COEDS WILL MEET THE DEAN OF WOMEN Strictly for you, the incoming coed, will be the forum devoted to a talk by Dr. Marna V. Brady, the University of Florida's Dean of Women. Since the offices of the Dean of Women and Dean of Men work in close cooperation on student affairs, you will also have the opportunity to meet Dean R. C. Beaty, Dean of Men, who will also speak to you at this time. Miss Evelyn Sellers, the Assistant Dean of Women, will be on hand to help answer questions you may have, particularly those related to Panhellenic affairs. The office of the Dean of Women is one of the most helpful offices on campus, and it is urged that yqu feel its service is accessible at all times. It is a major center for the counseling of women students and handles all kinds of problems from little ones to big ones. (By the way, if you go early the little ones may stay little or disappear completely instead of growing like Topsy.) Drop in and meet one of your friends in Room 152 of the Administration Building sometime during your first semester. Dean Brady is interested in and vitally concerned with all facets that com- pose the kaleidoscope of your life here at the University, curricular, extra- curricular, or personal. If you have good ideas for improving any part of the University life, discuss them with her. You will find an interested and receptive listener, and someone who may be able to help you carry them out. Associated with Dean Brady is Evelyn Sellers, Assistant Dean of Women, who is Adviser to Panhellenic and counselor for off-campus students. Both Dean Brady and Dean Sellers work in close cooperation with the Head and Associate Residents in your halls. (Another tip! The Staff in charge of your halls are called by the above titles, not Housemothers. They are trained people with Masters' degrees or the equivalent, and are there to help you. House- mothers are in the sorority houses, not the halls.) The Women Students' Association, through the Hall Councils, composes, revises, and enforces the regulations. Since both groups are elected by you and your upper-class fellow women students, you decide the regulations you abide by and enforce them yourselves. Take your part in these affairs as a good citizen. Offer constructive criticisms, not gripes about which you do nothing. Remember, too, the Honor Code pertains to your dormitory life as well as to academic or extra-curricular life and take your share of responsi- bility for carrying it out yourself and seeing that your weaker sisters do so. The University of Florida is proud of its recent coeducational element and the way they have shared campus responsibilities and honors. Dean of Women Mama V. Brady says a word of welcome to the men of the Class of '56