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atfield's Reorganization
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DliCKMBKK 18, lllli.'l
By ZAN STARK
SALEM (UPI) The future of
Gov. Mark Hatfield's plan to re
organize slate government now
rests with a mild-mannered,
round-faced, 68-ycar-old man.
Hillman Lueddemann will es
tablish the new 15-aRency state
Department of Commerce Jan.
1.
Hatfield termed the dopart
i ment "a major step toward a
j cabinet system of government."
j He added, "by its success will
j be judged luturc proposals."
Hatfield is counting on Lued
demann to be sueccsfclul.
A review of Lueddemann's
past indicates that Hatfield
who has a remarkable record of
i picking the right man for the
right job apparently has chosen
wisely.
A native of Tuscumbia, Ala.,
Lueddemann was educated in
California, was a high school
track and tennis star, and work
ed as a sports writer for the
San Jose Mercury.
In 1014 he moved to Portland
to enter the real estate business
with his uncles, Ernst and Max
Lueddemann. His World War I
service, which began in 1!)17,
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saw him earn four bronze stars.
I When he returned to Portland
in 1920 he went to work for the
McCormick Stamship Company
as a dock clerk. Eight years
later he was named the com
pany's northwest manager.
In 19.12 he became manager
of Pope and Talbot, and cli
maxed M years with that firm
I in 1960 when he retired as vice
i president and general manager
i to become a special vice presi
j dent and consultant.
His related activities included
a fantastic range for one man:
1 20 years as Oregon vice prcsi-
dent of the Pacific American
Steamship Association, former
I president of the Portland Steam
ship Operators Association,
chairman of the Portland Port
UJULtfw-''' ft '
NUCLEAR STA(iH A Saturn V-nuclear vehicle, with hypotheti
cal spacecraft, thunders from Ihe cloud-covered earth in this con
ception by a Lockheed Missiles and Space Co., artist. Atop Saturn
booster, and the same diameter, is nuclear stage which in possi
ble future missions will separate from the. Saturn and provide
propulsion In carry landing craft to Ihe vicinity of the moon,
j Intermediate-sized cylinder is lunar excursion module and other
spacecraft elements. Much smaller vehicle on top is rocket which
i will carry I.EM and its crew on abort trajectory in possible
I launch mishap. (UPI)
Plans
I Development Committee, former
' Portland port commissioner,
: founder and president of Port
j land Steamship Company, vice
: president emeritus for Oregon
Inland Waterways Association.
past president of the Portland
Chamber of Commerce.
! Past president of the West
Coast Lumbermen's Association,
; past president of the Portland
I Rotary Club, president of the
Oregon Territorial Centennial
Celebration, trustee emeritus of
' Lewis and Clark College, Port
land's first citizen for 1948, past
president of the Rose Festival
Association, and Oregonian se
lectee of one of the 100 men of
the century in 1948.
I He served on the Governor's
i Reorganization Advisory Com-
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PARK &
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MEDFOIiD MAIL TRIBUNE,
mittce in 1959-60, and was a
j member of the 1959 Interim
j Committee on Labor-Management.
In addition to being on the
; Pope and Talbot board, he
served as a director of Oregon
Portland Cement Co., Consoli
dated Freightways, Portland
General Electric, Oregon Mutu
al Savings Bank, and as head
Senator Morse Displeased
With Reporting Job by UPI
WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen.
Wayne Morse, D-Ore,, has
accused United Press Interna
tional of "shoddy reporting" in
describing his position on the
compromise foreign aid authori
zation bill.
The story in question was dis
tributed by UPI last Friday and
reported Morse's complaint that
the "American Pravda press"
had failed to report a speech he
made Thursday evening op
posing the conference report on
the aid measure.
Morse told the Senate the UPI
story left the impression he had
simply repeated his earlier op
position to the bill whereas he
Siskiyou
Contract
To Sioux
SALEM (UPI) -Bids totaling
$7,720,978 for 12 projects were
opened here Tuesday by the
State Highway Commission.
Another project, nine miles of
paving and grading of the Co
lumbia River highway east of
Arlington in Morrow County,
was cancelled.
Apparent low bids by County:
Clatsop Replace pilings at
Astoria ferry landing, General
Construction Co., Portland, $28,
800.. Douglas Roseburg traffic
signals. Trowbridge Electric Co.
