A THE, MICHIGAN DAILY TUSD3AY, D1!CFBER 8, 1949 Chloe Owen I UCommittee Fills Phoenix Project Posts Alumni Joseph M. Dodge and George W. Mason have been named to high positions in the Michigan Memorial-Phoenix Pro- ject, the executive committee of University of Michigan alumni, which is directing the drive for funds, announced yesterday. Dodge will serve as national treasurer of the project. He is president and director of the De- troit Bank, and is now United States Minister and Financial Ad- visor to the Supreme Command- er of the Allied Powers in Tokyo. * * * MASON WILL fill the position of national chairman for corpora- tions and foundations and nation- al chairman for special gifts in the project. He is the president and board chairman of the Nash- Kelvinator Corporation. The Phoenix Project has the two fold purpose of erecting a living, functional memorial to the men and women of the Uni- versity who died in World War II and to promote peacetime nuclear research. I -Daily-Barney Laschever POST OFFICE DILEMMA-Ann Arbor branch Post Office workers Robert Wayne, left, and Stanley Tschiltz dejectedly prepare to rewrap carelessly wi'apped packages mailed in the Christmas rush. Post Office officials warn senders that their parcels may be lost or damaged unless carefully wrapped and addressed. * # * # I + Holiday Rust Terror for P By VERNON EMERSON In spite of the deluge of letters and packages that will soon begin to pour into the Ann Arbor branch of the Post Office, Postmaster Os- wald J. Koch has little fear of the Christmas rush. "Although our work will be heavy for about a week beginning Dec. 15, we will have 60 or 80 extra men who will keep things moving at a good pace," he ex- plained. A NUMBER of the part-time employes will be University stu- dents who are not returning to their homes over the vacation period, Koch said. With this extra help, plus 30 extra dispatch cases, the WUOMGiven. More Power University broadcasting station WUOM-FM yesterday increased transmission power from 13,500 watts to 44,000 watts after re- ceiving approval of the Federal Communications Commission. This added power should in- crease the WUOM range through- out Michigan, particularly in the southeastern section, according to Dean Costen, studio engineer. Listeners in areas covered pre- viously should get a better signal and clearer reception, he added. Street f ea ARROW Kidl N1i :.t's3UU one fArrow' cmpu -r-- E ?z "inGr Arrw'nsdly Nstid : ItsoeoUro' ap "Sssx i in GronO U U Arwssarl tlda U 3 ern ~frl r k Current plans call for the con- Holds LC See struction of a $2,000,000 building oo Gulancs at the University housing re- search and study laboratories, an yLocal Talent auditorium, and a library. 'ostma1B.stel.r et For Review Seiantics Expert postmaster predicted his office To Talk t Forum will have the bulk of the mail Tryouts for this year's Gulantics taken care of by Christmas. Review will be held at 1 p.m. Sat- S I. Hayakawa, noted semanti- Koch is planning to increase urday in Rm. 3G of the Union. cist, will discuss new foundations pick-up and delivery services so Acts of almost any size, shape or for semantics at the Psychology that a constant flow of mail will description can be accommodated Colloquium at 8 p.m. tomorrow in enter and leave the post office. in the Gulantics review. Singing the Lane Hall basement. The postmaster said that he ex- groups, juggling acts, imitators, Hayakawa, who formerly taught pects the number of cards to dancers, 'or unicyclists are just a at the University of Chicago, is reach 200,000 a day during the few of the varied types of acts currently doing work in graphic week before Christmas. He noted which can be included in the show. modern arts as well as modern that out-going parcel post has al- The Gulantics Review was origi- folk music. ready picked up considerably. sated last year by the Men's Glee The semanticist also ser as * * * Club, the Union, and the League to editor of ETC. the semantics ubli- "WE ALWAYS can expect plenty provide the campus with an outlet cation in this country. of packages on the way out from for local performers, and at the the campus sub-station as students same time give the campus an en- send many of their holiday gifts tertaining variety show. before leaving for home, Koch Prizes of $100, $75, and $25 will XMAS GIFTS explained. be awarded to the acts which take The work of the post office first, second, and third places re- is often complicated by the neg- spectively. See our large Selection o ligence of mailers, he said. Beautiful Gifts, Plain or Koch stressed the fact that Crested with U. of M.Seal many people do not realize it costs o r aoo te ity U. oMSeal two cents to send' an unsealed Hody 7'an ort y card. "We are amazed at the num- HOldM eeting Here crests. ber of people who ask for 11/2 cent i stamps for this purpose." More than 700 Michigan high * * * school students will attend the There is still time for HE ALSO URGED that pack- fifth annual High School Confer- ages be double wrapped and prop- ence on Citizenship here tomor- Crested Jewelry for Xmas. 1 erly addressed. In the case of row. cities with zone systems, Koch Prof. Marshall Knappen, of the BURR PATTERSON - pointed out the necessity of in political science department, will - eluding zone numbers in the ad. keynote the program at 10 a.m. & AULD dress. tomorrow in Rackham Lecture "It would be a good policy to Hall with an address on "World 1209 South U. Phone 8887 place a copy of the sender's and Democracy May Depend on You." receiver's addresses as well as a 1 list of the package's contents in- side the parcel," he suggested. Out of Town.., Liberty Iut Jnv Out of Shape! ture SHIRTS lqUU.3U3EI.EU.maa.VV" ~ ~ .e the Collar. 8uae is favorites, the wide-spread-by bus. rail or air, the SHIRT xford fabric. jPA will go along with you -- r there and back -and retain the ind long perfectly laundered "V that peo- avaable r \l :'\ iu.,.pe see. /' .T 11