pAG ExGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sl}A ', S PTEMBEIt 24, 1946 PAGE EIGHT TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1946 GOING MY WAY, BUD? cU' Marching Band Rehearses for Nine-Game Entertainment Record Number Receive Car Permits for Fall Permits to drive an automobile during the school year were issued last week to 800 students. According to Charles M. Thatcher, assistant to the dean of students and in charge of the administration of driving regulations, the total number of permits which will be is- sued is expected to reach well over 1000, as applications are still being received this week. Exemptions Given Exemptions have been granted to another 400 students qualifying un- der one of three categories: those who are 26 years of age or older, part-time students and students with a faculty rating of teaching fellow or higher. The number of students who will be driving cars this year is larger than ever before, and has been mul- tiplied several times since 1944, when 400 permits were issued. Slightly more than 900 permits were given last year. This increase is largely attributable. according to Thatcher. to the unprecedented number of married students and students living at Willow Village. To Be Lifted The driving ban. which went into effect yesterday for all students who. have not obtained permits or ex- emptions. will be lifted during vaca- tion periods. This regulation will permit students to use automobiles for J-Hop. which occurs this year between the fall and spring terms. Driving privileges have been grant- ed to married students living with their families, those Who live in Wil- low Village or beyond a reasonable walking distance of the campus, physically disabled students recom- mended by the Health Service, stu- dents driving for business purposes ANN ARBOR'S FINEST U A CHELSEA FLOWER SHOP f 1A2 v CORSAGES - BOUQUETSO FLORAL ARRANGEMENTS and Ann Arbor residents who desire the use of an automobile for family errands. Commuting Permits Thatcher emphasized that students with "commuting permits" will en- j oy no privileges that students living on campus do not have. They will be permitted to use their automobile only on a direct line from their resi dence to a designated parking space in one of four areas on each side of the campus. Another provision in the driving regulations set up by the Board of Regents in 1927 is a clause permit- ting students to ride in family cars driven by members of the family and in cars owned and driven by non-stu- dents or exempted students. They may not ride in family cars driven by anyone outside the immediate family. Applicants for driving permission must follow these regulations: a writ- ten consent of parent or guardian must be filed by students who are not self-supporting, and students must present evidence of public liability and property damage insurance and a driver's or chauffeur's license from the state in which the car was licensed. New Education Course Offered T his Semester A special course in problems of higher education will be offered for the first time this fall by the School of Education, Dean J. B. Edmonson announced yesterday. The course is designed for prospec- tive college teachers, and is offered in the expectation that many grad- uates of the University will enter he field of college teaching, Dean Ed- monscn explaine.a. There will be special opportunities in this field in the next few years, he said, because of the expansion of college enroll- ments. The class will meet every Tuesday night from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Lecture Hall of the University Library. Deah Hayward Keniston, of the literary college, will speak a; the opening session today. His topic will be the "Rise of the Liberal Arts College in America." Helicopter Ambulances A Hollywood, Calif., hospital plans to begin a helicopter ambulance ser- vice in the near future. The helicop- ters will land on the hospital roof. The University Marching Band is rehearsing now to play for a full slate of nine games which will begin with the Indiana game Saturday. Prof. William D. Revelli, director of the University bands, announced yesterday that there still are posi- tions for 25 men in the organization. Trumpet, cornet, French horn, bass or saxophone players are particularly needed, he said. Enrollment Slow The present rather slack enroll- ment can be attributed in large part, Prof. Revelli said, to time and trans- portation difficulties as well as con- flicts between rehearsal times and late afternoon classes. Prof. Revelli also commented on the feeling, especially prevalent among veteran groups, of having lost proficiency in their instruments after several years in which they had prac- tically no contact with music. He said that he is especially anxious to en- courage these people to take up the work again and is confident that after only a few months of work their former skill will return. The Marching Band's plans are not yet complete for the season opener on Saturday, but Prof. Revelli has prom- ised a full-dress show for the occa- of-town trips for the Minnesota and sion. Ohio State games. The University of Indiana will be Two Trips Planned represented at half-time by the Ho- Auditions for band positions are bart High School Band, of Hobart, being held daily in Harris Hall. Mem- Indiana. The band, organized and di- bership in the Marching Band en- rected by Prof. Revelli in the period titles the player to one hour of aca- from 1925 to 1935 has been a national demic credit and an excuse from champion since 1930 and is ac- PEM. Drills are from 4:15 p.m. to claimed as one of the top-notch high 5:45 p.m. daily. school bands in the country. At the present time the band is under the - direction of Frederick Ebbs, a gradu- Read and Use The Daily ate of the University. Clsiie D c The Marching Band's plans for the C _ assifiedDirectory 1946 football season include two out- ' 'U' Professor Takes New Job Prof Howard B. Calderwood re- signed his position as professor of political science this summer in or- der to continue his work of the past year with the State Department in Washington, D. C. Other members of the political science department who have re- signed are Dr. Lester H. Phillips, who has taken a poasition in Greeley, Colo., and Ruth Silva, who will teach at Wheaton College in Massachu- sets. L You Always Save cat I L41 601 SOUTH FOREST AVENUE DRUGS - COSMETICS - GIFTS TOI LETRIES Witham's! "Teach your DOLLAR to have more CENTS"--Save at MICHIGAN SEAL Stationery 60 Sheets 50 Envelopes All for $1.00 Seal is embossed on finest Bond paper! PLASTIC Drinking GLASSES Assorted Colors 25c "NON-BREAKABLE" Electric Eversharp PENS and PENCILS The best at Marshall's! 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