PAGE FIGHT TIIHE MICTGAN DAILY Social Action FEUDIN' 'N FUSSIN' Swasbbucklifg Datons Seek Members for Merry Crew By JAKE IHURWITZ Reach for your guns folks. The Dalton boys ride again. There is no reward for their capture, however, since the char- ter members of the "Dalton Boys," Chuck Evans, Roger Gibbs, Arthur (Chippey) Russell and Dick Gar- ret are not wanted for any hein- ous crimes. Membership Qualifications The "Dalton Boys," it will be noted are University engineering students capable of imbibing pro- digious quantities of beer and "cussing a blue streak." Anyone possessing these outstanding qual- ifications is eligible for member- ship, according to Evans. It all started when Evans, sta- tioned in China while serving our mutual uncle, had occasion to make several trips to India. For Survey Shows Disa greement On IRAPlan. (Continued from Page 1) provoke the issue. Education is the answer to the problem. Arlynn Rosen-I think we as students should lead the way in fibting discrimination, but pick- eting only provokes antagonism. Ntore karm Than Good William Carey, '49-I think a move such as IRA's drive does more harm than good. Picketing is silly and stirs up resentment. Warren Spalding, '51-If the prosecuting attorney wants to get after the barbers, that's all right, but it's not for the general public to tell the barbers how to run their business. George Olson, '50-I think this campaign will do much to make people conscious of the issue in- volved. Marvin Nochman, '49-The IRA ought to confine its efforts to newspaper publicity - picketing exerts too much pressure. Joanne Christensen, '50-I be- lieve they are going about it the wrong way and won't accomplish anything. Harriet Krantz, '50-It's a won- derful idea if it arouses interest. They are going about it in the right way and should also insti- tute legal action. 'The ABC Network Presents The Metropolitan Opera Company in Mozart's "DON GIOVANNI" Direct from CARNEGIE HALL Saturday, Dec. 6 2:00 - 4:45 P.M. srome reason, he found that the country was a veritable paradise for a bearded man. At times he was forced to refuse the innumer- able offers he received to carry his bags and for free taxi trans- portation. Evans was so gratified that he organized the "Dalton Boys" last summer while at Camp Davis, the University summer camp for ge- ology and surveying students, in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Beards and Sombreros Here, accompanied by his three desperado companions, Evans made regular pilgrimages to town. With their long beards and black sombreros, they appeared like na- tive prospectors to the townspeo- ple who promptly dubbed them the "Dalton Boys." One traitor shaved his beard at Camp Davis. Sentiment for a kan- garoo court martial ran high, but pressing demands on their time prevented the trial, and the cul- prit escaped with a probationary sentence. The Daltons were not without enemies. "Rock-busters," (a term (f endearment engineers use to refer to geology students) often became tangled in their beards. A feud grew in which the Daltons were the ringleaders. Once some of the coeds study- ing geology at the camp, sat in on one of the Daltons bull-ses- sions. They never returned. The engineers outdid themselves in their cussing. The Razor's Edge When our heroes returned to Ann Arbor, there was a furious dash for razors between the boys and their wives. Now they're beardless but still alive. Each Friday, if you are observ- ant, you will see the original Dal- tons, and the comrades who have joined them, on campus in black sombreros. Any of them caught without his distinctive chapeau is sentenced to pay for the beer they drink when they hold their Fri- day meetings in a local German tavern. Here they cuss and recuss the mysteries and nuances of engi- neering problems and rehash the days at camp. As a tribute to their generosity and willingness to buy beer Profs. Harry Bouchard, George M. Bleekman and Robert C. Cole have been named honorary Daltons. To Be Theme Of Conference The student's place in world so- cial problems will be the theme of the Social Action Conference, sponsored by the Student Religious Association and Inter-Guild, to be held from 3 to 8 p.m. today in Lane Hall. The Rev. Francis W. McPeek, of the Chicago Council of Social Action will open the session with an address on "Why Social Ac- tion?" Panel Discussions This will be followed by panel discussions on current develop- ments in industrial relations, ed- ucation in post-war Europe and minority groups in this country. Panel leaders will be Mrs. A. C. Sedgwick, anthropologist, Sheldon Rahn, of the Detroit Council of Churches and the Rev. McPeek. Coffee will be served in the Li- brary before the dinner at 5:30. The dinner will be followed by in- formal discussion with the entire