1 PAGE SEVEN TH IHIA JAI AG EE I Bourke-White 1hotographer Will Talk Here Place Of Russian Women I War Will Be Topic Iek. In Hill Auditorium Data s First-Hand ** * One Of The Last Men On Bataan Louis Adamic To Speak Here Noted Author Is Authority On New Immigrants Louis Adamic, author of "The Na- tive's Return," "My America," and other books, will lecture here on the subject "Tolerance Is Not Enough" Nov. 30 in Hill Auditorium. He is now Consultant to the De- fense Commission in Washington. as an expert on new-immigrant and other related. matters. Hfe is- also en- gaged in wliting a series of five books in an attempt "to end the psychologi- cal war" in America. The first of these, "From Many Lands," won the $1,000 Anisfield Prize for 1940 and was termed by Lewis Cannett, the New York Herald Tribune's literary critic "as impor- tant a contribution to the psychology of national defense as any act.passed by Congres,. The second book in this series was published in the spring of 1942 under the title, "Plymouth Rock and Ellis Island." To obtain material for these1 books, Mr. Adamic and his assistants have travelled over 100,000 miles and! written about 20,000 letters. Ruth Mitchell To Give Inside Story Of Gallant Serbian Guerrilla Band Out of incredible suffering, priva- tion and mortal peril, Ruth Mitchell will bring to .Ann Arbor a touching story of devotion to honor when she appears Nov. 19 inM Hill Auditorium. This American woman, sister of "fightin'" Billy Mitchell and daugh- ter of a U.S. Senator, will give the inside story of how a handful of Serbian guerrillas are virtually im- mobilizing the Nazi troops in the Balkans. Ruth Mitchell is the only foreign woman member of the secret and powerful Chetniks under Gen. Draja Mikjailovitch. She served under him from the beginning of the war in the Balkans until her capture on May 22, 1941, when she was court-mar- tialed and condemned to die. Then came a fantastic nightmare for Mrs. Mitchell. She spent months in Nazi prisons, first in Croatia, and after that in Bosnia, Serbia, Austria. Finally, she was interned at Liebenau in Germany, her eleventh prison. From these experiences she came to know all the suffering and horror of the conquered peoples in Europe who have been sent to Nazi concentration camps. Her story of the heroic men, wo- men and children who are fighting so valiantly the cause of democracy against almost insuperable odds in the Balkan mountains is one of the most moving to come out of the war. While villages are wiped out by the Nazis, while men go down by the thousands, the fight against the en- emy goes on. It is for the orphaned and homeless children of these gal- lant comrades that Miss Mitchell now works, devoting the revenue she gets from her lectures and writing to a special fund for their support. It is people like these, she is con- vinced, that are already preparing the way for the military collapse of the Nazis throughout the whole of Europe. Ruth Mitchell was born in Mil- waukee. Educated at private schools in France and Switzerland and at Vassar College, she married an Eng- lishman and has spent most of her recent years abroad. She first went to the Balkans in 1938 to attend the wedding of King Zog of Albania to an Hungarian orin- cess. She was then invited by the Albanian government to stay on and write a guide book to Albania. It was while writing this book that the red-headed Miss Mitchell became interested in the Chetniks, a famous band of Serbian guerrilla fighters. She eventually became a member, taking the oath over a: drawn: dagger and a- loaded revolver before white- haired, white-bearded Kosta Pech- anats, the Chetnik leader. His words to her were: "You are now considered dead, your life-in for- feit to the cause of Serbian freedom." * * * Last Man Evacuated At Bataan WillXRelate Experiences Here MARkGARET BOURKE-WITE Margaret Bourke-White, world fa- mous photographer recently returned from. war torn Russia, will speak on' "Russian Women in the War" Feb- ruary 4- in Hill Auditorium as sixth. lecturer, in the Oratorical Series. f The outbreak of the Russo-German conflict found Miss Bourke-White and h~er writer husband, Erskine Caldwell, vacationing at a Black Sea resort many miles from Moscow. They immediately returned to Mos- cow and were pressed into service as correspondents -.for -the Columbia Broadcasting System. Their combined daily war reviews were the first broadcasts by foreign correspondents to come out of Russia in many years. It is'on material gathered during her, sta in -Moscow that Miss Bourke- W'hiteris basing her talk. Started, In College Miss Bourke-White started on her career of picture-taking while at- teiding_ Cornell University to help pay.expenses. But that was only the beginning. In the last ten years she has covered the earth in search of unusual and interesting pictures. A trite perception -of many little-publi- eized countries has been revealed through these camera studies. Her photography work led Miss Bourke-White to positions as Associ- ate Editor.: for Life and Fortune, and as Chief Photographer for PM, the newest New York newspaper, when it was first organized. Writes Also In addition to photography, Miss kourke -Wite has written several books on :countries she has visited. In 1931, she published "Eyes On Russia", and followed it up a few years later by "U. S. S. R.