THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 19490 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Nationalists Prepare To Quit Capital Reds 70 Miles From Chungking CHUNGKING--W)-The Chin- ese Government yesterday stream- lined itself and prepared to aban- don Chungking and follow its armies as Red troops surged to within 70 miles of the city. Just when the signal to quit Chungking would be given seem- ed to be up to the oncoming Com- munists. If they kept thrusting from the northeast, east and south } the hour may come soon. THE DEFENSE ministry admit- ted the Reds had laid siege to Wulung, only 70 miles to the east. (This put them 25 miles nearer Chungking than they were 24 hours earlier.) The ministry said other Red troops moving up the Yangtze Valley were near Chunghsien, 140 miles northeast of Chung- king. Private reports said the Com- munists from the south already had taken Tsunyi. This city is 130 miles south of Chungking. Between it and Chungking the road is good and not very mountainous. * * * PREMIER YEN Hsi-Shan's an- nouncement that a small mobile cabinet was being set up was the first clear indication that the gov- ernment was preparing to abandon Chungking. The capital will be wherever this cabinet is function- ing. Acting president Li Tsung-Jen still is in Hong Kong and on the outs with Chiang Kai-Shek. Chi- ang, who is here, has been try- ing to get Li to return. Each ministry in the mobile cabinet will have no more than 100 employes. Yen said offices would be established at an undis- closed place in the rear to keep the archives and handle routine business. It is expected this place will be Taipeh, capital of the Nationalist island fortress of Formosa, off the southeast coast. PROF CAMERON SAYS: Background and Training Make Shah Capable Ruler tr -Daily--Carlyle Marshall REPRIEVED GOBBLERS--These turkeys, now rsiding at a nearby turkey farm, will NOT be grac- ing Thanksgiving Day tables today. Born in September, their time will come next Thanksgiving. They are being fattened during their reprieve period so that a mere glance at them will stimulate the palates of any gourmet who may see them strutting their stuff next November. South African Professor Says U.S. Students Think Well American college students know how to "use their heads" better than they themselves may realize, a visiting English professor from Johannesburg, South Africa, said yesterday. J. Y. T. Greig, professor of Eng- lish language and literature in the University of Witwatersrand, made that comment on the perennial college gripe that "they don't teach us how to think." * *. * "AMERICAN STUDENTS are much less reserved than the Eng- lish in stating their ideas," he re- marked. "They are willing to dis- cuss fundamentals. English stu- dents think there's something al- most indecent about it." In search of American ideas on the teaching of English in COLUMBIA RECORDS Lp brings you a new standard of record perfection Music for dancing or listening . . . musical comedies, operas, symphonies, concertos, children's selections .. . also drama, literature and even the recorded history of our time! A treasury of entertainment for the whole family and new releases every month! The Columbia Long Play- ing Microgroove Record brings you all this together with these important LP advantages! Finer Tone Quality! . Complete Works On One Record! undergraduate university cour- ses, Prof. Greig yesterday met with eight literary college stu- dents in an Angell Hall bull ses- sion. Here in the United States on a travel grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, he has already talked with students and faculty members at Harvard, Cor- nell, Yale, Smith, and Amherst, as well as at Canadian universi- ties. * * * EARLIER contact with Ameri- can students came when English- born Prof. Greig taught at Vand- erbilt University some 20 years ago. At yesterday's informal confer- ence, the student-professor dis- cussion centered on the problem of "how much you can learn in four years" along with "how to learn it." 'U' Delegates- Meet _NSIFC Dean of Students Erich A. Wal- ter, Associate Dean of Students Walter B. Rea, and Jake Jacobson, '50, IFC President, will attend the National Interfraternity Confer- ence convention in Washington, D.C. tomorrow and Saturday. Representatives of college stu- dent affairs offices throughout the nation are attending the conven- tion, being held in Washington's Mayflower Hotel. The presidents of all local IFC's in the country are also at the con- vention, as are representatives from every national fraternity. Felc Papers Acquired by 'U' Collection More than 350 letters, papers and manuscripts of Governor Al- pheus Felch, an important figure in Michigan's rise as a state, have been acquired by the Michigan Historical Collections at the Rack- ham Building. At first a resident of Monroe on his arrival from Maine in 1833, Governor Felch moved to Ann Ar- bor ten years later where he lived until his death in 1896. His home at 116 N. State St. is still stand- ing. GOVERNOR of Michigan from 1846 to 1847 and United States Senator from 1847 to 1853, Felch also served on the University Board of Regents from 1842 to 1857. After retiring to practice law in Ann Arbor he became Tappan professor of law from 1879 to 1883. Among the many manuscripts donated to the Historical Collec- tions by Mrs. H. E. Durell, a grand- daughter of Governor Felch, is an address given at a University commencement. ANOTHER letter, dated "Mich- igan," February 23, 1848, was writ- ten by John Allen, a State sena- tor and one of the founders of Ann Arbor. "Michigan" was the name of the new State capital until the legislature changed it to ,Lansing in the spring of 1848. Read and Use Daily Classified Ads "Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, Shah of Iran, is a ruler capable of facing the present-day problems