f SINCE 1M0 T^cuj A COUNTRY SCHOOL FOR CITY CHILDREN HAROLD A MOHLER. DIRECTOR CHILD GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT STATE LICENSED OPERATING YEAR ROUND MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY BOTH MALE AND FEMALE TEACHERS TRANSPORTATION PROVIDED (V> DAY AND ALL DAY PROGRAM) GOALS FOR AGES 4 6 social DEVELOPMFNT physical coordination mental alertness lan guage DEVELOPMENT GOOD WORK HABITS DEPENDABILITY SELF ESTEEM HABITS CONDUCIVE TO GOOD HEALTH AND NUTRITION READINESS (READING Nl W MATH WFIITING INTRODUCTION TO A FOREIGN LANGUAGE! 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Hardback and Paperback both ^ .6e Text V also on sale Stationery - 1 The Oregon Daily Emerald is published Monday through Friday during the school year, except during exam and vacation periods, ami lour times weekly during summer session by the Kmerald Board of Directors at the University of Oregon Second class postage paid at Eugene, Oregon, 117-HU Subscription rates 1' University of Oregon student and faculty stall subscription rates are based mi annual contracts between the Emerald and the ASUO and the Emerald and the University ad ministration The rate of these subscriptions is approximately $2 00 per year ill* Special subscriptions for persons not included in category ( 1 > art* available at a rate of $10 00 per year. $0 00 per academic year and So f>0 (H*r term Editor General Manager Bill Bucy Al Phelps On Campus \ J Zeigler to lecture in Moscow Harmon Zeigler, professor of political science and research associate for CASEA, will lecture at the Soviet Academy of Sciences in Moscow in September. The lecture will be concerned with his book “The Irony of Democracy,” which according to the publisher is “the most successful political science text in the last 20 years.” Over 100,000 copies have been sold in the last 18 months and it has been adopted by more than 500 colleges and universities. En route to Moscow, Zeigler will also lecture at the University of Oslo in Norway and the Institut fur Bildungsforschung in der Max Plank Gessellschaft in Berlin. Community Cisco awarded $50,000 grant The Chicano-Indian Study Center of Oregon (CISCO) has been awarded $50,000 in federal Adult Education Act (PL 91-230) funds for a right-to-read project in Portland and the Willamette Valley, Dale Parnell, state school superintendent, announced Sunday. The grant will provide for expansion of adult education programs in CISCO centers to be established in areas with target populations. The objective is to enable adults to continue their education at least to the level of completion of high school and to make available to them the means to get training to help them become more employable, productive, and responsible citizens. 4 Volunteers needed for benefit bike ride A volunteer bike ride to benefit St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital will be held in Portland and its suburbs on Aug. 5. The ride is sponsored by Epsilon Sigma Alpha, an international women’s philanthropic organization. Riders are to secure patrons who will pledge a certain amount of money for each mile ridden. For information, contact Jo Barrett at 235-6362 (Portland) or Lynn Gerods, at 232-9395 (Portland). Pledge cards may be picked up at any Multnomah County and Vancouver, Wash, bike shops. Officer hired to recruit minorities Carey G Wong, a 22-year-old June graduate of Yale College from Portland, has been appointed to a new post to recruit minority group members and women for vacancies occurring in state government. W'ong’s appointment was announced by Kenneth T. Underdahl, deputy director of the Executive Department and Governor McCall’s order in April requiring state agencies to develop plans that would Affirmative Action program officer. The governor issued an executive open government to the hiring of more minority members and women. Wong will be assigned to the Oregon Public Service Careers Program directed by John Raynor. Wong, a native of Portland, graduated from Jesuit High Schoc^ He received scholarships to Yale, where he graduated summa cum laude, including one from the Oregon State Employees Association. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa During his first three years at Yale, he worked with the Ulysses S. Grant Foundation program for inner city students in the New Haven, Conn., area. Underdahl said Wong is one of four job developers who will be hired for the Affirmative Action program. Sunshine Festival to be held The Second Annual Sunshine Festival, sponsored by Eugene Parks and Recreation Department, will be held Thursday, Aug. 3, in Skinner Butte Park The eleven hour festival will begin at 11 a.m. with displays and demonstrations of crafts by local artisans. Throughout the day. festival goers can enjoy music, drama, games and food. The day's events include: 11 a m — Festival opens. Noon Recorder and cello ensemble featuring Renaissance and Baroque music 1 p.m — Performance by the New Mime Circus. 2 p m. — Glider airplane contest for all ages, string trio and quartet with music from the 17th and 19th centuries 3 p.m. — Carnival Theatre with excerpts from the rock opera ' The Survival of St Joan." A p m. — SKRAP Theatre 5 p m People's Kazoo Ensemble and Jug Band (several hun dred free kazoos will be provided). 6 p m Music by Tom and Josh, members of the Emerald Chamber Players and Musica Organica 7 p m to 10 p.m Rock concert featuring a band with the best of the 50 s After the day's events members of the audience will form the "People's Garbage Party” to clean up the park No admission will be charged for the Festival.