TAM M W, A'vA III- P .. .. .., ,. . Michigan Sororities to LEAGUE BA[LLROO'M WILL BESCENE UOF AFFAIR' - 'TOMORROW Scholarship Cup to Be Awarded to Pi Beta Phi for Third Consecutive Year. O. J. CAMPBELL TO SPEAK Houses to Sing Songs Between Courses; League Orchestra to Play. In Charge of Banquet :i I 4 4. ---I 44. Twenty-one sororities will gather at 6 o'clock tomorrow night in the main ballroom of the League for the seventh annual Panhellenic banquet. The affair is sponsored by the intersorority association in or- der to foster friendly relations be- tween the houses, to presergt for- mally the pledges, and to award the scholarship cup. Cup to Be Presented. Josephine Timberlake, '32, presi- dent of the Panhellenic association, will act as toastmistress, and the first event on the program will be the presentation of the scholarship cup by Ira W. Smith, registrar, to Pi Bet Phi. Thishouse has won the cup for three consecutive years, and has earned the right of per- manent possession. Following, the award, Miss Alice C. Lloyd, dean of women, who acts as advisor for the association, will speak, and she will be followed by Prof. O. J. Campbell, whose subject has not been announced. In accordance the traditional custom, each sorority will sing One of its songs between courses. Music will be furnished by the League orchestra. Amplifiers will be set up throughout the ballroom. Thirty at Speakers' Table. Guests of honor will be seated at the speakers' table, and they in- clude Miss Lloyd, Mr. and Mrs. Ira W. Smith, pean Joseph A. Bursley and Mrs. Bursley, Prof. 0. J. Camp- bell and Mrs. Campbell, Dean W. D. Humphrie, and Mrs. Humphries, Dean John R. Effinger and Mrs. Effinger, Mrs. John Wannamaker, Miss Jeanette Perry, Mrs. Byrl Fox Bacher, Miss Ethel McCormick, Miss Ellen Stevenson, end Dr. Mar- garet Bell. Also seated at the table will be Katherine Koch, '32, president of the League, Lois Sandler, '32, vice- president, Dorothy Elsworth, '32, president of the Women's Athletit association, the officers of the Pan- hellenic association, and the mem- bers of the central committee for the banquet. Emily Bates, '32, was general. chairman for the affair, and she was assisted by Josephine McCau- sey, '34, Evelyn Neilson, '33, Bea- trice Ehrlich, '32, Dorothy Norris, '33, and Elizabeth Gribble, '33. Sororities are asked to enter the ballroom immediately upon arriv- ing. The guests of honor will gather in the Grand Rapids room at 6 o'clock, and will enter last. -Photo by Dey Studio Emily Bates, '32, general chair-, man for the seventh annual Pan- hellenic banquet which will be held' at 6 o'clock tomorrow, night in the main ballroom of the League. Miss Bates is also president of Mortar-I board, senior honorary society. 1 AU T HOR PLACES DO WITH BEST OF 1 Elizabeth Wycoff Admires Immensely Interesting Views on Life. Her '"Dorothy Canfield Fisher has been a famous novelist for nearly twenty years now, and every year or so something interesting has ap- peared over her signature," states Elizabeth Wyckoff in an article in a recent issue of the Bookman mag- azine. "That she and her thought are so much a part of the mental back- ground of most American women is one good reason why as a novelist and literary personage she has not been taken seriously. She has phrased theories of life which most .people cherish as ideals, and many more think they do. It is difficult to separate the literary craftsman in her work from what there is no better word for than therpropa- gandist - a fluent+ and creative. propagandist, to be sure, but al- ways advancing some immensely interesting, adventurous or coura- geous way t6 live," shecontinues. "It is undoubtedly probable that Mrs. Fisher is not at all troubled by the lack of literary recognition. Fashions in Movie Sirens Change With Succeeding Decades Fashions in vamps have changed in the last decade, and now there is no set style, according to Ruth Tildesley in a recent Screenland. In the old days the determined siren reclined on a tiger rug amid burn- ing incense. That was enough. The modern methods are more frank and yet more subtle. Gay indifference pl u s smart clothes, smart