Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 October 1946 — Page 22
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Mr.
1919.
The
the Indiana divisional oratorical contest in 1918. Mr. Lilienthal received his law ,,tion—control and development of | degree from Harvard university in atomic energy. 1923, and at the DePauw university commencement of 1945 he was given mer chairman of the Tennessee valan honorary ‘doctor of laws degree. Joy authority, the group assumed | He is also a member of Delta Upsi-| yl] authority over all phases of the lon social fraternity.
| Chapter will hold its 30th | meeting tomorrow at 4 p. m.. in the west room of the World War Memorial bldg. All Red Cross members | are invited to attend. W. 1. Longsworth, chapter chairman, said 13 members are to be elected to the board of directors: | sion also was instructed by Mr. TruMr, lLongsworth will present the |annual chapter report.
Times State Service
Indianapolis
| Lilienthal k From Winamac; DePauw Called Him ‘Davie’
GREENCASTLE, Ind, Oct. 20.— David E. Lilienthal, newly named
‘Hehairman of the five-man energy commission, active in student affairs while at DePauw university. He is a graduate of DePauw's class of 1920. ; Mr. Lilienthal, known as “Davie” on the campus, had the distinction of being president of the student body for two years, was an out. standing campus orator, a football enhusiast, a student journalist, and actor, jesides heading the student body diiting his junior and senior years, jentha], who came to DePauw from his home town of Winamac, Ind, in September, 1916, was a member of Duzer Du, dramatic fraternity and a star of two successful Little Theater plays, Played “Varsity Football” He was also a key staff member of the DePauw Dally, student newspaper, for two years, a member of| the yearbook staff, ber of Sigma Delta Chi, journalism, fraternity, Ne Wai founded on the DePauw c He also took an fp in| | athletics, he was on .the varsity I otball team for two years. ‘Board of ‘Five Gi Given Wide Mr. Lilienthal's oratorical ability | is exemplified by the fact that ae was winner of the second state prohibition oratorical contest and of | __pjye prominent civilians today | interstate (ook over from the army the most |
atomic
and a mem-) national
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A . THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
RUBBER UNION ASK
FOR PAY INCREASE
P).~The C.'l. O. United Rubber} Workers union today set the postOPA wage demand pace. by asking pay increases of 26 cents per hour for its 193,000 members. | International U. R. W. President C. 8. Buckmaster, Akron, O. sald the “higher cost of living” was the] reason for the upward revision of current wage increase demands, The 26-cent. figure was set dur-] Ing a two-day conference of the
[union's policy committee here, Mr. visions" in the event of any further
Rubber. : SOUTH BEND, Ind. Oct, 20 (U. proposed iricrease would add|ss of collective bargaining would be
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| Buckmaster sald the demands would gupstantial increase in the cost of | Tit, ar
made immediately on the “big he — of the rubber industry, Good- ving vetoes 3 weitiemen is reached
rich, Goodyear, Firestone and U 8% er He said he hoped that “the proc-|
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| Authority.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 (U. P.. | the
| challenging job confronting
Headed by David Lilienthal, tor}
(atomic program — including the] bomb—under a presidential
RED CROSS CHAPTER fo RE peace TO HOLD MEETING "Or Thiental native of mui.
Red Cross | nois, lived at Winamac, Ind., during annual his
youth and is a graduate of | DePauw university.) { “Deep Humility” (At Knoxville, Mr, Lilienthal said | today he is accepting his appointment with a feeling of “deep humility.”) The new atomic energy commis-
man to give full co-operation in this country’s efforts to bring world control of atomic energy through the United Nations. Included under the commission's | jurisdiction are the plants which manufacture atomic bombs. The {chief ones are at Oak Ridge, Tenn, Hanford, Wash., and Los Alamos, N M Appointments came as Soviet Premier Josef Stalin announced that | Russia had not developed an atomic bomb or any similar weapon. Marshal Stalin agreed with Mr. Truman that strong international control of atomic explosives is mandatory. Laboratory Chief Included
The five appointments to the atom {control commission were announced !by the President yesterday at a hastily summoned news conference. Besides Mr. Lilienthal, the mem- | |
bers are: Robert F. Bacher, 41, professor of {physics at Cornell university. He | was in charge of the Los Alamos, | {N, M., laboratory where the first test bomb was exploded in 1945. Sumner ‘T, Pike, 55, former member of the securities and exchange commission. William W. Waymack, 58, editor of the Des Moines Register and | Tribune since 1942. He won the Pulitzer prize for distinguished editorial writing in 1937. | Lewis L, Strauss, 50, New York {banker and partner in Kuhn, Loeb | |& Co. During the war, as a rear| |admiral in the naval reserve, he! served on the inter-departmental committee on atomic energy. | | Clapp to Head TVA | Mr. Truman named Gordon R.| |Clapp, general manager of TVA! since 1939, to succeed Mr. Lilien- | thal on that agency. The new commission was created |by congress last summer. The ap- | pointments, including Mr. Clapp’s, | {are subject to senate confirmation {when the new congress convenes in January. | Among the first to comment was Senator Glen Taylor (D, Ida.) regarding Mr, Lilienthal. He said: “The Tennessee valley's loss is the world’s gain.” The 47-year-old Mr. Lilienthal leanlier this year headed a special | {committee which drew up for the | |state department a plan for world | /atomic control. It was incorporated (in the U. 8. plan submitted to the | United Nations by Bernard M.| |Baruch, U., S. member of the United Nations atomic energy commission, Mr, Truman
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