality is made to satisfy intellectual needs. In science we think of the intellectual satisfaction of getting at the essence of what we call reality. 'What?' and 'HOW?' are asked in science. 'Why?' belongs to metaphysics. All our lab- oratory machinery helps to determine the 'What?'" Casuality is the one great question common to ail science, and it is essen- tially a metaphysical question, accord- ing to Professor Wenley. The theoret' ieal distinction which men make be- tween the two grat groups of facts is that the one, more stable and larger of the two, is physical, and the other consists of the conscious facts. "There are five investigations, all of which we must settle with, if we are to get even a hypothetical solu- tion " said Professor Wenley. "We must investigate first the real nature of what we call material existence. What is it? Is there any distinction between this existence and the phys- ical? Again, we must investigate the distinction between the mechanical and the teleological processes. We must ask, just what is the justification fbt the conception that the physical order is rigidly conformable to a uni- form law. We must also inquire into the constant framework under which the whole universe appears, namely space and time. What is the bearing of these upon the reality of the order which moves within them. The fourth question is; what are the factors it the conception of development? What do we mean by evolution? Finally, we must inquire into the part which descriptive science is to play in our experience" WILSON AGAIN PROVES FAVORITE OF THE ECONOMICS STUDENTS. Governor Woodrow Wilson, demo- cratic nominee for president, again demonstrated his strength among the he received a plurality of 18 votes ov- ef Roosevelt, and a majority of 12 votes over the Held, in a straw vote of Mr. W. H. Hamilton's clases in economics 1. The ballot resulted as follows: Wilson, 26; Roosevelt, 8; Debs, 2; Chafin, 2; and Taft, 2. This is even a stronger showing than the governor made Thursday. Work on Tunnel is in Progress. Vcrk on the power house tunnel lelding to the Hill Memorial Audjyo- riusI has progressed rapidly up to the present, thirty yards having already been completed. The tunnel, with piping, tiling, and wiring, will be ready to connect with the lines from the auditorium in three or four weeks. tis of reinforced concrete construc- tion and its dimensions are 6 x 6 by 5 x 6. tograE tOLT PRESENTS DIAMONI) TO FAR-FAMED NATIVE SON. The Detroit Board of Commerce will hold a citizen's reception this after- noon at the Hotel Pontchartrain to welcome Ralph Craig home from the Olympiad. As soon as lie arrives he will be taken to the Pontchartrain, where such men as "Ty" Cobb, and Jake Stahl of the Boston Red Sox, an old time college athlete, together with representatives from the Univer- sity of Michigan Athletic Association, the Detroit Y. M. C. A., Detroit Ath- letic Club, Detroit Boat Club, and Beard of Commerce, will be in the re- ceiving line, in the parlors on the sec- ond floor. The Council Committee, on behalf of the city, will prseent Craig with a diamond ring bearing the seal of De- troit engraved on one side and the figure of a sprinter on the other side of the diamond. A number of Craig's old time friends from the University will attend the reception, while the Detroit Universi- ty of Michigan Club will attend in a body. PROFESSOR TATLOCK AND POET EXTENSION WORK TOlE a o-t ZE VHAUCER'S POEMS MPI HEAT WELL RECEIVED Latest of the books written by mern- TO WARM CAMPUS bers of the faculty, is a modernized versitn of Chaucer's poems, by Prof. Success of Lects'es 'Throughout the J. P. S. Tatlock, of the English de- Stadent Opnion on Presidential Elee. State Warrants Renewal of partment, in collaboration with Percy ion Will llc Tested in Appropriation. Mackaye, the poet and dramatist. The Straw Vote, volume will probably appear later in PLANS MADE FOR NEXT YEAR. this month. It is to be published by F IVE1 lPAiTIES REPRESENTED. the McMillan Company. Cons.'quent to, the success of last year's extension work of the Univer- sity, the Board of Regents, at a recent meeting, have again appropriated the sum of ten thousand dollars to carry on the work in the coming year. Also, to meet the matter more adequately and to place it on a permanent basis, the new office of Director of University Extension Work was created, and Prof. W. D. Henderson of the physics department was chosen its first in- cumbent. Last year, the Board of Regents made the first appropriation of ten thousand dollars for the work, to con- sist of three hundred lectures. The past year has amply demonstrated the wisdom of the movement and the advantage to the community thus serv- Samoan wiloW& sus on w &Aftu MWOMpowsim MA-k I INTLRFEROMETER IS edThe president has received several ACUTE INSTRUMENT Prof. N. M. Randall Tells How it Aids Scientists to Work With Light-Wm ves, IS MARK OF (000) LABORATORY. "Of the