A PAGE TWELVE THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1951 STUDENTS, ADMINISTRATION CLASH: - w ii i ..r. .......... I Squabbles Mark History of Driving Ban By DIANE DECKER As Christmas vacation draws near, students are beginning to look forward to no classes, later hours and driving the family car. For 24 years, with the exception of a few proud holders of driving permits, student driving has been limited to such vacation periods. Although this restriction is ac- cepted passively now, this was not always the case. WHEN THE Driving Ban hit campus for the first time in 1927, student outcry was loud and sen- sational. Transported by roller- skates, they paraded back and forth in front of the Administra- tion Building, then located in Uni- versity Hall, while the Student Council resoluted, The Daily edi- torialized and the Adelphi House of Representatives Debating Socie- ty orated. Although the ban stunned the student body that fall, they were not altogether unfore- warned. The preceeding spring a serious automobile accident culminated in President Clar- ence E. Little asking the Re- gents for action on the matter. Prior to this time, driving had been forbidden only to students with less than a "C" average, freshmen and sophomores. All persons under 21 years old needed Written permission from their par- ents and all drivers were registered by the Dean of Students. Enforce- ment of these regulations was in the handsofsa student committee. ALARMED by the pending ac- tion of the Regents, The Daily pro- posed a counter-measure to Presi- dent Little. It suggested a plan for stricter enforcement of the exist- ing rules by a new committee. The suggestion was tried, quite suc- cessfully. Nevertheless, in June of that year, the Regents passed a reso- lution, stating: "no student in attendance at the University shall operate any motornvehicle except in exceptional and ex- traordinary cases at the discre- tion of the Dean of Students." Uproar ensued because the ban was, according to The Daily, in di- rect violation of the agreement made by President Little that the ban would not be leveled if the counter-measure proved effective. The student body felt that it had. * .* * DESPITE denials of the admin- istration that the ban was an at- tempt to curb "flaming youth," a report made by Dean of Students Harvey C. Emery at this time in- dicates that more than tighter en- forcement of the existing regula- tions and concern over deaths in the past years was involved in the Driving Ban. Emery stated that the ban was "not a hysteria move moti- vated by the number of student deaths." It was passed in order to eliminate wasted student time, overstressing of social dis- tinctions, and to improve the existing moral conditions, ac- cording to Emery. Commenting on the latter point, Emery said, "Anyone will admit that people will do on back coun- try roads that which they would not do on State Street." He ex- plained that the function of the University was to act "in loco parentis." AS STUDENTS attempted to find loop-holes in the regulation, the Dean's office issued a state- ment that "the employment of chauffeurs by students to circum- vent the ban" was "illegal." In reply to a personal letter, the State Attorney General W. W. Pot- ter upheld the constitutionality of the act. "The rule of school au- thorities extends beyond the class- room," Potter pointed out. Little by little, the Regents re- laxed the ban to allow students over 28 years old, married stu- dents, local and part-time stu- dents limited driving permission. The Daily instantly predicted a marked upsweep of student marriages. "Toasted Rolls," a popular col- umn of 1928, broke into verse in honor of the permits: Sing paeans to the hardy souls, Who've told him their tales of woe, Sing of their tears and their downcast eyes, As out of Emery's office they go. Sing softly, muse, of departed ones, Who ingenuity lacked To drive their cars and not get hooked On Emery's Auto Act. * * * ALTHOUGH student protesta- tion over the Driving Ban contin- ued to flourish, only one case of near-violence was reported. Two members of the newspaper staff, Benjamin Bolt, author of "Toast- ed Rolls," and Cora the Coed of the women's page slugged out the controversy in print. Cora kicked things off by say- ing that, with the cars gone, she had had to look at the men. "I never realized," she confided, "what a bunch of dumb soaks there were among the masculine population on campus until I had to start walking with them." In response, Bolt merely said, "In an institution such as this, where the average of feminine beauty would scarcely cause boast- ing at the old folk's home, such a subject is a delicate one." Cora managed to avert blood- shed by admitting she finally had realized that "the number of women blockheads on campus equals the number of masculine ones." University officials remained pleased with the ban, it is indi- cated in a 1928 report on causes and effects, because they felt that it increased a trend toward in tellectual and cultural effort. Stationary is the perfect gift: 59c to 10.00 per box Beautiful Christmas Cards: 59c per box and up 4< 1 x r M p0 B TR FIF -ENGINEERS!- PERSONAL INTERVIEW OPPORTUNITY with 43M rep rse 4iV0 Permanent positions open for Seniors and Graduates as technical and design engineers in the world-famous IBM RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT LABORATORIES Endicott and Poughkeepsie, N. Y; Chance to do outstanding work in creative design, model building, testing, and product improvement in the fields of electronics, mechanisms, circuitry, and other physical sciences. Also field engineering positions as CUSTOMER ENGINEERS CALL YOUR COLLEGE PLACEMENT OFFICE t make appointment or come in on .JW ILL.At- M --AL Gift Suggestions STATIONERS, PRINTERS, BINDERS Phone 3-4515 Off ive Outfitters 112 S. 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