Rosehurg, $5,968. Roberts Moun-
Morse Criticizes
India Military Aid
WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen.
Wayne Morse, D-Ore. has
criticized programming of mili
tary aid lor India and reported
plans to station U.S. naval
forces in the Indian Ocean on a
penrtancnte basis.
He said in a statement that
Ihe American people have been
duped by a Pentagon Iheory
that military a i d is extended
because it is "cheaper than
pulling Americans in uniform to
defend the countries involved."
Morse said that actually the
United States is doing both.
(living military aid In Paki
stan as a "partner with us
against communism" already
has proved fallacious as a
theory, he said. Now this coun
try is "programming a military
nirl nrnL'rnnl for India Ilia! is
on ahoul the same scale as that
for Pakislon "
Morse said thai "if any use
of our aid lo these countries
ever occurs, it will be against
each other, and not against ajw
Communist power."
Boeing Receives
Boardman Papers
SEATTLE (l'Pl)-The Boeing
Co. has received all docu
ments relevant to Ihe lease of
1(10,00(1 acres of lan d near
Bonrilman, Ore. (or a space age
industrial park.
A spokesman for Ihe firm
said Ihe material is now under
review, with final determination
expected in the next several
das.
The board of directors had
been expected lo appropriate
f units for initial development of
llie prelect but no action has
been announced
Rneinc had signed a 77 year.
Sin million lease of the prop
erly with Ihe Slate of Oregon
earlier this year, but local en
tanglements postponed exercise
ol ihe lease
Hoeing is expected lo develop
a rockol IrsUnc facility at
Boardman.
Tliornfon Rules on
Political Removal
S.M.EM 'I PI' -- Alty. Gen
Robert V. Thornton said Tuesday
that Oregon law does not pro
vide for removal of a precinct
committeeman by a political
parly's county central commit
tee for supporting Ihe nomina
tion of a person of his own party
in a primary election
Ihe idea behind the political
p.utv laws is lo ivrnvt the
olors to construct the organira
tion tiom the Ivltom upwards.
Thornton said Tuesday.
I I MM 11 111 II P
VINEI AMI. J. il'Plt-Vi-tliony
Klaim wa. elected chief
of ihe Taniher Head Eire Co.,
Monday.
MEDFORD, OREGON
ow Up To Hillman Lueddemann
of the Delta Park Recreation
Commission.
Has Two Children
In 1951 he married Mrs. Doro
thy E. Patterson. He has two
children, Jane and Hillman, Jr. j
Lueddemann said he plans a
"small office and staff." j
The heads of the 15 agencies
he now supervises were called
into Hatfield's office recently !
actually was "expressing my op
position to the decisions made
by the Senate conferees in con-
1 nection with the conference re
port. i Writing Said Not Factual
I "I do not know," Morse said,
"whether they (UPI) write what
, they do out of prejudice, ig
norance, or both, but certainly
they do not very often write
j factually.
"What do you expect of a
wire service which, as was
; pointed out in public hearings
i earlier this year in connection
j with some of its so-called for
I eign news, was perfectly willing
Grading
Awarded
City Firm
lain section of Pacific Highway,
Slate-Hall, Portland, $1,114,916.
Gilliam Hay Creek bridge,
R. L. Coats. Bend, $23,090.
Grant and Harney John Day
Burns Highway rock production,
Arthur Simonsen St Co., Baker,
$;)0.950.
Jackson Siskiyou Summit
California line section of Pacific
Highway, Western Contracting
Corp., Sioux City, Iowa, $4,874,-
838.
Jefferson Jefferson County
roids in the vicinity of Culver,
Babler Bros. Corp., Portland,
$Rfi.ll3.
Josephine Selma section of
Redwood Highway, C & H. Dur
bin Construction Co., Eugene,
$345,642.
Lake .Lakevicw-Burns high
way rock production, .ledd Wil
son & Son, La Pine, $21,900.
Morrow Willow Creek-Airport
Road section of Columbia
River Highway, Earl L. McNutt
) Lo., Eugene, Sl.921,224.
.Sherman Scott Canyon-Was-co
Section about three miles
I south of Rufus. Frank G. Baul
ne. Spokane, Wash., $151,035.
j Washington Hillsboro traffic
I signals, Trowbridge Electric Co
, Kosoburg, $6,397.
Africans Protest
Death of Student
MOSCOW (LTD - About 400
African students demonstrated
in Red Square today to protest
the death of a Ghanaian sludent
under what they called "mys
terious circumstances" a week
, ago.
