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THE RED AND BLACK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1936.
Three
Dance to Be Given Saturday
For New Coordinate Students
By Katharine Hosch
C ONTRARY to the custom of “letting the boys pay for every
thing” a girl script dance, honoring freshmen and sophomore
transfers at the Coordinate College, will be given Saturday
night from 9 to 12 in Pound Auditorium by the members of the Sopho
more Y. W. C. A. Cabinet and Council.
Tickets have been sold to the junior college women entitling them
to extend invitations to three men.
The dance which will not be a
girl break affair will have music sup
plied by Jack Stewart and his Geor
gia Bulldogs.
Proceeds from the dance will go
toward furnishing recreation rooms
in the "Little White House” on the
Coordinate campus.
Chaperons for the occasion in
clude: Dean and Mrs. R. H. Powell,
Mrs. Ellen Rhodes, Mrs. Julian Mc-
Curry, Mrs. George Napier, Mrs. R.
H. Howell, and Miss Moina Michael.
The committee in charge of the
sale of tickets includes: Jacqueline
Evans, Margaret Byrum, Marion
Eberhardt, Helen Northcutt, and
Bobbie Stephens.
Cabinet members are as follow’s:
Marjorie Mann, Nina Fuller, Ann
Littlepage, Virginia Barfield, Martha
Darden, Jacqueline Evans, Hunter
Gibbes, Rebecca King, Mary Nell
McKoin, Rebecca Medlock, Alma
Quillian, Bobbie Stephens, Lillian
Walker, Marion Eberhardt, Mary
Neel, and Helen Northcutt.
Council members are as follows:
Betty Chick, Caroline Brosseau,
Ruby Steele, Hazel Ward, Nannell
Bagwell, Rosalie Brooks, Beth Bry
ant, Margaret Byrum, Helen Clarke,
Jane Coffin, Barbara Fielis, Theresa
Gamage, Dot Harris, Myra Harris,
Mary Heliner, Bobby Hightower,
Jean Kirkland, Jessie Lee Lynn,
Wandsleigh Hayes, Jane McIntosh,
Louise McKie, Mary Neel, Mary Red-
fern, and Virginia Tregone.
Freshman Women Debate
In Pioneer Club Try-outs
Freshmen women’s debate try
outs on the subject: Resolved, that
college graduates make a more suc
cessful marriage than debutantes,
featured the second meeting of the
Pioneer Club held Thursday after
noon on the Coordinate campus.
Mary Gordy, Columbus, president
of the organization, introduced the
officers to the freshman class. Cath
erine Atkinson. Savannah, debating
chairman, presided over the three-
minute debate try-outs.
Florida Will Honor
University Greeks
Prompted by the Georgia-Florida
game, chapters of national fraterni
ties on the University of Florida
campus will entertain their brothers
from Georgia who attend the game
in Jacksonville this week-end.
Members of Georgia Alpha of Phi
Delta Theta will be guests of the
Florida chapter at a breakfast Sat
urday morning preceding the game.
Lambda of Pi Kappa Phi will be
honored by the Alpha Epsilon chap
ter at a dance at the Hyde Park
Country Club.
Members of Gamma of Kappa Al
pha will attend the Elk’s Ball.
A buffet supper and dance on the
roof garden of the Mayflower Hotel
Friday night features the entertain
ment which the Florida chapter of
Kappa Sigma plans for Beta Lambda
chapter.
Mrs. Rhodes Entertained
By Winnie Davis Students
Women living in Winnie Davis
Hall entertained for Mrs. Ellen P
Rhodes,^ dean of women, Tuesday
night. Dinner was served in the Co'
ordinate dining hall. After this Miss
Moina Michael, house director at
Winnie Davis, and Mrs. Rhodes re
ceived in the dormitory parlors.
Included in the receiving line were
Miss Evelyn Sellers, assistant to Mrs
Rhodes; Mrs. J. A. Brooks, house
director at Senior Hall, and Mrs.
George Napier, house director at Gil
mer Hall.
Mrs. Rhodes addressed the women
on the importance of social charm
and the accomplishments of a nat
ural ease and grace.
Delta Phi Epsilons
To Honor Pledges
At Party Saturday
In honor of the pledges of Delta
Phi Epsilon, the members of Psl
chapter will entertain with a weiner
roast, Saturday night from 7 to 12
at the sorority house on Prince
avenue.
The affair will be held in the gar
den behind the chapter house. Col
ored spotlights and stacks of hay
will serve as decorations for the oc
casion.
Chaperons include: Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Loef, Mr. and Mrs. A. Brooks,
Mrs. Simon Michael, Rabbi and Mrs.
Lawrence Block, Mr. and Mrs. Jake
Joel. Mr. and Mrs. Jake Bernstein,
and Miss Jane Parker.
Pledges of the chapter who will
be the honored guests are: Minnie
Schreiber, Brunswick; Helen Rutkin,
Tampa, Fla.; Slyvia Glass, Atlanta;
Mitzi Sauls, Savannah; Emma Mink-
ovitz, Sylvania; Gracie Wilensky,
Savannah; Rita Slotin, Glennville;
Miriam Dreizin, Butler; Ruth Miller,
Miami, Fla.: Ida Erberfield, Newton,
N. C.; Sara Kramar, Summerville,
S. C.; Norma Simon, Brooklet; Jean-
net Weinstein. Greensboro; Sara
Perling, Sandersville; and Martha
Rauzin, Miami, Fla.
