Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. 245 Candidates For Fall Degrees The names of 245 students who are candidates for degrees from the University at the end of this semester were announced today. Waring to Play March 7 in Hoch The University Concert Course today announced that Fred Waring and his entire cast of 60 Pennsylvanians, including the glee club and orchestra, will appear in Hoch auditorium on Saturday night, March 7. Waring and all his Pennsylvanians will take a "leave of absence" from television after their January 25 show to go on their first coast to coast concert tour since 1937. In 60 FRED WARING days they will visit 58 cities in 24 states, travel 17,000 miles by plane, train, and bus, and do television programs from Los Angeles and Kansas City on their "days off". The tour opens Jan. 26 in Rochester, N. Y., and closes in Atlanta, Ga., March Under Mr. Waring's leadership, the group will tour the Pacific northwest, California, the southwest, the midwest, and the south prior to returning to New York for resumption of television commitments for General Electric in time for their traditional Palm Sunday TV show over CBS-TV. Mr. Waring has chartered a United Air Lines DC-6-B plane for the "long hops," and will use trains and buses on the shorter trips from city to city. The Pennsylvanians will travel as far north as Seattle and as far south as San Diego, north to Duluth and south to New Orleans in the central states, and from Cincinnati to Atlanta in the eastern area. It marks the first time in 16 years that Fred Waring and his Pennsylvanian have visited the California area, and in many of the cities on the itinerary it will be his first appearance. ___ Registrar James K. Hitt said each of the candidates must successfully complete his course work of the current semester in order to receive the degree. Names of the successful candidates will appear in the June commencement program as KU holds the exercises but once a year. Most of the candidates "marched down the hill" in caps and gowns last June or will do so next June. The 245 candidates are from seven of the University's 10 schools. The Graduate school and School of Medicine do not award degrees at this time and the school of Pharmacy has no mid-year candidates. The candidates are as follows: Bachelor of Arts: John Rollin Allen, Thomas E. Allen, Don Rickard Bell, Thomas E. Allen, Bill Wallace Marshall Buck Jr., James Robert Chamberlain, Richard E. Davis, Will Howard Dukelow Marjorie Ann Erboe, Lee Ferguson, Frederick W. Freeman Harold Kane Greenleaf, Jimmie Eural Grey, John Paul Griffin, Clark Alden Grimm, Carolyn Mildred Harborb, Marjane Lichtenberg, Robert Dean, Mary Evan Holte, Robert Dean Hovey, Robert Carroll Howard, Beverly Stapuleska Kaplan, Kenneth Keiler, Stapuleska Kaeen, Mary Lou Klehl, Willard McKee, Robert Ruth Lambert. Marcus Leroy Lee. John Arthur Maier, Harrier Bernard Malone, John Douglas McBride, Hanna Mary McDowell, Harry Richard McFarrell, Mary McCormack, Denise DeMercer, Hermed Lee Miler, Miles Tillerson Nichols, John Sherry O'Keefe, Pauline Ferrol Patterson, Roderick Thomas Phillips, Donald Benjamin Wanda Jean Purdy, Kenneth C. Relph, Katherine Dell Rising, Richard Lee Rushford, Rita M. Schwacher Kernitray Sewell, James G. Shaw, Ann Sproul, Allen Steinberg, Patrick Grady Sullivan Lugene Ernest Thompson, Shirley Nell Townsend, Robert E. Lee Walker, William W. Lees, Paul Wiens, Nan Julia Juda, Earl Patrick Winsor, Roba Corbett Zimmerman Bachelor of Science in Chemistry; Anson Dean Cole III. Nicholas Yovitch. Bachelor of Science in Geology: Curtis Eugene Adams, Gerald Lee Boyd. Arthur Sardius Brewster, Harold Alan Bernard Lewis, John Patrick Shields. Bachelor of Science in Nursing: Evelyn M. Harris Brown. Bachelor of Science in Physical Therapy: John Robert Amick, Dolores Ann Dean, Elizabeth Demils, Leonard Jennish, Elizabeth Lennoldia, John Dudley Rockwell. (Continued to page three) Weather a freak thunderstorm, balmy temperatures in the west, snow, sleet and rain in the east made up a capricious weather summary f o Kansas today A swander a shower bright a trace of rain to Garden City late yester-day. Hutchinson an d Concordia had light snow during the night. a drizzle moist- ened Wichita, Emporia had freezing drizzle and Topeka had rain and a trace of sleet overnight. CLOUDY x FOGGY After retiring from the foundation, Dr. Barber worked with two physicians in Brazil to eliminate the Anopheles gambiae mosquito, a carrier of