of his country," according to Prof. Geo- rge G. Cameron, of the Near East- ern studies department. "This is because of both the Gale Relative Constructor of fIran Railway The visit of the Shah of Iran, Mohammed Rez Pahlavi, will hold special interest for Esson M. Gale, Director of the International Cen- ter, and Mrs. Gale. For Charles J. Carroll, late hus- band of Mrs. Gale's sister, engi- neered the construction of the railway across Iran that was the life-line of U.S. supplies to Rus- sia during World War II. * * * CARROLL graduated from Yale in 1899 and immediately received appointments for railroad con- struction in Mexico, Haiti and China. "In 1927 he was called to Teh- aran where he so impressed Shah Reza Pahlavi, father of the present Shah, that he was made Director General of the Persian government railways," Gale said. He was further commissioned to complete the railroad line from the Persian Gulf to the Caspian Sea. "Only a widely experienced en- gineer would have attempted this task for it entailed the building of a port in the desert heat of South Persia," and cutting through the rugged Elborz Mountains, Dr. Gale continued. * * * THE RAILROAD marked the first means of access to the capi- tal city other than by canal or pack train. It crosses the Iranian plateau and finally reaches the second newly constructed portof Bandar Shah. "Carroll assumed great per- sonal risk in his construction for he was finally captured by bandits. However, the Shah in- tervened any by holding the families of these bandits as h3- tages secured the return ' f Carroll," he said. However, the harrowing experi- ence affected Carroll's health and necessitated his return to the United States in 1938. He died here in 1941. "It is also interesting to note that the father of Victor Jamal, one of the Persian students on campus, was Carroll's associate," Gale pointed out. Faculty Musicale The Faculty Wind Quartet will be heard today over WUOM in the second program in a series of broadcasts devoted to the music of Mozart. The "Quartet Concertante, K. Suppl. 9" is scheduled for today's concert. valuable earlier training he re- ceived from his father and his scholastic career," Prof. Cameron added. * * * THE SHAH'S father, Reza Shah Pahlavi became ruler of a land taken of its resources by a number of inept former rulers. It then faced a titanic problem in utiliz- ing its natural resources, Prof. Cameron pointed out. The elder Shah improved the economic position of the vast number of his subjects by utiliz- ing those natural resources to their fullest extent, Prof. Cam- eron said. In his efforts to improve com- munications, he built numerous railroads and constructed an ex- tensive system of roads, Prof. Cameron added. * * '* IN THE WAY of agricultural assistance, Prof. Cameron con- tinued, the present Shah's father built huge silos and storage houses for grain grown by the natives. He also eliminated the importation of sugar by setting aside large pieces of land specifically for the growing of sugar beets and by set- ting up refineries within his own country. He was very successful in cleaning up theylarger cities by constructing many new build- ings, which, even though they re- flected the past, contained all the conveniences of modern times. "Reza Shah Pahlavi, in bargain- ing with the oil companies, got good terms both for the individual workers and the country of Iran in general," stated Prof. Camer- on. S* * * THE ELDER ruler faced prob- lems fearlessly and would accept no excuses from his administrat- ors. This brought a new attitude into the government organization, which behooved them to perform tasks as rapidly and as efficiently as possible. His policies were remarkably ef- fective, although his tactics were not wholly acceptable to Western powers and some of his own peo- ple, Prof. Cameron said. U' Grad To Head Vermont School William S. Carlson, alumnus and former instructor at the Univer- sity, today announced his resig- nation as president of the Univer- sity of Delaware to become presi- dent of the University of Ver- mont. A native of Ironwood, Dr. Carl- son was graduated from the Uni- versity in 1929, received hismas- ter's degree here in 1932, and his doctorate in geology in 1938. Prior to the Delaware presiden- cy, he was dean of admissions andj records at the University of Min- nesota. Dr. Carlson will take over his new post next April. Just in time for XMAS SHOPPING The MONTH-END SALE Begins Tomorrow SAVINGS from 1 to 1/2 off Bring your XMAS LIST with you. Groups of SUITS Groups of COATS 100% Wool Tweeds, Gab- Fur trim and casuals, cam ardines, Crepes. Sizes 9 to el hairs, tweeds, gabardines and broadcloths. Original 15, 10 to44,14% to24h/2, 45.00 to 79.95 at V4 of orig. 39.95 to 79.95. original price. Groups of Groups of RAIN or SHINE COATS SHORTIE COATS Gabardines, Twills, Tweeds. Navy and grey, TimmyTuff Many lined, good for year- niny and cr t round wear linings and collars at Originally 16.95 to 39.95. 14.95 Groups of DRESSES Groups of SKIRTS Rayon crepes, failles, gab- Tweeds - Plaids - Solids. ardines, dressy and tailored styles. Orig. 10.95 to 35.00 Originally .95 to 1495. from 1/4 to off. NOW from 5.00 to 10.00. Groups of BLOUSES Groups of PASTEL ANGORA WOOL 2.98 to 5.00 SETR SWEATERS Beautiful colors and crepes. at 2.98 and 5.95 Originally 5.95 to 10.95. Orig. 5.00 to 10.95. 2 Groups of 2 Groups of CAPESKIN & PIGSKIN Double Woven Cotton GLOVES 3.95 and 5.00 FABRIC GLOVES Black - Brown - Natural Now 1.49 and 2.00 Originally to 6.95. Originally to 3.50. Reg. 1.50 values BRASSIERES Sizes 32 to 38 at 1.00 Groups of HANDBAGS Top Grade Nylon Calf - Cape - Swede HOSIERY Reptile and Broadcloth Light and Dark Shades 1 5 and 30 denier sheers in- Orig. prices 5.00 to 16.95. cluding extra long lengths. at % to 1/2 off Orig. 1.65, 1.95 at 1.00. 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