Dates invited include: Lewis Co
hen, Marvin Rauzin, Joe Gerson,
Gene Lipschitz, Marshall Clein. Her
man Simon, Bennie I’risant, Sidney
Raskin. Aaron Cohn, Buster Isen-
berg, Bruno Held, Herman Shapiro,
Harvey Cohen, Herman Kraft, Aaron
Cohen, William Allen, Sunny Kap
lan, Bert Levine, Irving Miner. Mau
rice Friedman, Carl Loef, Albert
Rosenberg, Leon Berkman, Harry
Kaplan, Bernie Friedman. Leo Gil
man, Martin Sussman, Ben Erlich,
and Nat Krumbein.
Miss Moina Michael, originator of
"Poppy Day,” will visit several Geor
gia towns during the week of Armis
tice Day. She has been invited to
Gainesville for a celebration Nov. 7,
and to Danielsville on Armistice Day.
She will go to Eatonton on Nov. 12,
for another Armistice ceremony.
Candy, Cakes, and Cigarettes Are Taboo
As Sorority Neophytes Train for Derby
Fat girls getting fatter, thin girls
getting thinner, tall girls stretching
out, short girls shrinking up—all
these reversals of the usual order
of feminine pulchritude are taking
place along "sorority row” in prep
aration for the Sorority Pledge Der
by, to be held at the Sigma Chi
house on the afternoon of Nov. 14.
At the A. O. Pi house “no smok
ing” is in effect until after Nov. 14.
Candy and other wind-shortening
foods have also been banned in the
rigid training rules which have been
adopted while spinach comes first on
the food list.
Tri Delta is feeding its candidate
for the heaviest pledge six meals a
day and using the breakfast eggs in
practice for the egg-and-spoon relay.
It is plnnned to have the Brenau
chapter over to join the Tri Delta
cheering section.
Kappa Delta is having secret prac
tices with no on-lookers allowed. The
K. D. cheering section, composed of
the sisters, will be in uniform sim
ilar to that worn by the team.
Disputes over who ahull enter the
"Modern Venus” contest have taken
place at Kappa Alpha Theta meet
ings. The Thetas practice every Sun
day afternoon.
Chi Omega’s shortest pledge is
carrying books on her small head
to make her grow even more diminu
tive. Chapter members are busy re
hearsing yells.
The tall girl of A. D. Pi suffers
nightly, being tied to her bed and
pulled unmercifully to make her
stretch. Unique costumes are being
planned by this pledge team.
Phi Mu's thinnest is on short ra
tions in an effort to shrink her still
further. The relay team is running
around in circles, preparing for the
'round-the-hlock marathon.
Alpha Chi is concentrating on the
three-legged race. They also claim
to be suspending their entry for the
tallest pledge from the chandelier.
Alpha Gamma Delta, believing in
the theory of self-determination, is
imposing no training rules. Inten
sive practice is beginning this week.
Skullduggery and foul play are
rumored, as evidenced by the fact
that one sorority pledge rooming
with another, admitted to be the
smallest in school, is stuffing her on
candy and fattening foods in a de
termined effort to wrest her title
from her. Thus up and down the
row pledges, one and all, are pre
paring for their coming out party.
GIRLS! HERE IT IS.. . The New Boct Sensation
f V REVERSE CALF
Laced right up to the
ankles... they’re the
youngest... newest
.. .“sportingest” style
you’ve ever worn. Metal
eyelets ... leather heela...
genuine Goodyear welt sole*...
and GRAND for all sports wear!
M MAIN FLOOR—CO-ED SHOE DEPT.
ICHAEL’S
Assemble Your Own Ensemble
UT them togcltier—and you have
the nat I lest new note in young fash
ions any season ever saw.
The sweaters art* Zephyr Yarn creations with I/Oehlasll Kin-
broidery in many smart models, in many colors . . . SIi-zm
34 to 88 . . .The skirts are all-wool—suede-surfaces, two-
tone plaids and woven woolens, all shades. With Neva-
gupe and zipper fastenings found only quality skirts. Sizes
HI to 32. Several combinations illustrated.
MICHAEL’S
Co-eds!
f
GEORGIANNE
BEAUTY SHOP
PHONE
1326
loivtj CLAYTON STREET
Over Reid Drug Company
MRS. SUE WHITE, Manager
★ ★ ★ ★
Scoops on Style
by michael’s
HOLLYWOOD ladles of the
screen know their business be
fore the camera. Make-up can
launch many a face but only
good lines in clothes cun fix a
figure. That’s why Cinematic
Fashions were horn and deliv
ered at Michael’s. Kiloeti Starr
Davis, dancing ut Homecoming,
was proof of what a Hollywood
fashion can do to a crowd.
Michael’s can complete the
transaction If you wish to bor
row glamour from tho stars.
PUNNING Is something Mi
chael’s is not doing, we hope,
when boasting of having a fac
ulty for college clothes . . . but
we are chuckling over the way
you took the silk shirt sugges
tion last week. Newest with
skirts this week are broadcloth
man-tailored shirts in yellow,
white, and beige.
P. S. We vote Font llaggs,
the campus highlight of the
week in style.
15” for pigxkln gloves is
a cheer for which Michael’s
eagerly, if a bit unaccustom-
edly, would like to rise and
shout. Kia Martin evidently
agrees with us that the pigskin
on the field demands pigskin
gloves in the grandstand. At
2.98. Pardon us, we feel like
cheering again.
TIP-OF-THE - WEEK: The
"novelty” buy bt here. Rhine
stone clips or wooden clips for
sport are attached to a long pin
which holds your scarf se
curely. Ingeniously made so
that the pin is hidden and only
the clips show. 1.00.