'~w~~iixTTTE MTICHIGAN DAILYV r im , N V;1?,IM WORLD PROBLEMS: First ofEightLectures To Be Given Thursday o _ h ______-- B . it 11 UNIYERSr[Y OF MICHIGAN ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION presents First hand informatijn on politi- cal and social problems in all parts of the world will be presented to the people of Ann Arbor by the Univer- sity of Michigan Oratorical Associa- tion in its 1943-44 lecture course. The series which consists of eight lectures will be opened next Thurs- day by Will Rogers, Jr., a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of Representatives who will speak on "The United Stales in Foreign Affairs." Neither Mr. Rogers nor Madame Wellington Koo, wife of China's Am- bassador to England and another speaker in the series, will receive any personal remuneration for tneir ap- pearances here. Instead, Mr. Rogers Humorist's Son To Appear as First Speaker Will Rogers, Jr., Holds Position in Important Committee of House Will Rogers, Jr., first lecturer in this year's Oratorical Association Series, is the sn of America's great- est humorist of our times. Born in New York where his father was play- ing vaudeville, he grew up among the stars of the American stage. Upon finishing his college work at Stanford University, he bought a newspaper in California and went into the publishing business. He de- cided to cover the war in Spain for his own paper and spent several months at the front watching the original "block-busters" spread their havoc among defenseless civilians. Alarmed about what Germany was evidently going to do with this ex- perience, he made a special study of foreign affairs and has been one of those to support from the beginning the idea of total war against Nazism. Shortly after Pearl Harbor, he en- listed. After two months as a pri- vate, a reserve officer's commission which he had held at Stanford in field artillery was renewed; he went to ffijer's school and then :was at- tached to the 889th Tank Destroyer Battalion, Camp Hood. From Camp Hood, he was elected to Congress in a. campaign which tohsisted of: one bradcast address. Arriving in Washington he was hon- ored by being made. a memberof the Foreign Affairs Committee of. the House. Fulton Lewis To Appear Here Former Columnist Is Second Speaker Fulton Lewis, Jr., who will be the second speaker in the Oratorical As- sociation Series, is a former newspa- perman, editor and columnist. The only nightly news commentator from the nation's capitol, he hasreceived recognition for his lone wolf fight to gain Congressional recognition for radio as a full-fledged news gather- ing and disseminating medium. A native of Washington, D.C., he attended the University of Virginia and then worked as a cub reporter for the Washington Herald. Within three years he had risen to the posi- tion of city editor. Highlight of his career was his "scoop" on the Farnsworth case. In the summer of 1936, Lewis discovered the operations of Lt.-Commander John S. Farnsworth, retired naval officer, and conducted an investiga- tion which led six weeks later to the arrest and conviction of Farnsworth on espionage charges. Travel Expert Will Lecture This year Burton Holmes, who will appear three times in the current Oratorical Association Series, is cele- brating his golden anniversary as traveler extraordinary and lecturer. No one but Mr. Holmes knows how many feet of film he has shot or how many still pictures he has made, or how many words he has spoken during the last 50 years on his lec- ture tours. When he delivered the first lecture of his Jubilee in Chicago last spring, Mr. Holmes, with an even slyer twinkle than usual in his eye said that only "Uncle Tom's Cabin" has had a longer run than his show, and that not even "Uncle Tom's Cabin" has continued all these years with the same cast. In the Burton Holmes film library are thousands upon thousands of will donate the entire sum he re- ceives to Army-Navy relief while China War Relief will be given Mad- ame Koo's entire fee. Second in the series of lectures will be Fulton Lewis, Jr., considered by many as today's leading commen- tator on national affairs who will speak on Dec. 1. The topic which he will discuss will be "What's Hap- pening in Washington." Burton Holmes, seasoned traveler and veteran travelogue lecturer will speak three times in the series. Mr. Holmes will present successively "Our Russian Allies," "North Africa -Dakar to Suez" and "The Italy We Knew." On Jan. 13, Louis Lochner, for fourteen years chief of the Associ- ated Press in Berlin, will consider the question "What About Germany?" Later in January "What I Saw in Russia" will be disclosed by Leland Stowe, famous war correspondent. Season tickets for the series may now be obtained at the Hill Auditor-' ium box office, which is open from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. daily except for Saturday af- ternoons and Sunday. Although mail orders have been heavy, seats are still available in every price section. Single admission tickets for the Will Rogers, Jr. lecture will not be sold until Nov. 17. Servicemen sta- tioned on campus will receive special rates for single admission