malaria. Dr. Barber returned to the United States in 1939, and for two years was a consultant on tropical medicine to the Secretary of War and a lecturer at the Army Medical school in Washington. In 1946, Dr. Barber received a citation for his work for the War department in World War II. The citation stated he gave lectures and laboratory demonstrations teaching the fundamentals of the role of the mosquito in the transmission of malaria. Thousands Jam Parade Route He served as, a captain and later as major in the sanitary corps of the Army in 1917 and 1918. Dr. Barber did field investigation on malaria for the public health service from 1920 until 1929. From 1929 until 1931 he worked with the yellow fever commission of the international health division of the Rockefeller foundation. His work took him to Greece, Egypt, India, Central America and Cyprus. Dr. Barber was the author of the book, "A Malariologist in Many Lands." Dr. Barber was a member of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and in 1940 was national president of the organization. He was a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Washington —(U.P.)— Swarms of American citizens jammed the U.S. capitol grounds and the sides of Pennsylvania avenue today to see Dwight D. Eisenhower become President and parade in triumph to the White House. Daily hansan The crowds assembled early—a few waited through the night to be sure of choice vantage points—and what started as a trickle in the foggy dawn had swelled to a flood as the sun cleared away the clouds an hour before noon. The densest jam was on the East Capitol plaza before the flag-bedecked, temple-like temporary structure erected for the outdoor outtaking ceremonies. With tens of thousands scrambling for the better spots, small boys took to the trees, defying attempts of police to get them down. He was born in Crown Point, Ind., in 1869. He received a bachelor of arts degree from the University in 1891 and three degrees from Harvard including an A.B. in 1892, a M.A. in 1894, and a Ph.D. in 1907. This crowd got its first chance to let go with applause when Herbert Hoover, the last Republican, before Mr. Eisenhower, to be president, arrived at the capitol. Mr. Hoover walked on to the inaugural stand at Distinguished guests began to file into the capitol more than an hour before the ceremony. Members of the Eisenhower cabinet gathered in the "president's room," just off the Senate chamber. The diplomatic corps filed into a large reception room on the other side of the Senate chamber. In 1911 Dr. Barber began work with tropical diseases which took him throughout the South Pacific in seven years. Eisenhower Becomes 34th U.S. President At 10:15 a.m. CST the first members of the Eisenhower family arrived at the capitol. They were Maj. John S. Eisenhower, the President's son, home on leave from Korea, his Services Held For Ex-Professor 10:15 a.m. CST and was greeted with an enthusiastic burst of handclapping. Among the more impatient spectators were the two young daughters of Vice President Richard M Nixon. They arrived with their grandparents at 10 a.m. CST. "When is it going to get going?" asked four-year-old Julie Nixon. Julie was wearing a red and green plaid coat and dark green snow slacks. Her six-year-old sister, Patricia, wore a navy blue coat, slacks and a red velvet hat. Dr. Barber became assistant professor of bacteriology in 1894. Before he left the faculty in 1911 he had been promoted to associate professor and later to professor. Funeral services for Dr. Marshall A. Barber, former professor of bacteriology who died Thursday at his home in El Caljon, Calif., were held this morning at the Rumsey funeral home in Lawrence. LAWRENCE, KANSAS 50th Year, No. 77 Tuesday, Jan. 20, 1953 There were a few yells of "Yea, Harry" as Mr. Truman and Mr. Eisenhower rode midway along the route to the capitol. The proceedings began building toward their climax when the Eisenhowers drove to the White House from the Statler hotel at 10:20 a.m. For the most part, the three deep along the sidewalk just applauded politely and there were few cheers. After handshakes all around and a quick reshuffling of passengers, cars of the party made the slow trip to the capitol. Sitting beside the President-elect in the back seat was Mr. Truman whose tenure fast ran out. In jump seats ahead of them were Speaker Joseph W. Martin Jr., and Sen. Styles Bridges (R-N.H.), Senate president pro tempore. wife, and Mrs. John S. Doud, Mrs. Eisenhower's mother. In a second open convertible where Mrs. Eisenhower, Mrs. Truman, and Margaret Truman. Washington—(U.P.)