TW M~TV",'T. A TV ON THE LOCAL SCENE: Ann Arbor Council Candidates Discuss Issues. r UNCLE' ' , .1 Speech Department Group To Give 'The Mousetrap' I WANTS YOU ! i WWWAUM14F - - ..-..... NOW iL DIAL NO 2-3136 M-IC KEY.no one's gonna Idrag me down The Last Mile AVO ty-alive!" (Continued from Page 1) Harold J. McKercher (R-Ward I) has owned a local real estate and insurance agency since 1945. He has served as business man- ager of the Fresh Air Camp for four summers. He has been active in the Metho- dist Church, Chamber of Com- merce, Ann Arbor Masonic Lodge and Ann Arbor and Michigan as- sociations of insurance agents. He is on the board of directors of the Michigan Association for Retarded Children and is regional Vice- President of the National Insti- tute of Farm Brokers. He is 52 years old. McKercher believes that owners of deteriorated property should be, encouraged to improve it. He with- holds his final decision whether he favors Urban Renewal until the plan is finally developed and more fully explained. He urges that the residents and taxpayers who would be affected by the plan be con- sulted fully before it is put into effect. In his ward, McKercher feels, the traffic problem in the areas of the hospitals and the North Cam- pus is the most serious immediate problem. He suggests one solution might be more offstreet parking. Alicia Dwyer (D-Ward I) is a supervisor in the business adminis- tration school. She has been on the City Council for two years, serving also on the Taxicab Board and the Citizens' Recreation Board. She is 30 years old. Have a WORLD of FUN! o (ravel with $ITA Unbelievable Low Cost nE top 60 Deys t from $645 43-65 Day, s4'eAe from $999 5EE flRMany tours btclude colle gecredit. Also low-cost trips to Mexico $169 up, South America $699 up, Hawaii Study Tour $549 up and Around the World $1798 up. ,Ask Your Travel Agent Year FWOouimTRAVEL. I*9. A one-act play, "The Mouse- Trap," by William Dean Howells will be presented at 4:10 p.m. today in Trueblood Auditorium, as the second in this semester's series on the speech department's Laboratory Theatre Bill. Although there are perhaps better known literary "mouse- traps" than this 1880 farce, few of these can provide more laughs in a half-hour's time than this ever-modern sketch from the pen of one of America's first literary realists. Though the surface issue in the play is women's suffrage, the far- cical implications are concerned with the universally moot ques- tion, "Which is the stronger sex?" The role of the man caught In his own mousetrap is played by Ty McConnell, '61. Hilda Gage, '60, will play the part of the fem- inine antagonist, while Susan Ecker, '61, Cecile Weinstein, '61, Sally Tozer, '61, and Valjoan Ur- ban, '61, will play visiting women. Kay Delle Smith, '59, will be seen as the maid. ~spaim.' Closes A color motion picture on "Spain" will close the Burton Holmes travelogue series at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. Sponsored by University Plat- form Attractions, the film tour will include modern Madrid with its plazas, avenues and the Na- tional Palace; Toledo, home of El Greco and Grenada with "the world's supreme architectural treasure," Alhambra. -Daily-David Arnold COUNCIL MEETING-The Ann Arbor City Council discusses a controversial issue at a recent meeting. Standing up is Ann Arbor's outgoing mayor, Prof. Samuel J. Eldersveld of the political science department. Elections for the mayor's office and for five Council seats, one from each of the city's five wards, will be held April 6. One Democrat and one Republican is running for each position. ORGANIZATION NOTICES ":1 . i. One of the prime issues before Ann Arbor, Miss Dwyer says, is the support of the new city char- ter, adopted in 1955. It needs clari- fication and amendment in a few places, she says, but on the whole it is "an extremely efficient instru- ment of government." She feels that discrimination is "a critical issue." She says she will support the recommendations recently made by the Human Rela- tions Commission. She also supports Urban Re- newal because, she says, she sees no other means to its goal of giving the residents of the area "decent houses and neighborhoods." She supports the establishment of a municipal trash collection. She quotes Dr. Otto K. Engelke,. City and County Health Officer, as saying that present methods of trash disposal offer considerable danger of epidemics. This is especially important in her ward, she says, since the main route to the dump is there and it is continually littered. Also important in her ward, she says,, is the development of parks, including tennis courts particu- larly. *'* Mrs. Florence R. Crane (R- Ward ID is the wife of Prof. H. R. Crane of the physics department. She has been city councilman from her ward for the past two years. She has been active in the Citi- zens' Council, the League of Wom- en Voters, the American Associa- tion of University Women, and the Faculty Women's Club. She is 47 years old. An important issue which will, come up soon, Mrs. Crane feels, is that of replacing the present zon- ing ordinance, which was adopted in 1923. She feels that the kinds of re- strictions on land use for which it provides are sometimes unclear and sometimes behind the times, From The Broadway Stage Success and that its procedures for zoning make it cumbersome. Mrs. Crane feels that one of her ward's most important problems is that of moving US-23 out of the ward., She also thinks that the traffic and parking problems in the State St., Main St. and South University shopping