Friday, July 28, 1961 Summer Session Kansar Page 5 Karin Gold, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, and Sidney Berger, Brooklyn, N. Y., graduate student, clown it up in a scene from "Idiot's Delight." The play opened in Murphy last night and will be performed again this evening. Springer to Conduct Brazilian Institute George Springer, professor of mathematics, will leave Lawrence today for a two month stay in Brazil, where he will conduct a two month institute for high school and college math teachers in Sao Paulo. Prof. Springer has received a National Science Foundation grant to support the institute. He will go to Wurzburg University in Germany later where he will spend a year studying and conducting research on a Fulbright scholarship. Prof. Springer will be accompanied by his wife and three children. Mathias P. Mertes, assistant professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, has been awarded a National Science Foundation scholarship to attend the Fisk University Infrared Spectroscopy Institute in Nashville, Tenn., August 28-September 1. Mertes To Attend Nashville Meeting The institute is planned to help chemists, biochemists, biologists, physicists and engineers make effective use of infrared spectroscopy as a tool and technique in attacking the problems they meet in the course of their research. Prof. Mertes now has several sponsored research projects underway. To Stop East Berliners In March to Freedom BERLIN —(UPI)—The Communists have disclosed East German Chief of State Walter Ulbricht has demanded "all means" be used to stop the record flow of refugees who President Kennedy said are "voting with their feet" against Communism. Kennedy used the phrase in his nationwide radio-television address on the Communist-provoked Berlin crisis Tuesday. More than 25,500 East Germans have sought asylum in West Berlin since July 1 following Soviet threats to sign a separate peace treaty with East Germany. Ulbricht, in a speech bristling with charges that the West was "recruiting" East Germans, said, "the enemy must not be given an "recruiting" East Germans, said, inch." Ulbricht spoke Sunday at Marleeberg to 1,500 municipal officials but his speech was not reported until Wednesday. The report, published in the official communist party newspaper Neues Deutschland, gave no clues to the measures Ulbricht wants to stem the exodus from the Communist-dominated zone of Germany. But an authoritative Western source Tuesday said the Communists are studying a plan to create a 31-mile-wide circular "forbidden zone" around Berlin. He said all East Germans would be barred from the area without special authorization. The Communists have imposed tighter controls on East German traffic to Berlin and on the Berlin inter-city elevated and subway systems. They have taken other reprisals also, such as evicting from their homes East Berliners who refused to give un jobs in West Berlin. But nearly 1,000 East Germans reached West Berlin Tuesday in a continuation of the biggest exodus since the 1953 Worker's Revolt. Among the latest refugees were Dr. Herwig Plachetsky, chief physician at the hospital in Eberswalde; Walter Harte, an editor of the procommunist East Berlin newspaper National Zeitung, and Helmut Sack, production manager of the Dresden margarine factory. It brought to more than 3,000,000 the total of East Germans who have sought asylum in the West since 1949. In his speech, Ulbricht said "enemy efforts to recruit" East Germans had been stepped up. "Enemy attacks must be met with all means," he said, "and we must develop life in the German (Communist) Democratic Republic to make East Germans feel at home, to make everybody realize that there is no reason for a citizen of the first workers and farmers state to desert his own camp for that of the enemy." Ulbright accused local officials of being neutral toward the refugees. Try the Kansan Want Ads Session Planned in Jewelry Skills Beginning students will receive instruction and experience in designing and making silver jewelry, including soldering processes, raising techniques, stone setting and casting. Approximately 20 teachers, recreation supervisors, and hobbyists will improve their skill in jewelry and silversmithing at a two-week Jewelry and Silversmithing Workshop August 7 to 18. Advanced students will study handwrought holloware and advanced sand and centrifugal casting. Robert Montgomery, instructor of design in the KU School of Fine Arts, will be instructor for the workshop, which is sponsored by the Department of Design, School of Fine Arts, and KU Extension. Two outdoor movies will be shown tonight in the area east of Robinson Gym. They are "Swedish Way to Sunshine" and "Tournament of Roses, 1961." Two Movies Tonight Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street V! 3-4416 BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 STEREO 908 Mass. - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service