A Ghana Embassy spokesman
coninmed the demonstration
, was in progress. I
' The demonstration was the
second such incident in a Com-!
! munis: nation in less than a j
j year. Thousands of African stu
i dents are studying in Commu-I
nist schools, many of them with
all expenses paid.
Last tcbruary. Communist po
lice in Sofia, Bulgaria, used
clubs to disperse a demonstra
tion by 200 African students
who were protesting an official
ban on their student organiza
tion. Several were injured.
Many of the 350 students in
Rulgaria led the country for
Western schools, charging Ihey
had been discriminated against
and ridiculed.
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and introduced to their new boss
without advance notice.
Lueddemann seemed relaxed i
and composed. He casually com- j
mented about his plans to co
ordinate the activities to his
various departments "so we can
give better service to the pub
lic." ;
He confided he hadn't yet de-
to take money to write alleged
or purported news stories at
least that would be the interpre
tation of the readers whereas
the stories really were lobby
services by United Press to
foreign governments, foreign
concerns and foreign clients."
(In New York, a UPI spokes
man said the news service had
never taken money from a for
eign government or anyone else
to distribute news in their be
half and that no evidence to
that effect came from the Sen
ate Foreign Relations Commit
tee hearing this year.)
Morse also noted that the UPI
story reported that the Oregon
senator spoke Friday to a near
empty chamber since the only
other senator present was the
presiding officer.
Downgrading Claimed
"What tommyrot is this to
seek Uie downgrading of a sena
tor.. .by sending out that kind of
shoddy reporting?" Morse
asked, "based upon the falla
cious premise that unless we
are talking to a full Senate we
are not performing service for
our constituency...
"But so long as the American
press continues to follow a pro
gram of concealing such facts
as it wishes to conceal," Morse
said, "I repeat that the Ameri
can people are not enjoying a
free press but a rigged press
time and time again in its re
porting policy."
Caroline Kennedy's
School To Be Moved
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
White House school that Caro
line Kennedy attends will be
moved to the British Embassy
after the Christmas holidays.
Thursday will be the last
school day at the White House
for Caroiine, 6, and her 20
classmates. Pamela Turnurc,
press secretary to Mrs. John
F. Kennedy, said classes would
be resumed at the embassy
next month.
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cided how he was to go about
his job.
Then there was a subtle, al
most unnoticable change in his
tone, and he commented "I'll re
view the agenda of every
agency before it meets, and
we'll all work together so I'll
know what's going on."
It wasn't a comment; it was
a command.
Same Direction
Every agency head there
seemed for a second to start.
Suddenly there was no doubt
that Hillman Lueddemann
planned to bring to his new job
the same keen mind and posi
tive direction that had made
De Gaulle Plans
Diplomatic Ties
With Red China
PARIS (UPI) - President
Charles de Gaulle plans to es
tablish diplomatic relations with
Red China, perhaps sooner than
had been thought likely, in
formed sources said Tuesday.
They insisted this is the case
despite reported assurances by
France to the United States and
Nationalist China that no such
move is planned.
American sources at the cur
rent Paris North Atlantic
Treaty Organization (NATO)
council meeting said earlier the
French government had in
formed the United States it
does not plan recognition of the
Chinese Communists.
Thanked By Rusk
One press report said Secre
tary of State Dean Rusk
thanked De Gaulle personally
Monday for these reported as
surances. There was no official French
confirmation or denial. But in
formed French officials said,
although the decision would be
one for De Gaulle alone to
make, they would be "much
surprised" if he did give any
such assurance.
The only assurance France
has given, one French govern
ment source said, is that recog
nition is not planned in the im
mediate future.
However, French sources said
De Gaulle plans to discuss the
whole matter thoroughly with
the United States before taking
any final action.
BOKSBL'RG BELLS
JOHANNESBURG, South At
rica (UPI) Residents of Boks
burg, a mining town 14 miles
east of here, have no fear of
hailstorms. They say Ihe bells
of a local convent, St. Domi
nic's, drive the hail away.
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him a success in his private
! business career.
1 Hatfield said Lueddemann's
i "talent for attaining coopera
tion of divergent interests
; should enable him to bring ef
' fieiency and savings through co
: ordination."
' There seemed little doubt that
I Lueddemann agreed.
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