Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS The Army ROTC unit has announced the appointment of 32 cadet officers to take command of the division for the 1958-59 school year. AROTC Appoints 32 Cadet Officers OUCH!-A sober-looking group of students waits in line to pay fees on time today, the last day of regular fee payment, in Strong Hall. Those planning to pay after today will find an additional $5 per day charge for late payment. Monday, Sept. 29, 1958 The division is composed of 2 battlegroups with two companies apiece and attached units. Attached units include the band, Pershing Rifles, and the color guard. $\textcircled{*}$ The change is to facilitate closer training between the two units. Those cadets receiving appointments as cadet lieutenant colonel are Thomas Kennedy, Wright-Patterson, Ohio, division commander; James Wright, Merriam, and Howard Crotchett, Lewisburg; commander of the 1st and 2nd Battle groups. This year both battlegroups will drill on Tuesday. In previous years drill has been on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. Kenneth Yeo, Kansas City, Mo. division executive officer, has been appointed cadet major. Those appointed cadet captain are Stephen Jenkins, Topea; John Peppercorn, Overland Park; and William Witt, Garden City. Roulier, Colby; Weldon Fate, Kansas City, Mo.; William Hahm, Scotch Plains, N. J.; William Gochis, Arkansas City; Harold Miller, Langdon; Gerald Broyles, Bethany, Mo.; Dale Remsberg, Iola; John Girotte, Pittsburg; Charles Foster, Kingsville, Tex., and James Henley, Olathe. Cadet first lieutenants are Leon Cadet second lieutenants are Richard Dobbin, Tribune; Edward Wettig, Leavenworth; Larry Jones, Milford; Phillip Heinschel, Smith Center; Donald Hearn, Topeka; Melvin Schmidt, Topeka; Charles Yagher, Columbus; David Skaggs; Pratt; John Gee, Leavenworth; James Ware, Kansas City, Mo.; Carl Kelley, Lawrence; Lee Lord, Ridge Manor, Fla.; Jasper Revere, Lexington, Mo.; James Karr, La-Cygne; and Richard Reitz, Council Grove. Murphy Tells Visitors World Aims Are Same The peoples of the world are much more alike than they are different, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy told 24 high school educators from 15 foreign countries at a welcoming dinner Friday night. After travelling through the USSR, western Europe, and Latin America this summer. Dr. Murphy felt that the aspirations, prejudices and human genius are the same the world over. Earlier in his speech, Dr. Murphy told the educators of the development of Kansas University from 1850 to the present time. The guests will spend three months at KU studying American educational methods. Freshman Wins Larkin Grant The Kenneth H. Larkin civil engineering scholarship has been awarded this year to Gerald Duncan Weatherby, Neodesha freshman mETHODs. "Today our educational goals are The $500 scholarship is provided by the KU Endowment Association from funds of Larkin and Associates in Kansas City, Mo. Weatherby also holds a men's scholarship hall award. Lawrence was selected as KU's location in 1864 and the Board of Regents held its first meeting in 1865. The first members of the faculty were elected in 1866. Governor George Docking and Clyde M. Reed, republican candidate for governor will be invited to KU to speak during Political Emphasis Week Oct. 24 to Nov. 4. Members of the group in addition to Gee are: Julie Casterman, Pittsburg junior and representative of the KU Young Republicans; Ed Chapman, Lawrence, third - year law, and president of the KU Young Democrats; and Rex Doherty, Dellvale junior and president of the other campus party, AGI. Saturday a group of four students, headed by Tom Gee, Leavenworth senior and president of Vox Populi, will go to Democrat and Republican party headquarters in Topeka to give the invitations. pointed directly toward helping the state as well as benefiting the individual student. The University belongs not to a self-perpetuating board of trustees, nor the faculty, but to the people of the state. It serves the educational and the economic needs of the people." Students to Invite Docking, Reed 56th Year, No.12 Young GOP Ignores Right-to-Work Bill Scrivner Urges Budget Slash, Blasts Demos Congressman Errett P. Scrivner (R-Kan) Saturday appealed to Kansas' Republican youth to insure a sound economy for the nation and to guard against a government-controlled education system. Scrivener, Congressman from the 2nd District, spoke to some 50 Collegeiate Young Republicans attending the state Issues Conference at the Holiday Inn. "The American economy was gone when Sputnik went around the earth" he said. "It's our job to cut the budget," he said. "The only times in 28 years the taxes of the nation were cut and the federal debt reduced were under the 80th and 83rd Congresses. Both were Republican." He blamed a Democratic-controlled congress, not President Eisenhower, for the budget deficit. "If the debt grows larger it is under them," he said. "The President can't spend a nickel Congress doesn't give him." He referred to the $7 \frac{1}{2}$ billion dollar deficit as a "payment on dead horses." "Let's pay our bills as we run them up," he said. He disapproved "passing them on to our children and grandchildren." But he offered no solution as to how the debt should be cut. He also shoved the blame for today's economic situation to the CIO-AFL and the Committee on Political Education. These organizations control 190 of the 435 seats in Congress, he said. "Some here would have the United States take over the education system. I want none of it," was his firm response. "It's easier for them to gain control here than in each of the 48 state legislatures." he said. The Congressman also stormed his disapproval of the Russian state system of education. Considerable cloudiness through tomorrow. Cooler west tonight and much cooler over state tomorrow. Scattered showers and gusty winds eastern half tonight and tomorrow morning. He