many instruments which mark the modern scientist, and the perfection of equipment of a labora- tory, the interferometer holds the most conspicuous place," said Professor H. Mt. Randall in the course of his lec- ture on "The Interference of Lieht Waves and Some of the Related Phe- nomena," yesterday afternoon. "Our eye will not only detect dis- turbances of the great speed of light but it will detect differences in the speed giving impressions of different colors," he continued. The analogy between the omission of light and the increasing wave-rings from the dis- turbance caused by dropping apeb- ble in water was very clearly brought out, The theory of light and dark bands, of which light is composed by project- ing it on a film of varying thickness, was explained. After making draw- ings of the paths of light and showing the effect of passing it through me- diums of varying density, the speaker thowed by the aid of a 'soap film the reason of the various colors in light due to the differences in wave length and speed. For a given color we al- ways ha'e a definite thickness of film, and where the film is thinnest, light enters and returins in the opposite phase and results in darkness," said he: . These various principles developed and proven led to a discussion of that wonderful invention of Michelson, the Interferometer. "This device," said the speaker, "is nothing more than a series of mirrors and glasses so placed as to intensify the light from a source; and by passing a beam through these glasses to two reflecting surfaces and back again, the fringes of light, as was shown, are effected by the densi- ties of the various media through which they pass. "For instance," the speaker explained "the heating of the air through which one part of the beam passes, causes a deflection of the fringes in a degree varying with the density of the air, changed by the heat. The moving of one of the re- flecting surfaces causes a deflection of the fringes. The introduction of a film into the path of the beam has the same effect; of deflecting the fringes an amount depending on the thickness of the medium. It was this fact that made it possible to measure the wave (Continued on page 4.) letters expressing the warm appre- ciation of not only the individual speakers but, the commendable plan of thus cementing the bond between the people and the university," said Prof. Henderson. "This is gratifying in view of the fact. that this was the fundamental idea of the work." Last year the work was forwarded threough the Library Extension Bu- reau operating from the president's office, and was experimental in nature. "The purpose, as now planned," said the director, "is not the organization of classes nor the conducting of ex- aminations, but to advance the cause of education and culture and to ren- der assistance along such lines as the community selects. The local work will be done through several teachers' associations, granges, wom- en's clubs, and any other organiza- tions touching in any vital way the life of the community." The new 1912-1913 bulletin of the bureau will be ready for distribution about the first of October, and offers some hundred lecturers. The number of lectures given in any one locality will of necessity be limited, as the demand exceeded the number provid- ed for the last year, and it is desired' to distribute the lectures as equitably as possible. Each lecturer is paid a definite fee and hotel and travelling expenses by the university, making it possible for the lectures to be free to all. Te local committee must furnish the hall and lights, and such adver- tising as they choose beyond that fur- nished by the university in the form of uniform advertising matter sent to each community receiving this service for distribution. Redecorate Secretary's Office, The office of Secretary S. S. Smith is at present enveloped in a shroud, while painters are redecorating and repainting. The color scheme is the same as that now used in the purchas- ing agent's office. The work will probably be finished next week. NOTICE! * All students who desire credit * for work done in the summer * graduate school, or the lit- erary department should call * at the office of the sum- mer session and fill out a * * blank. At the same time they * should leave a stamped ad- * dressed envelope for the return * of credits after the close of the * session. It is imperative that * this be given immediate atten- * -ion. * To Hold oat Rases at Camp The students at Camp Bogardus are arranging a series of boat races for next Saturday. Betting is high on the favorites, and there is considerable ex- citement at camp. The race will ex- tend over a quarter mile course. TELEPHONES IN- VOLYE VAST OUTLAY Surprising Statistics Mentioned by ProtParker in Lecture on Telephony. "There are over eight million tele- phones in use in the world," said' Professor R. 1). Parker in his lecture, "Some Recent Developments in