fU 4A EUGENE REGISTER-GUARD, Sunday. Jin. 13, 1M8
State 4-H Delegates
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Named
By 4-H
(ReglsteivGuard photo)
Randy Brown, 16, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harding Brown of Cottage Grove, and
Dianna Titus, 16, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Wesley Titus, Oakridge, were
named in Eugene Saturday as Lane
County delegates to the 4-H Day state
session in Salem later this year. They
were selected near the end of a county
4-H "Know Your County Government"
session that included talks by various
county officials.
Cuban Big Shot Hurt
In Assassination Try
; HAVANA Wl Carlos Rafael Rodriguez, one of the top Com
munists in the Cuban government has been shot and severely
wounded in an assassination attempt, an informed sourct report
ed Saturday. .
' Prime Minister Fidel Castro's regime denied the report. The
official Cuban information agency said it had "been authorized to
deny the reports of the alleged assassination attempt as being
Without foundation."
" Rodriguez, boss of Cuba'a powerful National ; Institute of
Agrarian Reform, was said to have been hit by four bullets in
the leg and thigh last Wednesday.
The Columbia Broadcasting System In New York quoted Its
Havana correspondent as saying
Rodriguez was in a hospital and
tBat a specialist had been sum
moned to treat him.
.'An attempt to kill Rodriguez
was made on Sept. 12, 1961, as
he returned by car from Matan
zas Province. A government an-
nouncement at the time said
the car was riddled by bullets
but that Rodriguez escaped un
hurt. Rodriguez then was editor
of the Communist newspaper
Hoy and a chief aide of Castro.
Rodriguez is regarded as No.
2 man behind Bias Roca among
the old-guard Communists in
Cuba. He is considered, how
ever, the top Marxist theoretician.
LODGE LEADER Glenn
Hoff, a teacher at How
ard School in Eugene, is
the new president of the
Sons of Norway Lodge 38.
He lives at 832 Gregg
Way, Eugene. Other offi
cers installed recently are
Jon Pederson, vice presi
dent; Robert Johnson
counselor; Helen John
son, secretary; Marvin
Hanson, treasurer, and
Thelma Lindeland, historian.
I LARGE or SMALL!
ALL SIZE APPLIANCES . . .
WE REPAIR THEM ALL!
I Hamilton Electric
JFK Says Chances Are Improving
Things Looking Better in Senate, But About the Same in the House
By JACK BELL
or the AnocUted PrtM
WASHINGTON OB Presi
dent Kennedy apparently is
keeping his fingers crossed
about the fate of his legisla
tive program in Congress,
despite his victory in the
House Rules Committee fight.
Kennedy has told those who
have discussed the political
situation with him he believes
the chances for passage of
controversial proposals he
makes may have Improved
somewhat in the Senate but
are about the same in the
House as they were in 1962.
Another decision important
to the President will come
Monday when House Demo
crats caucus to determine who
fills two places on the power
ful Ways and Means Commit
tee which holds the key on
presidential tax plans and oth
er administration goals such
as medical care for the
elderly.
Three men are seeking the
two places Reps. Phil M.
Landrum of Georgia, W. Pat
Jennings of Virginia and Ross
Bass of Tennessee. The real
contest seems to lie between
Landrum and Jennings with
the former uncommitted on
Medicare and the latter fa
voring the President's Social
Security approach, in prin
ciple. Public congressional activity
Monday will center on the
President's State of the Union
message to both houses. He
is to deliver this in person at
12:30 p.m. As usual, it is ex
pected this will be couched in
general terms with specific
recommendations reserved for
later, special messages.
In the Senate, preliminaries
probably will be carried out
for a prolonged fight over the
Senate filibuster rule. Motions
to change the present rule
and make it easier to curb
filibusters are expected to be
offered.
Southern opponents of any
change in the present rule
which requires a two-thirds
majority of those voting in
order to limit debate already
are organized to filibuster
against it However, the ac
tual debate is not likely to
start until Thursday.
But it could run on for
days, or even weeks, once it
starts.
The President was repre
sented as surprised by his
margin in the 235-196 vote by
which the House decided to
continue its Rules Committee
at the lS-member level. Nom
inally, this is expected to pro
duce 8 to 7 votes in the traffic-directing
group to send
major administration pro
posals to the House floor.
There is some thought in
Congress that Democratic
leaders may have done too
good a job in rounding up
support. There may be a tend
ency by Democrats who back
the administration only when
they are put under heavy
pressure to point to the 39
vote margin as indicating
Proclamation Signed
SALEM Of) Gov. Mark Hat
field signed a proclamation Fri
day commemorating the 60th
anniversary of the Civil Service
Act.
their help isn't needed on in
dividual measures they want
to oppose.
With a contribution of 28
votes toward the result. Re
publicans have put themselves
in a position to deny any
charges the President may
level against them that they
are only obstructionists.
Kennedy has made the
point that, by and large, the
public must be relatively sat
isfied with the way the 87th
Congress operated or so many
of its members would not have
been re-elected last Novem
ber. Including vacancies created
by resignations, death and re
apportionment,' 67 new mem
bers came to the House 36
Democrats and 31 Republi
cans. Roughly this accounted for
a 15 per cent change in the
House membership. A shift
of this nature could be signi
ficant if it represented any
substantial . change in view
point Whether it does will be
determined only when mem
bers get down to voting on
specific issues.
Phone Company
Reveals Budget
EVERETT, Wash. OB West
Coast Telephone Co. has an
nounced a $31 million construc
tion and operations budget for
1963. including $8,247,000 for
construction in Washington and
$$,520,000 in Oregon.
L. Gray Beck, vice president
and general manager, said 10
projects of $50,000 or more had
been budgeted for Oregon, most
of them in the Portland area.
He said there would be 23 such
projects in Washington, mainly
in Snohomish County and the
Kirkland and Redmond areas.
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SPRINGFIELD