areas, all in her ward, should be worked on. William K. Marshall (D-Ward II) is assistant' manager of Bob Marshall's Book Shop. He has at- tended the University and Cornell College in Iowa. He served as a lieutenant in the paratroops in the Korean War. He is 28 years old. Marshall thinks discrimination is one of the city's most important problems. He thinks it is "a com- plex and delicate" problem but feels an ordinance is "the only real solution." .He thinks a fair ordinance could be arrived at through public de- bate. He has no final opinion about how it should be phrased. He supports the present Urban Renewal plan. He proposes that the city move ahead on it as fast as possible "consistent with eco- nomy and my concernffor avoiding discrimination in the result." Marshall is interested in the profitable use of the Huron River. He supports the Huron River Watershed Inter -Governmental Committee in its study of the problems in the use of the river for recreation and for sewage dis- Am. Chemical Soc.-Student Affiliate, Student Papers (Szanto, Johnson), Mar. 25, 7:30 p.m., 1300 Chem. Democratic Socialist Club, Mar. 25, 8:15 p.m., Union, 3-C. Speaker: Dr. Parikh, "Politics in India." 'o * * . Grad. Hist. Club, Faculty Panel, Mar. 25, 8 p.m., Rackham, Assembly Hall. * * * Grad. Student Coffee Hour, Mar. 25, 4-5:30 p.m., Rackham, 2nd Floor-W. Lounge. All grad, students Invited. s* * w* La Sociedad Hispanica, Informal Meeting-Slides, Film, Refreshments, 8 p.m., 3050 F.B. Everybody welcome. PLUS VICTOR MATURE in "ESCORT WEST" Luth. Student Assoc., Holy Com- munion Service, Mar. 25, 7:15 p.m., Luth. Student Chapel,Forest & Hill. Roger Williams Guild, Choir Pre- sentation of Stainers "Crucifixion" and Holy Communion, Mar. 28, 8 p.m., 1st Baptist Church Sanctuary. ,* * * Stud. Chapter ASCE, 'Meeting, Mar. 25, 7:30 p.m., Union, 3rd Floor Conf. Rm. Speaker: Phillip McCallister, U.S. Corps of Engineers, "Hydroelectric De- sign Construction & Testing." Young Republicans, Dinner-$ p.m., 101 Union; Reception--7:30 p.m., Kala- mazoo i. League for Mrs. N. Burgess and Fred. Matthaei, Mar. 25. a magazine .of international folklore * SONGS * ARTICLES OF SPECIAL INTEREST * RECORD LISTINGS ---A MUST FOR ALL FOLK MUSIC LOVERS- Now on Sale at Marshall's & The Blue Front U of M Folklore Society r____._ ---- --- ,d - I s' THE TAREYTON Here's why Tareyton's Dual Filter filters a single filter can: 1.V It combines an efficient pure white outer filter.... MdIARKS HE2. with a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED THE . cHARCOAL....which has been definitely proved to make the smoke of a cigarette REAL HINGmilder and smoother. REAL THING THE REAL THING IN MILDNESS...THE REAL THING IN FINE TOBACCO TASTE! Lesson for today: In a few short months, New Dual Filter Tareytons have become a big favorite on U.S. campuses. For further references, see your campus smoke shop. "Your est Bet - Call A Vet" VE TEIR AN'S CAB NO 3-4545 NO 2-4477 NO 3-5800 SERVICE TO WILLOW RUN and WAYNE MAJOR Airports Call our office for group rotes I~ i We Go Anywhere 24-our Service MAIL ORDERS NOW' Ben, Jonson's Comic Satire" ' l i I i STARTS TODAY A1 DIAL NO 8-6416 Our Great Pre-Easter Program- On A Perfume f Pillow... The Strangest Pact Ever Sworn ..The Most k Diabolical Crime A Man And Mistress Ever Conceived! ' eem MICHELE MORGAN- DANIEL GELIN 7,Wt Peter Van Eyck-Beerrd BhA _trcted by Oenys de Is P ftI'* .. -h, ,an.ve? Oyames Hadley Chs PLUS A GO-FOR-GOOFINESS PICTURE, STRICTLY FOR LAUGHS '-4;- posal. In his ward, Marshall would like to see further development of Gal- lup Park. He iscalso interested in a master traffic-flow plan, with one of its goals the keeping to a minimum of traffic in residential areas. City To Vote On Salaries This April 6, voters will be of- fered a chance to increase the range of salary offered'their mu- nicipal judge, according to Miss Alicia Dwyer, Supervisor of the Business Administration School and City councilwoman. At their meeting last February 2, the City Council voted to place this resolution on the ballot. The reason for this, Miss Dwyer said, "is to bring the municipal judge's salary more in line with the salary of other city jobs." The present salary range of the municipal judge is from $4,000 to $9,000 and the proposed increased range would be from $7,000 to $16,000. Miss Dwyer said, "we in- tend neither to place the salary at the maximum or minimum, but this will give us a better range with which to work." According to present municipal judge Francis L. O'Brien, "the salary of an elected official can- not be raised during his term in office, and since the term of mu- nicipal judge is a six year term, the availability of a salary increase for the job would not become a possibility until 1962." Judge O'Brien pointed out some of the reasons salaries of court of- ficials in the state have lagged be- hind those of other positions. Daily Classifieds Bring Results Presented by U. of M. Dept. of Speech Lydia M endelssohTeae OLPO APRIL 9, 10, 11-8 P.M. M. t . ^ A 111I r11b 1 1 i lli1 'I /IIi Y iM 11 1 r F-- I I FILL OUT and. send to: play production, box office Lydia i t: Mendelssohn Theatre, Ann Arbor, enclose stamped, self-ad- dressed envelope, rake check payable to "Play Production". I ENCLOSED FIND $_for TICKETS TO "VOLPONE" ON (CIRCLE ONE) THURS., APR. 9; FRI., APR. 10; SAT., APR. 11. - rI -.I ..I I Name FILJUJ CO -. - - - - - - - - - - - - - s NOW ! -4'i DIAL NO 2-2513 5~~~~~~ 16 the 1~f~ "w.ww wr es"w M tha 0er IuiPPed. . I Tareyton A DUAL FITER &u'to ne TRAVELOGUE 1 //r I GIBRALTAR = BASQUE COUNTRY 0 I 11