Tel- ephony," Thursday afternoon. "Some- thing over eighteen million miles of wire are needed. Over a billion dol- lars is invested in the business which. requires about 225,000 employees in the United States alone. Probably the telephones in this country are used a hundred million times a day at a cost of approximately a million dal- tars. "The great problem in telephony is the problem of transmission. For a number of years after the invention of the telephone, experimentors did not understand what they were deal- ing with, It was not until 1892 that Oliver Heaviside, after a considerable amount of research and experimenta- tion, published a paper in which he upset the current ideas. Practical experiment, however, seemed to refute his claims, and it remained for Pro- fessor Pupin of Columbia University to carry the woric of the Britisher to a successful conclusion. "Before Professor Pupin's invention was adopted by tlhe was adopted by American telephone compnies, t was possible to talk from Chicago to New York only under very favorable conditions; but at oth- er times no amount of shouting made it possible for conversation to be un- derstood. Now it is easy to talk tbreb times that far, and submarine com- munication, before impossible, is now established between England and the continent. Professor Parker mentioned as oth- er recent developments in telephony the so-called phantom circuit which makes it possible for six people to carry three different conversations ov- er four wires without interference; duplex telephony; and wireless tele- phony. Professor Parker illustrated his lec- ture with a series of slides made up from oscillograph records taken throughaniordinary telephone trans- mitter, of the vowel sounds, of "hello," and of "the University of Michigan." Sociological Lecture Monday Prof. F. R. Clow will deliver two lectures Monday on sociological themes. The afternoon lecture is on the "Relation of Sociology to Religion,"and the evening upon "The Study of the Individual." Both will be delivered in the west lecture room of the phys- ical laboratory. Prof. Clow is teaching the courses given here this summer in the socio- logical department, the principles of sociology and sociology and education. He holds the chair of sociology in the Wisconsin State Normal School at Oskosh. 01(FICL 0.aALLOT.* * REPUBLICAN:* ( ) Taft & Sherman * DEMOCRATIC:- ( ) Wilson & Marshall * SOCIALIST:- ( ) Debs & Seidel PROHIBITION:- * ( ) Chafin & Watkins * * PROGRESSIVE:-* * ( ) Roosevelt & Johnson *Number of treasurer's receipt Note-No ballots will be acceptea swithout the number of the treasurer's receipt. Votes! Votes! Votes! Come one, come all! Equal franchise-women, smen, children-only that ye be of the faculty or student body-cast now .your vote for president. Only one vote will be allowed a person, and it must be recorded upon the regulation hal lot, as herein printed, and as will be printed in each of ths*next three is- sues of The Wolverine-and further- more must bear the signature of the voter. Cast your vote early,, and re- member to sign it. The polls will open with this issue, and will close Monday, August 19, at noon. Results will be given daily, and the total will be published in the is- sue of Tuesday, August 20. Ballots may be depositied in the boxes in University Hall, and in the Law, En- gineering and Economics buildings. This straw vote has been suggested to The Wolverine by various members of the faculty and of the student body, and if all cast their votes early the contest promises to be interesting, What is the consensus of student opinion on this subject? UNION REALIZES FIFTEEN DOLLARS ON SUMMER DCANCES The series of five dances given by the Michigan Union for students of the sumer session came to an end last night. The dances held in the large new hall, with the novel lawn decorations, have proved a pleasant feature of the present summer ses- sion, and were well attended through- out, though financially not a great success for the Union. Sixty-three couples attended last night's affair. The total profit amounted to about fifteen dollars. Next fall dances will be held in the new hall of the club house every Sat- urday night; these will be for mem- bers only. The hall may also be rent- ed throughout the year for private dances. Human Chamelion at Last Rewarded, Major Cody, one time wanderer on the face of the earth, Hope of the Wolverine feature scribes, and source of much copy, has at last been recog- nized by a long inconsiderate public. It is said that even now he is enjoying his well-earned rest on the plantation at Eloise. Major Cody P'"'s in the memory of local students ana others for his earnest efforts in behalf of the resurveying of Wayne County; also for his expert inspection of the hos- pitals here. Several of the faculty will recollect the blithe incidents of his stay in Ann Arbor when the monthly billet-doux comes in from the grocer and his colleagues.