group and the three speakers. "Our Place in Social Action To- day" will be the concluding dis- cussion at 7 p.m.. Open Sessions All sessions are open to stu- dents and faculty and reservations may be made by calling the Lane Hall desk. There will be a nominal charge for the supper. Lewis Towler, chairman of the SRA public affairs committee and Betty Lou Zwemer, chairman of the Inter-Guild social action com- mittee, are in charge of the con- ference. Radio Broadcast Dise-usses Marriage Problems that split-up mar- liages will be the subject of the speech department's documentary drama to be broadcast at 2:30 p.m. today over station WKAR, East Lansing. Entitled "The Marriage Gal- lery," the program will feature flashbacks into the lives of mar- ried couples whose differences jeopardized their happiness, and will include advice for resolving difficulties commonly encoun- tered. The program is part of a series, entitled "Living for Moderns." rN '1~ rF F i H U C E S A R D I N E T R A P -- Fishermen stand knee-deep in their dinghies in a weir at B'acks Harbor, N. B., Canada, to haul in sardines. They trap as many as 1,000,000 a day. RARE PERFUME FLASK-Anewadditiontohis collection of rare jewelry-an antique Persian perfume holder of carved silver, crystal and gems-is shown to Mrs. Walter Thornton; -' by Pieter de Witt of New york.' kt , I DAILY OFFICIAL- BULLETIN H 0 0 V E R C E T S A W A R D - Dr. Eelco vai Kleffens, (center) Netherlands ambassador, watches as Harold 0. Voorhis gives Ex-President Hoover the gold medal of the Holland Society. P R I N C E S S R E G E N T.- Princess Juliana, named prin- cess regent of the Netl ds, Prince Bernhard and their three oldest childeen po this portrait on a Canadian visit. (Contin'ued from Page 7) p.m., First Methodist Church. Pro- gram: Christmas music by vocal and instrumental soloists and the Sigma Alpha Iota Chorus. The public is invited. Economics Club: Mon., Dec. 8, 7:45 p.m., Rackham Amphithea- tre, "Empirical Studies of the Consumption Function," by Dr. George Katona, Program Director of the Survey Research Center and Associate Professor of Psy- chology. Graduate students and staff of Economics Department and School of Business Adminis- tration, as well as other interested persons, are invited. Art Cinema League and the IRA present Paul Robson in NATIVE LAND, plus "Americans All," a short, telling how the city of Springfield fought discrimination. Sun. and Mon., Dec. 7 and 8, 8:30 p.m., Kellogg Auditorium. Tickets on sale at University Hall, 10-12 noon and 1-4 p.m. beginning Wed- nesday. Tryouts for the French Play: Mon. and Tues., Dec. 8 and 9, 3- 5:15 p.m., Rm. 408, Romance Lan- guage Bldg. Any student with some knowledge of the French language may participate. Camp Association Meeting Stu- dents and others interested in the field of camping are invited to at- tend the meetings of the Michigan Camping Association in the Uni- versity Hig School Auditorium, Sat, Dec. 6. Theme of meetings: "Summer Camping Helps A Child's Winter Living." Camp di- rectors, counselors, and parents will participate in the sessions. Open to the public without charge. Further information may be pro- cured in the Office of the School of Education. Graduate Education Club: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Mon., Dec. 8, West Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. Student-faculty panel: "Grades in the Graduate School." Social hour, 9:15 p.m. Faculty, graduate students and guests are invited. Graduating Outing Club: Meet for winter sports on Sun., Dec. 7: 2:30 p.m., northwest entrance, Rackham Bldg. Sign up at Rack- ham check desk before noon Sat- urday. All graduate students wel- come. . .t 1600 ON YOUR DIAL IN W O M A N L E S S L A N D - The chief cook (left) and chief librarian of the Vatopedion monastery on Athos penin- sula, Greece, sit in the portico overlooking the courtyard of the monastery. The 20 fortress-monasteries on peninsula jutting 30 miles out into AegeanSea are inhabited by 3,000 monks of four nations. No women are permitted in area. A H E A V Y H A R B O R W E A T H E R- A U. S. Coastguardsman walks the deck of his cutter, dispatched to New York harbor to aid ships dragging their anchors in a 60-mile wind and rain storm. California Here We Come. Travel with the MICHIGAN Gang TO THE ROSE BOWL On the Santa Fe STUDENT TRAIN The EL CAPITAN Coach Streamliner Saturday, Monday, Monday, Thursday, Thursday, Saturday, Dec. 27 Dec. 29 Dec. 29 Jai. 1 Jan. 1 Jan. 3 Lv. Ar. Ar. Lv. Lv. Ar. Chicago (Dearborn Station) .. .... 7:00 P.M. Pasadena..... 8:12 A.M. Los Angeles ........................... 8:45 A.M . Los Angeles (Union Station) 8:00 P.M. Pasadena 8:25 P.M. Chicago ....... . ... . 1:45 P.M. .1 IT'S CLEAN IT'S FAST IT'S COMFORTABLE 1 411 seats reserved in each direction! " ,- I