called the Russian system a "regimentation of talents for state use." In Russia you do what the state tells you to do. You don't follow the field of your choice, he said. O. K. Hardy, president of the Lawrence Central Labor Council, told the morning session that organized labor has helped achieve the social security act, a minimum wage law and unemployment compensation payments. "Organized labor contributed $50,- 000 to Lawrence after the 1951 flood," he said. "It is also providing 50 scholarships for future teachers." Hardy said labor's future goals included an improved unemployment compensation program, housing and slum clearance programs, and added school and hospital construction. He said labor has supported rural electrification programs, civic projects, disaster relief fund drives and education through scholarships. Weather Amendment 'Out of Order'; Scrivner Declines Comment The controversial right-to-work amendment was side-stepped Saturday at the Issues conference of the Collegiate Young Republicans of Kansas. It was announced at the start of the morning session that discussion of the amendment would be out of order. Two conference speakers, including keynoter Rep. Errett P. Scrivner (R-Kan), declined comment on the amendment. Two others told a Daily Kansan reporter they favor it. John McCaley, research director for the Kansas Industrial Development Commission, also declined to comment on the amendment. Scrivner said the amendment "... is not a Congressional issue." He said he believes it is "fitting that voters have the opportunity to vote on the measure in November." "The commission has agreed not to take an official stand on the issue," he said. He would not say whether he believes approval of the amendment will affect the commission's work or influence the rate of new industry into the state. Favoring the amendment were Lou Norris of the Farm Bureau Federation at Manhattan and Carl Nordstrom, assistant manager and research director for the Kansas Chamber of Commerce. O. K. Hardy, president of the Central Labor Council and chairman of the Committee on Political Education, told the conference that laborers are not now forced to join a union. "There are 67 million non-agricultural jobs which are not unionized," he said. "However, if a man does take a union job, we feel he should carry a share of the burden of negotiating with management." Law Authority Speaks Today An authority on international law, Dr. Ignaz Seidl-Hohenveldern, will lecture at 4 p.m. today in Bailey Auditorium on "Protection of Private Property against Nationalization." Dr. Seidl-Hohenveldern is a professor of international law and German public law at the University of the Saar. He will speak tomorrow on "The Saar Problem and its Solution," and will speak Wednesday on "Film Censorship in Europe." Dr. Seidl-Hoenveldern has lectured at other European schools, and has written articles on nationalization and citizenship problems. KU Given $17,168 For Blood Research G. Bonar Sutherland, assistant professor of physiology, is the principal investigator of a research project supported by a new grant from the U. S. Public Health Service. The grant is for $17,168. Tentative commitments for renewal grants totaling $28,750 have been made for the next two years. A study of being made of changes which occur in blood constituents as a result of our protection against disease, but a perversion of the phenomenon results in allergy, occasionally in excessive susceptibility to shock and possibly in certain types of heart disease. Court Protests Arkansas Move By United Press International The four Little Rock high schools were leased today to a corporation for operation as private, segregated schools, while in Washington, the Supreme Court delivered a stern opinion on the subject. The court said the constitutional rights of Negro pupils cannot be "sacrificed or yielded to the violence and disorder" which have occurred in Arkansas. The opinion, read by Chief Justice Earl Warren, stated that while the responsibility for education is primarily the concern of the state, all state activity must come within federal constitutional requirements. The corporation in Little Rock rushed to get the lease signed before the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People could ask federal appeals court to stop it. Members of the board and Virgil T. Blossom, school superintendent, doubted, however, that the schools would be in operation before Wednesday. Mayor Favors Integration Lawrence Mayor John Weatherwax said today he wished restaurants here would serve both Negro and white customers, but that the issue was not a step to be taken by the city government. "If a man wants to open a business and serve only white or Negro customers, that is his privilege," Weatherwax said. "And to force him to serve both is to infringe upon free enterprise," he said. But, "I wish and would encourage" the desegregation of the restaurants, he said. "I wish anyone who had the price of a meal and who behaved himself would be served." "There should be no distinction or unfair treatment accorded an individual because of his race," he said. "I do not mean all persons are equal or should be so treated," he said. "But I do believe that any distinction should be based on ability without regard to race or religion." He said he was not aware of all that was being done by campus organizations to end racial discrimination but that he did not feel the issue was being rushed. Indonesian Officer Shows Paintings An exhibit of oil paintings depicting scenes and subjects of Indonesia painted by an Indonesian army officer, Lt. Col. D. Ashari, are on display at the Museum of Art. The Ashari showing resulted from a visit to Washington by Joyce C. Hall, president of Hallmark Cards, who saw some of the Indonesian's paintings. He mentioned their distinctive quality to Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy who invited Ashari to show his work at KU.