EUGENE REGISTER-GUARD, Monday, May 21, 1962 - Page 3A
Action Program Urged
PTA Opens
Convention
PORTLAND Jn A three-year action program to improve
the lot of the nation's economically and socially deprived young
tiers was launched Monday by the National Congress of Par
ents and Teachers.
Delegates to the congress' annual convention were given a
wide-ranging list of projects to be tackled by 12 million mem
bers of 47,000 local PTA's.
"These children need richer educational opportunities and
more social services than other children, and the PTA is deter-
1 Economically and socially de-
Four Killed
In Weekend
Auto Mishaps
Br ASSOCIATED PRESS
A weekend collision on High
way 6 a few miles southwest of
Portland claimed its second life
Sunday when Lorctta Anderson,
15, Vancouver, Wash, died in a
Portland hospital.
Killed outright in the Satur
day night collision was a bride
of six months, Marian Jean
Mitchell, 20, Beaverton, Ore.
Another Oregon traffic death
Saturday was that of Mrs. De
lores Sullivan, Beaverton, Ore.,
in an accident near Beaverton.
Late Friday Violet Agness
Hendrix, 16, Milo, Ore., died in
the plunge of her car into Days
Creek, near Roseburg.
The accidents increased Ore
gon's araffic death toll for the
year to 143 in the Associated
Press tabulation. Twenty-two
have been killed this month.
QU1NCY, Wash, m A Grants
Pass woman, Mrs. Hazel Suttle,
58, was killed Sunday in a high
way accident near this Eastern
Washington town. Two of her
companions, also from Grants
Pass, were injured.
The state patrol reported that
a car driven by Mrs. Suttle
stopped at a highway intersec
tion, then apparently started out
and was hit by a car driven by
Ida B. McGlcnn, 54, Puyallup,
Wash.
Mrs. Suttle was thrown from
her vehicle.
He passengers were Marporie
V. Roark, 55, who suffered a
collar bone fracture, and Anne
Coleman, treated for cuts and
bruises.
To Attend Institute
COTTAGE GROVE Harlan
Smith, junior at Cottage Grove
High School, will attend a six
week summer institute at Ore
Eon State University sponsored
by the National Science Founda
tion. He is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Smith of this city.
pnved youngsters, usually re
ferred to as "the disadvan
taged," include children of mi
grant farm workers, children
whose parents are on relief and
children who lack adequate su
pervision while their mothers
work. Most of them are in Negro
families which have moved from
the south to Northern cities and
Puerto Rican families which
have flocked to New York City.
The program recommends
that local PTA's:
Support establishment of
nursery schools and kindergar
tens to help the disadvantaged
children overcome the handicaps
of their limited backgrounds.
Encourage schools to de
velop "higher horizons' pro
grams, patterned after those in
New York City, to broaden the
children's cultural experiences.
Help to establish day-care
services for children of working
mothers.
Work for improved and ex
panded guidance and couscling
services, starting in the elemen
tary schools.
Sponsor stay-in school cam
paigns. Urge school administra
tions to keep vocational educa
tion programs up to date, use
ful and practical.
Spark the formation of
community wide committees to
work on the problems of school
dropouts and unemployed youth.
Jackie Competes in Horse Show
Portland Woman Held
On Murder Charge
PORTLAND I Portland po
lice jailed a woman on a second
degree murder booking after the
fatal stabbing of her husband at
their home Saturday night.
The victim was John Horace
Banister, 39. City detectives
James Harvey and Gordon Mor
gan quoted his wife, Marjorie
Jean, 44, as saying she stabbed
him with a butcher knife in self
defense after he had struck her
with a baby bottle and a coffee
cup.
Writer Arrives
LONDON W) Kornci Tchu
kovsky, 80, noted Russian writer
of fairy talcs, arrived here Sat
urday for a two-week visit.
.is' t,
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No etra (are tor exclusive Scenicruiser Service. For eiample:
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First
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Lady
(AP Wlrephoto)
Mrs. John F. Kennedy clears a jump as she competes in the Loudoun
Hunt Horse Show at Lcesburg, Va., over the weekend. The First
Lady is riding Minbreno which she jointly owns with Mrs. Paul Fout.
Technicians
Seek 'Bugs'
In Aurora 7
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. W
Technicians checked Aurora
7, the Mercury spacecraft of
Navy Lt. Cmdr Malcolm Scott
Carpenter, and its Atlas launch
ing rocket in detail Monday.
If they find no more "bugs"
in capsule or missile if the
weather holds if other factors
all are favorable, then the
Aurora 7 Atlas combination
will blast off next Thursday be
tween 7 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.,
Eastern Standard Time.
A successful launch would
fling Carpenter into the same
type of 100-mile high, three-orbit
flight that Marine l.t. Col.
John 11. Glenn Jr. made Feb.
20 but with several new ex
periments to be performed.
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration had
planned last week to launch
Aurora 7 Tuesday. Discovery
of a possible defect in an elec
trical device that keeps the At
las flight control system from
freezing up forced a postpone
ment of at least two days.
Carpenter's backup pilot is
Cmdr. Walter M. Schirra Jr.
Landslides Kill 20
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia On
Landslides caused by torren
tial rains have killed 20 tribes
men in a remote area of Ethio
pia, according to word which
reached this capital Saturday.
Adjutant General Dies Saturday
Services for Hintz
To Be Wednesday
SALEM ufi Military funeral
services I are scheduled at 10
a.m. standard, 11 a.m. daylight
Wednesday for Maj. Gen. Al
fred E. Hintz, the commander
of the National Guard's 41st In
fantry Division and adjutant
general of Oregon.
Hintz, 56, died in an Oregon
City hospital Saturday shortly
after being stricken at Camp
Withycombc, Clackamas, where
he had just delivered the com
mencement address to the Ore
gon Officers Candidate School's
graduating class. He suffered a
heart attack.
Earlier in the day he had re
viewed the Armed Forces Day
Parade through downtown Port
land. After the military funeral in
the Salem Armory auditorium
there will be private burial ser
vices at Willamette National
Cemetery.
At all National Guard instal
lations in Oregon flags will be
flown at half-mast.
Oregon and Washington Na
tional Guard units make up the
41st Division, of which Hintz
took command Oct. 1, 1959 un
der the arrangement that rotates
the command between the states
every four years. Since then he
has lived at Camp Withycombe.
The widow, a son and four
grandchildren survive.
lt is the second time in less
than four years that an Oregon
adjutant general has died in
office. Maj. Gen. Thomas E.
Rilca, his predecessor, died in
February, 1959.
Hintz joined the Wisconsin
National Guard in 1925, begin
ning his military career.
In 1933 he enlisted as a priv
ate at Portland in the Oregon
National Guard's 218!h Field
Artillery. He was promoted to
second lieutenant in 1938.
By the time the 41st Division
was called into active service in
1940 he had become a first lieu
tenant. During World War II he serv
ed in the regular Army as a
captain. After that war he re
turned to the Oregon National
Guard. He was promoted to
brigadier general in 1958 and
the major general in 1960.
The 41sl was under Hintz'
command when it was assigned
to defense mobilization of Al
aska. He helped in the training
of specially selected officers
and men at Fort Greeley, the
Army's Arctic test center near
Fairbanks.
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