conversation, and good fellowship are Lilyan Tash- man's formula for trapping the modern man. Greta Garbo lets no man be sure of her. Joan Craw- ford believes that the spirit of youth and adventure sweeps men off their feet, but George Arliss adds a final note in declaring that the truly dangerous woman pos- sesses innate charm, poise discern- ment, and refinement. MICHIGAN WOMAN li DIRECTSBUSINESS Marie Root, '14 Manufactures Road Scrapers. "Marie Josephine Root, class of '14, is the only woman in the world engaged in manufacturing road scrapers," according to an article in the latest issue of the Alumnus. She is vice-president and general I manager of the Root Spring Scrap- th er company of Kalamazoo. lJiss ba Root came to Michigan after her sir graduation from Western State A Teachers' College. Upon leaving in Michigan, she taught school for a ed few years, took a post graduate les course at Columbia, and then an helped her father in his work at Nc the office. At his death in 1925, Miss lik Root entered her present position. Ur Although extremely feminine in qu every way, Miss Root believes that del marriage and a career do not mix de well. She is a member of Collegiate th Sorosis, the Kalamazoo Chamber of ye Commerce, Altrusaclub, the Ameri- m can Road Builders' Association, and is very active in the Michigan Alumnae Association of Kalamazoo. Mrs. Oliver Stewart, A.B., class of I '92, visited the campus last week for the first time since her gradua- R tion. She came to Ann Arbor with her husband who spoke Tuesday at the Prohibition Forum. ROTHY CANFIELD pe VOD ERN NOVELISTS p in If she had wanted to lead a lifein es the literary circles she would have sh stayed in New York. But her own detachment is no reason for ignor- to ing or taking her for granted," Miss wi Wyckoff says. "To leave Dorothy Canfield Fish- ne er out of a serious discussion of the American novel is becoming a little more than ridiculous. As a ra matter of fact, she belongs in the an succession of novelists that begns O'> with George Eliot and continues if with Mrs. Humphrey Ward. All their novels are full of motherly understanding and tolerance of hu- man beings," she declares. Some of Dorothy Canfield Fish- er's best books include "The Squir- rel . Cage," "The Bent Twig," "The Brimming Cup," and "The Deepen- ing Stream," her latest novel. Cornell Awards Daily Positions for Points Women at the University of Cor- nell are to be given three months opportunity to try out for positions on the woman's editorial board of The Cornell Daily Sun. The com- petitiors will be rated on a point system depending on the number of stories published, initiative shown, and quality of work offered. PERMANENT WAVES Take advantage of 4 our low end-of- season'0 special prices. All waves complete with shampoo and set at _ no extra charge. WAVEOLINE SYSTEM-A real wave at ap plrprice .........................1 3 0 MARCELINE OIL WAVE-a recondi- tioning oil $4.50 system ........................$45 CURLINE PROCESS - Our very best wave$..........................Y 00 Shampoo, Finger Wave. Arch Marcell, Manicure, Facial, Hot Oil, any one soc, any two 75c PUBLIX BEAUTY SHOPPE 201 E. Liberty St. Phone 23414 I MIRACLES HAPPEN, STATESLILY PONS Famous Opera Star Describes .,Romance of Life. "Miracles do happen," says Lily Pons to Rose Heylbut during an in- terview which Miss Heylbut wrote for the American magazine. Miss Pons, who, at twenty-six, as an opera star, proves there is still plenty of glamour and romance in work well done, says the writer. At the age of fourteen, Lily Pons, entered the piano department of the Paris Conservatoire and there made splendid progress, but be- cause of ill health was forced to abandon this work. At eighteen she found an opportunity to take small parts in a very eminent stock com- pany. Then at twenty she was married. Those first months of married life offered her leisure time so she again took up piano and singing. Her husband encouraged her to take vocal lessons. That was the beginning, affirms Miss HIeylbut. r- American Made Watches NEW SYTLES AND NEW LOW PRICES "Ask Him and He'll Say 'Elgin"' 1 T 1 t" i