Daily Strength For Daily Needs Ale class of 1922 was founded by M. Millicent Carey, and it has been only through her constant care in meeting deficits in our endowment that the organization has survived. If there was ever a class that needed daily strength, it was the embryonic dark blue class who started their college career “revelling in humility’! In our first class meeting, Milly told us that the most terrible thing that could happen to us would be to have the odds vote us fresh. She told us that 1920 had been thus stigmatized, and we were led to believe that they had practically never recovered from the effects. With this hideous example of the sins of our fathers ever before us, we quelled our instantaneous instinct to lick the Red and virtually licked their boots in our tremendous reaction. No Freshman class has ever made fewer breaks than we. Before every function Margie would get a list from Milly of the breaks that were possible, and during each ceremony warnings would be hissed through the crowd as to what we were not to do. We never did anything wrong. The trouble was—we never did any- thing at all! Milly had said that the whole college would be watching us for the first few weeks, and if there was one thing we feared more than being voted fresh, it was the unwelcome attention of this strange and incomprehensible body. If they were watching for breaks, they watched in vain. Milly’s lists were irreproachable Milly was not only our social guide but she was also our athletic inspiration. She instructed us in the holiness of hockey and in our eagerness to excell in order to justify our existence, we held many tense meetings. At these we were told that 18