Most of the steps in Dance Mad (St. Louis, 1914) were collected by “author” F. Leslie Clendenen from other dancing masters, but he gives himself credit for the Sorority Glide, a sixteen-bar one-step sequence that he recommends be danced to “Too Much Mustard” or “any One Step music of a similar swing. It’s a fun little sequence with a very “Castles” feel to it and room for some personal style. It works as an independent dance or can be plugged into a regular one-step as a variation.
The dancers begin in a ballroom hold, turned out slightly so both face line of dance. The dancers need to be far enough apart to make a cross step without crowding. Weight should be shifted onto the forward (outside) foot, the gentleman’s left and the lady’s right, since the dance starts on the inside foot.

