The Bulletin, Thursday, December 12, 1963 Construction of Round Butte dam now over 80 per cent completed Special to The Bulletin , IfinnAC rVmctniplinn rrpws working on Portland General Electric company's Round Butte dam on the Deschutes Eiver west of here have placed well over half of the 10 mil lion cubic yards of rock and earth required for the 440-foot-high structure. Construction of the $60 mil lion project is over 80 per cent complete. Round Butte is sched uled to go "on line" next year. The reservoir is scheduled to begin filling in January. With the spillway and power tunnel virtually completed main activity has centered around the powerhouse and the power tunnel wtaKe structure Installation of mechanical and electrical equipment is under way at the intake tower, which rises 200 feet on the west aDin-ment. Visitors to the observatory building overlooking the dam' site can view the trifurcalion system which regulates the flow of the Deschutes through each of the three penstocks. Over 35,000 cubic yards of concrete went into the power house, which is now complete. Installation of turbine equip ment is 50 per cent complete and the installation of the gen erator equipment has started. The powerhouse portion of the fish facilities, which will incorp orate the concept of passing up stream migrating fish over the crest of the dam by means of an aerial tramway or trolley tank suspended on cables, is 60 per cent complete. Concrete work on these powerhouse fish facilities is complete and equip ment installation is proceeding rapidly. Concrete placement on the downstream fish facilities is about half finished and mechan ical and electrical installations continue. The 100-mlle-long transmis sion line connecting Round Butte with PGE's Bethel sub station east of Salem is 05 per cent complete. The 2.10,000-volt line will consist of 300 wood pole structures and 213 steel towers. The terrain is so rug ged in some areas that the legs of some of the towers are 10 feet high on the uphill side and 50 feet high on the downhill side. Lake Chinook, a 4,000 - acre body of water to be formed by Round Butte dam, will provide 60 miles of scenic shoreline ex tending six miles up the Crook ed, nine miles up the Deschutes and 12 miles up the Metohus rivers. Budget board members named REDMOND Lloyd Priday, Lower Bridge, and Clyde Carl son, Redmond, were appointed to the Redmond Union High School budget board Monday evening at the regular meeting of the board of directors. Priday will serve until 1065 and Carlson until 1968. Other budget board members are Kieran Madden, John Copenha ver and Lloyd Petersen. Superintendent James Brown explained the new requirements in budget formation which calls (or an advertised public pre sentation of budget plans in ad dition to the previously requir ed public hearing, and the ap pointment of an official budget otticer and a designated person to make the presentation. Brown was appointed by t h e group to serve in both positions. Norman Lantz was named to serve as board representative on the faculty economic welfare committee, which will hold its organizational meeting this eve ning. It was reported that 31 of the 64 RUHS band members had made the Honor Band and that 17 of the 26 members of the All-State Band are from Redmond Union High School. V .. 1 At f ,A uV -y 'vyv w GOVERNOR GETS BEEF CERTIFICATE Indicating there will be plenty of "beef" ai Governor Hatfield't home during the holidays, Christmas Beef Gift Certificate No, I , a gift from the Oregon Cattlemen's Association, was recently presented to the governor. Presenting the certificate, at right, is Richard Westerberg, Medford, chairman of the Oregon Beef Council. In center is W. F, Marshall, first vice president, Oregon Cattlemen's Association. Gift Certificates offered for sale by Cow Belles Beef for Christmas! This is the suggestion of the Oregon Beef Council, headed by Richard Westerberg, Medford, as chairman, and the Cow Belles, with Mrs. Oliver Jones Deschutes county chairman. To further the sale of beef, the Council has prepared Christmas Gift Certificates, re ports Walter B. Schrock, Bend, president of the Oregon Cattle men's Association. The gift certificates are available in three denominations and can be obtained from any local Cow Belle group. Certificate No. 1 was present ed recently to Governor Mark O. Hatfield in Salem. These certificates can he pre sented as Christmas gifts, cat tlemen point out, and will be redeemable at any retail store or shop handling meat. Advance orders for certifi cates in the populated Portland area are reported heavy, and cattlemen are hopeful the cert ificates will prove a consider able benefit to their industry. Distribution of the certificates was formally launched when the Oregon Cattlemen's Associa lion presented Certificate No. 1 to the Governor. CANDIDATES SET PORTLAND (UFO - John N. Westling, 21, Portland a his tory major at Reed College, and Robert T. Kudrle, 21, Eugene, a government