-A Port- folio of Photographs" as a supple- ment. "You Have Seen Their Faces", a much discussed work of the under- privileged children in this country, was written in collaboration with her husband. So also was "North of the Danube", a documentation of the Balkans at the outset of the Euro- pean strife. Photo-murals have been installed in Radio City in New York, a living tribute to a woman who has made a place in a field that one usually con- siders as reserved for men. The last man to leave Bataan be- fore the Japs took over for good will appear here on+-Oct. 15 in Hill Audi- torium to tell an Oratorical Associa- tion audience about the courage and heroism of the defenders of the Phil- ippines. Col. Carlos P. Romulo, who fought side by side with General MacArthur as his aide-de-camp, confidant and friend, will describe that gallant struggle from the inside, with an ac- curacy and vividness possible only to a member of General MacArthur's staff. Colonel Romulo's escape from Ba- taan-the last man to leave before America's surrender-in a decrepit old plane that had literally been fished from the bay and his dramatic flight to Mindanao and from there to Australia to join MacArthur are among the most colorful stories to come out of the war in the Pacific. But it is not his own experiences that Colonel Romulo wants to tell about. He is more interested in tell- ing the United States just what war means-something to impress upon the hearts and minds of Americans here at home so that we will come to understand the full significance of the dead American and Filipino troops who died on Bataan and Cor- regidor. As their comrade in arms-a Fili- pino soldier exposed to the same dan- gers and privations-Colonel Romulo will describe how those men fought a superior enemy and died before giv- ing up. He will describe in unforget- table terms their courage and hero- ism, the pitiful starvation rations of Timely Information To Be Presented Here Fresh from the battlefields and capitals of Europe, many lecturers in the Oratorical Association's lecture series will give late, first-hand in- formation. Typical is Ruth Mitchell who a few months ago was fighting in the Yugoslavian mountains with the Chetniks. She was battling against the Nazis in one of the most danger- ous fighting areas of the world. Years of experience make lecturers like Walter Duranty authoritative speakers on the warring nations in Europe. He has spent most of his last 20 years in Russia and is thoroughly familiar with European politics. Two foreign correspondents will give their views on the peace at an- other lecture. Jay Allen and Louis Fischer, both veterans of the news- fronts, will speak. a handful of rice a day, the complete absence near the end of all modern medical supplies, the ragged clothing and the impure water. Born in the Philippines, Colonel+ Romulo was educated at the Univer- sity of the Philippines (A.B. 1918) and Columbia University (M.A. 1921). He also holds an honorary LL.D. de- gree from Notre Dame (1935). Before the Japs attacked Pearl Harbor, he owned four newspapers and two radio stations in the Phil- ippines. A series of articles reporting his observations on a tour through China, Burma, Thailand, French In- do-China, British Malays and the Dutch East Indies on the eve of Pearl Harbor-he predicted the out- break of war after this trip-wonhim the Pulitzer Prize for the best foreign correspondence of 1941. This was the first time the coveted journalistic award- went to a non- American journalist. Three WTIom enAreSc e u d For Lectures Three women-each famous for her own exploits-will appear on the Or- atorical Association lecture series be- ginning Oct. 22. The first, Ruth Mitchell, did a warrior's job in Yugoslavia that many men shied away from. She comes from a warlike and prophetic family-her brother is the late Gen- Billy Mitchell. Ruth Mitchell joined the Chetniks to fight against the Nazis. She will relate her experiences in the lecture. Ilka Chase, the second woman to speak, presents a marked contrast to Ruth Mitchell. An extremely witty and talented actresshand radio star, Miss Chase made her reputation in the field of entertainment. She has written for "Vogue" and has pro- duced several movies in Hollywood. The third, Margaret Bourke-White, is a world famous photographer who clambers about mines and workshops and palaces over the world to record great events with her camera. She has taken informal photographs of Churchill and Stalin. With her on her latest trip to Russia was her author-husband, Erskine Caldwell. Thus three women will tell their experiences-varied experiences-on the lecture platform. It is part of the trend of lecture series over the nation as more men go into the fight- ing forces. .._- 71 r . SCHEDULE OF LECTURES 1942-1,943 University of Michigan Oratorical Association LECTU RE SERIES tiI October 22 - Col. Carlos P. Romulo Gen. "The Battle of Bataan" MacArthur's aide-de-camp [I~~I i November 5 Jay Allen and Louis Fischer - "The Shape of the Peace to Come" November 17 - Ruth Mitchell - A Prisoner of the Gestapo "Odessey Through Hell" November 30 - Louis Adamic - Expert on New Immigrant Problems "Tolerance Is Not Enough" December 7 lka Chase - Actress, Radio Star, Author "The Psychology of Being a Woman' February 4 - Margaret Bourke-White Famous Woman Photographer "Russian Women in the War" February 18 - Walter Duranty - Famous Foreign Correspondent "When East Meets West in Battle" March 18 - T. R. Ybarra- Former European Editor of Collier's "Latin America Tomorrow" SEASON TICKETS ON SALE DAILY (Except Saturday Afternoon and Sunday) Pricesfor o peeCourse: $440.$3,0u22 f tD1..;- - ;,- Ir,rl rA1. Fc. IfrAfrfnl *.%' THE WORLD TODAY TIMELY TOPICS DISTINGUISHED PLATFORMs PERSONALITIES * The War in Russia Margaret Bourke-White *Bataan ... Still a Mystery? Col. Carlos P Romulo * What is going on in Hitler's .Euro pe? Ruth Mitchell * Unknown Latin-Ainerica T. R. Ybarra .-II1 bAI IIaaau .IF rkANIY II TTm r1I IM A \ ITI l All I '1 1,111 WALTER DURANTY I)