up into the air in tiny rings. She said, "Amen!" She said, "Amen and hail the new Christ child!"
The following morning, a few minutes before the taxis arrived with the rushees, Mother Nesselbush gave the final instructions.
"Remember, girls, the phonograph is your signal to dance with one of the rushees. Don't, for heaven's sake, girls, don't leave a girl without a partner. You'll be able to tell a whole lot about a rushee by dancing with her. Notice how she dances, and in speaking to her, try your best to determine whether she would make a satisfactory Tri Ep. We know most of the facts on these girls, but it's up to you to verify them. And one more thing. In regard to the Mitchell girl —be patient. She may not look like a Tri Ep, but girls, I'm to the point where I'll insist that she be one. Now—go to it, and good luck!"
Susan Mitchell arrived in the first taxi along with four other rushees. Beside them she looked like a great hound dog that had been forced to romp with a select group of dachshunds, Pekinese, and toy poodles. Her manner was sprightly and buoyant, and she lacked the poised reserve of the others who walked with her up the long path to the marble steps, where Kitten Clark waited to greet them. She was smiling when her hand caught Kitten's, and her voice was too impetuous and ingenuous. "Hi" she said. "Hot, isn't it?"
Kitten glanced hastily at the name tag. She should have known. The dimples came in her cheeks, and her hand guided Susan lovingly toward Mother Nesselbush. "This is Susan Mitchell," Kitten said. "Mother Nessy will introduce you to the girls."
Mother Nesselbush's fat fingers reached for Susan's arm, and as she led her through the porch door to the living room she exclaimed, "What a lovely name! Susan! Or Sue? Which one do you like best?"
"Most folks call me Mitch," the girl answered, and Mother Nessy said, "That's a darling name! Mitch!"
Marsha Holmes interpreted Nessy's wink correctly. She rushed forward immediately and checked the name tag. Then she sat beside Susan Mitchell on the divan and she talked in that mellow, soft voice. She brought the girl cool mint punch and round jelly cookies, and she punctuated every sentence with "Mitch." Through the house she guided the girl, showing her the neat, pastel-colored rooms, the grand tile bathroom with the glass shower and tub stalls, the spotless white kitchen, the cellar with the washing machines and dryers and irons, and the closed-off section known as The Den, where Tri Eps brought their dates for ping-pong and Cokes. Soon Kitten Clark finished greeting the rushees and joined the entourage, and Marybell Van Casey followed along, and Jane Bell, the pert, efficient rush chairman, and they were all smiling and saying, "Do you like it, Mitch?", "Wait till you see this, Mitch," and "You are going to come back, Mitch?"
Mitch felt confident and proud. She sat at the bridge table with the Tri Eps flocking to her, and her eyes saw the wretched lanky girl in the corner near the window, alone, fumbling frantically with her purse, feigning an interest in its contents, ignored by the smooth busy figures in white. Another girl in a creamy yellow suit enjoyed the same attention Mitch received, the white formals reaching to light her cigarettes, bending to smile benignly, kneeling adoringly at her feet as she sat there in the stuffed chair and let the cool breeze from the porch ruffle her hair lightly. There was a fat girl in a red suit standing awkwardly with Mother Nesselbush in the doorway of the room, not speaking, looking fearfully at the assembly. A small, pug-nosed rushee with a flip feathered hat whispered fervently to two Tri Eps. Mitch saw them all, hearing the voices talking to her on all sides, answering and listening and watching until her eye rested on a girl standing near the piano. The girl was beautiful. Her white gown began just above her breasts and came in tight at her waist and full down to her ankles, where it ended and allowed