major at Harvard, were named Wednesday as can didates for Rhodes Scholarships from Oregon a Top (fipbfflaft due on trip VATICAN CITY (UPI)-Top Vatican diplomats and experts on relations with Eastern churches will accompany Pope Paul VI on his pilgrimage to the Holy Land and a possible "summit" meeting with Ortho dox leaders, it was disclosed today. The Vatican today released a list of persons who will travel to Palestine with the Pope Jan. 4-6. Their names seemed to con tradict at least partially the Vatican's contention that the trip is strictly a personal pil grimage, and indicated that weighty contacts between churches may be expected. Traveling with the Pope will be his secretary of state, Am leto Cardinal Cicognani and the three assistant secretaries of state, Msgrs. Antonio Samore, Angelo Dellacqua and Ernesto Camagni. Others will be Eugene Cardi nal Tisserant and Gustavo Car dinal Testa. The French-born Cardinal Tisserant is the dean of the Sacred College of Cardi nals and second in ceremonial rank only to the Pope. He is also an authority on the Orient. So Is Testa, secretary of the Congregation for the Eastern Churches and a former apostol ic delegate to Palestine. Only Wednesday, high Vatican sources had said Cicognani pre sumably would not accompany the Pope for fear that this would give a too "official" character to the trip. There have been repeated suggestions for a meeting in the Holy Land between the Pope, Greek Orthodox Patriarch Ath enagoras of Constantinople and possibly other leaders. A Vati can envoy called on Athenagor as in Istanbul two days ago to inform him of the Pope's think ing about a possible meeting. TOUGH TO ENFORCE OXNARD, Calif. (UPI) The city council Wednesday reject ed an ordinance tnat wouia have made it a misdemeanor to own a dog that "barks un reasonably." Councilmen called it "unwork able and discriminatory." Hill man Luddemann, ex-sfeamship head, picked for new Department of Commerce By Zan Stark UPI Staff Writer SALEM (UPI) - HMman Lueddemann, a former Port land steamship company execu tive, Tuesday was named by Gov. Mark Hatfield to head the newly-established State Depart ment of Commerce. The department was created by the 1963 legislature. It is the first of the government reorgan ization programs asked by Hat field to become law. Lueddemann, 68, is a past president of the Portland Cham ber of Commerce, and vice president emeritus for the Ore gon Inland Waterways Associa tion. He will resign from the board of directors of the Ore gon Mutual Savings Bank and from the Delta Park Commis sion in Portland. Hatfield termed the appoint ment "a major step toward a cabinet system of government. Policy adopted on community college courses PORTLAND (UPI) - The State Board of Higher Educa tion has adopted a policy that would Insure competency by community college Instructors. Dr. Miles C. Romney said the policy was necessary to guaran tee that community college credits can be transferred to in stitutions of h i g h e r education. He is vice chancellor for aca demic affairs with the state sys tem. Under state law, the state board must approve courses in the colleges which are intended to be transferable and must al so approve the hiring of instruc tors who will teach such cours es. The policy also stipulates that community colleges have ade quate library facilities, and that they must not impair the effec tiveness of instructors by ask ing them to teach too many dif ferent courses. "By its success will be judged future proposals." The governor said the new department would become oper ative on Jan. 1. He said the sal ary range was from $12,000 to $15,000. Small Staff Lueddemann said he would have a small staff, and would "coordinate the operation of the 15 boards in the department to give better service to the pub lic." The 15 agencies being com bined in the new department now have in excess of 100 em ployes. The new department includes five administrative divisions: Banking, corporation, insurance, planning and development, and real estate. Ten licensing, advisory and administrative- review agencies are Included: Collection, watch making and clockmaking, pilot commissioners, real estate, banking, accountancy, architect examiners, auctioneers, en gineering examiners, and land scape architect examiners. Formerly each of these de partments reported directly to the governor. Lueddemann now will make a single report to the governor. Lueddemann said he and his wife, Dorothy, will move to Sa lem. Lueddemann is a n a t i v e of Tuscumbia, A 1 a., attended school at San Jose, Calif., and moved to Portland in 1914. He earned four bronze stars during World War I and return ed to Portland in 1920 to be come dock clerk for McCormick Steamship Co. In 1960 he retired as vice president and general manager of Pope and Talbot, Inc. 1UNTUCOT nJ'J.'i't PBS 1 Jfr . 1 ii we mean! FlIAZ NEW LOW PRICE Kentucky's finestdourbon for over 150 Years! 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