tickets. Newspaperman To Give Talk Ont Germany Louis P. Lochner, for fourteen years Chief of the Berlin Bureau of the Associated Press and one of America's most outstanding newspa- per correspondents, will relate a dra- matic story about Germany today and formerly as well, when he speaks here Jan. 13 on the subject "What About Germany?" Mr. Lochner secured a world scoop when he reported the German inva- sion of Poland. He repeated this per- formance in Finland and again when Hitler's iron-heels marched into Rus- sia. He went back and forth between battle regions and Berlin, and was therefore able to keep his American reading public fully abreast of Ger- many's political ~and military posi- tion in the European war. In 1938 he received the Pulitzer Prize for the best, example of foreign correspondents, work when he pre- dicted the collapse of Czechoslo- vakia, the. fates of the Sudetenland territory, Bohemia, Moravia and Slo- vakia. He was arrested on Dec. 11, 1941, the date upon which Germany de- clared war on the United States. After a three-day imprisonment he and his wife and daughter were tak- en to Bad Nauheim, near Frankfort. Madame Koo Will Speak on China's Fh ptre "What China Is Fighting For" is the topic which Madame Wellington Koo,twife of China's Ambassador to Great Britain, will develop in her appearance here in the Oratorical Association Series. Her task has been to present Mod- ern China to a blase, pre-war Europe, to make the. political cynics sit up and take notice and invest goodwill in her country's future. As wife of an outstanding Chinese diplomat, she has aided in shaking China out of its medieval lethargy into a brisk contemporary stride. Before her return to London to join her husband, Madame Koo is making a speaking tour of this coun- try where her statements about Chi- na's war aims and peace aims have already made important news re- leases. War Correspondent To Lecttire Here After many months of continuous service on the military fronts Leland Stowe, one of America's ace war cor- respondents, returns to the lecture platform. On Jan. 25 he is scheduled to appear here in the Oratorical As- sociation lecture series. Mr. Stowe has covered almost ev- ery important political and diplo- matic event in Europe and South America. He was present at the Young Reparations Conference, the formation of the International Bank at Basle and the World Disarmament Conference at Geneva in 1932. He has covered the conquest of Ethio- pia, and every important front of the second World War-Oslo, Stockholm, RM R SONALITIES Outstandg Features HILL AUDITORIUM I: 7% WI LL ROGER Jr. is a member of the important Foreign !affairs Committee of the House of Representatives and has long been a keen student of our interna onal rclations. His manner and his appearanm e are starlingly like his father's. BURTON HOLM ES has tro'sformed the travel lecture into an art of which he is t e greatest living master. He will make three appearances here this season with pictures and stories of Russia, Africa and Italy gathered through fifty years of travel. Our Russian Allies. With the magic of his curious camera, Mr. Holmes shows you the Russia of the Czar and Czarina and carries you to the Russia of Joseph Stalin on a typical Moscow May Day - NorthAfrica, Dakar to Suez. Mr. Holmes gives a portrait of N rth Africa before it became a theater of war, and-brings. pictures of its interesting and war-important ploces . Aljeria, Morocco, Libya, Egypt, Dakar, Gibraltar, Tunis, Suez -all pass in review. * The Italy We Knew. Since before the turn of the century, Mr. Holmes and his camera have made regular trips to Italy. He has now taken from his famous film library the choicest of his many experiences for one unforgettable story of this country. L E LAN D STOWE, famous war correspon- dent, has written brilliant news stories from: nearly all of the war zones. These stories rank high among the achievements of modern journalism. Mr. Stowe has a dynamic, vivid style and is already a favorite with local audiences. LOUIS P. LOC H N E R was representative (and for fourteen years Chief) of the Associated Press in Berlin from 1921 to the declaration of war by Germany on the United States. He understands Hitler, Nazi officialdom, and the German people better than any other American. SEASON TICKET PRICES $4.40 $3.30 $2.20 (Inc. Fed. tax) SEASON TICKETS NOW Hill Auditorium Box Office Open Daily 10 A.M. to 1 P.M. and 2 P.M. to 5 P.M, (Saturday 10-12 A.M.) OPENING NUMBER THURSDAY, NOV. 18. Schedule of Lectures MADAM E KOO is one of the world's foremost women, the wife of China's Ambassador tq London and former Ambassador to Washing- tgn,andPQris., She has intelligently as well Ps charmingly participdted in the making of history 'nour tmes. '' k s ,'; b f r Y a99p dr i .' §: :i y - y 4 Y e 1 £t :! i .. P s i R, ' k I' ,. t FULTON L EWIS Jr. has a radio aud- ience of millions when he gives "The Top of the News from Washington.", His-clear, penetrating and vigorous analysis of current evepts has caused the members of Congress to vote him the leading commentator on national affairs. Feb. 22-BURTON HOLMES I *fl ~ ~ r.i. 1 D I N 14t* M FSk