—Dwight D. Eisenhower became President of the United States today and immediately held forth a guarded invitation to Communist Russia to negotiate "honestly" for world disarmament. The soldier-hero of World War II took the oath of office before thousands of well-wishers massed in the East Plaza of the Capitol and millions more who watched by television the installation of the first Republican President in 20 years. He extended his cautious peace feeler to the Kremlin in a brief, strikingly non-partisan inaugural address delivered after he was sworn in as President by Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson. GEN. DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER Declaring world peace the "supreme" goal of his administration, Mr. Eisenhower said he will "stand ready to engage with any and all others in joint effort to remove the causes of mutual fear and distrust among nations, and so to make possible drastic reduction of armaments." He quickly added, however, that any such negotiations must be "aimed logically and honestly toward secure peace for all" and "every participating nation" must be prepared to prove its "good faith." President Eisenhower evidently harbored no great hope that Russia would soon accept such terms. For he went on to warn his countrymen that a long, hard pull is ahead of them. Two former Presidents—Herbert Hoover, the last Republican to occupy the White House, and Harry S. Truman, who achieved expresidential status the moment Mr. Eisenhower took the oath—were present to view the inaugural. Mr. Eisenhower had begun his big day by praying for divine guidance at a private service at the National Presbyterian church. He was escorted to the Capitol by Mr. Truman and Republican leaders of the House and Senate. Richard Milhous Nixon was sworn in as vice president shortly before Mr. Eisenhower took his oath to become the 34th U. S. President. A fellow Californian, Sen, William F. Knowland, administered the oath to Mr. Nixon. Mr. Eisenhower devoted his 2,300-word inaugural address entirely to international problems. Details of his domestic program will be spelled out in the State of the Union message which he plans to deliver in person before a joint session of Congress, probably next week. The new President set forth nine "rules of conduct" for the United States and the World and said that if these are observed, "an earth of peace may become not a vision but a fact." Mr. Eisenhower's nine "fixed principles" dealt mostly with global problems. 1. The statesman's first task must be to develop strength that will deter aggression and promote peace. Such engagement must be directed honestly and logically toward peace for all, and provide methods to assure good faith all the way. 2. "Realizing that common sense and common decency alike dictate the futility of appeasement, we shall never try to placate an aggressor by the false and wicked bargain of trading honor for security. For in the final choice a soldier's pack is not so heavy as a prisoner's chains." 3. Upon the strength, productivity and security of the United States depend the hopes of free men everywhere. 4. "We shall never use our strength to try to impress upon other people our own cherished political and economic institutions." 5. We shall strive to help proven friends of freedom within the limits of their needs, but shall count upon them to assume "their full and just burdens in the common defense of freedom." 6. Recognizing economic health as indispensable to military strength and world peace, "we shall strive to foster everywhere, and to practice ourselves, policies that encourage productivity and profitable trade." 7. Economic need, military security and political wisdom of regional groupings within the United Nations and the United States will help foster such world wide strength. This will be accomplished by joining our western hemisphere neighbors in the common purpose and by asking Western European leaders to strive with renewed vigor to achieve unity of their peoples. 8. "We hold all continents and people in equal regard and honor. We reject any insinuation that one race or another, one people or another, is in any sense inferior or expendable." 9. "Respecting the United Nations as the living sign of all people's hope for peace, we shall strive to make it not merely an eloquent symbol, but an effective force."