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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (June 22, 2000)
Locally owned DOWNTOWN 1320 Willamette 485*2356 2975 West 11th 344*0807 OPEN Sundays*"^ Additional LUBE, OIL, FILTER • Chassis Lube • New Oil Filter • Up to 5 Qts. 10W-30 Kendall Oil • Clean Front Window • Vaccuum Front Floor Boards _ Kendall QQ . MOTOR OIL Appointment necessary 3/4 or 1 -ton & Most light cars & trucks Extra Cab Trucks Oregon daily emerald worldwide WWW. dailyemerald.com Feel the Beat. Enjoy the Heat. /^r^x /> --Mv **** ad t0 far* * Not combinoble with other otters. Not retroactive to previously purchased tickets. LJ X Xere’s a different flavor of Afro-Cuban fusion: Vocalese. Two choirs, half a world apart, sing music of their country and heritage. You may not always understand the words. But with their passion, joy, and communication, you’ll get the message. Join us and live the freedom of world music. Go beyond boundaries. ENTREVOCES OF CUBA CHRIST THE KING CHOIR OF UGANDA Tuesday, June 27, 8 pm • Hult Center Sponsored by Eugene Weekly bridge TO THE FUTURE / Moiety The International Voices project is made possible in part by grants from the Association of Performing Arts Presenters Arts Partners Program, which is underwritten by the Wallace-Reader's Digest Funds and Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, and the Hult Endowmenr of the Arts Foundation of Western Oregon. Opening a rare window into the musical soul of Cuba, the singers of Entrevoces will perform contemporary work by Cuban and Latin American composers, a little Monteverdi, a few spirituals, and a lot of tropical, breezy sounds. Out of the heart of East Africa comes Christ the King Church Choir, until recently one of Uganda's hidden treasures. Using percussion, dancing, and expert choral singing, the group's 40 voices weave a fabric of daily and spiritual life in East Africa. June 23-July 9 l Oregon Bach Festival Order online: oregonbachfestival.com Or Call 682-5000 Listen to Music Beyond Boundaries, daily at 10 an; and 4 pm on KWAX 91.1, sponsored by Cou^ll and Hansen. Birth to Three continued from page 1A tions: “Incredible Infants,” “Won derful Ones” and “Terrific Twos.” Besides focusing on the child’s de velopment, the program stresses the importance of the role of the parental relationship as well as in teraction with other families. Through training videos, in struction manuals and group meetings, the program will be im plemented nationwide, and it is all made possible with the fi nances provided by the grants. Birth to Three has served as a working model for the “First 3 Years” curriculum and involves families throughout Lane County. Tina McClellan, mother of Char ity, 5 1/2 months, and Collin, 22 months, has been involved with the program since Collin was a newborn, and continued helping when Charity was born. McClel lan and her husband still meet once a month with the original group of parents and children they joined when Collin was an infant. “We intend on continuing our group until people break it up, which hopefully never happens,” McClellan said. As she watched her children playing with other children who are part of the Birth to Three pro gram, McClellan said, “I come here to play, too. Why stay home and do dishes?” Birth to Three, a private, non profit organization, was founded in 1978 by three mothers. The idea for the organization was kin dled by a research project on parental isolation by Rothbart, a professor of psychology and a Birth to Three grants Ford Family Foundation ($225,000) Meyer Memorial Trust ($175,000) Oregon Community Foundation’s Harris Fund for Children, Anna Wheeler Hayes Fund and Mildred F. Hoskins Fund ($60,000) Collins Foundation ($50,000) Sadder Institute for Developmen tal Psychobiology with funds pro vided by grants from the James S. McDonnal Foundation ($10,000) SOURCE: Birth to Three member of the University’s Insti tute of Cognitive and Decision Sciences. Part of Rothbart’s proj ect included an in-home study of parents with young children. The two research assistants in volved in the project, along with one of the mothers involved in the study, Minalee Saks, the current director, believed that parents would greatly benefit from child raising education and interaction with other families. After a year of research and planning, funded by a federal child abuse prevention grant from the Children’s Bureau of the De partment of Health, Education and Welfare, Birth to Three was launched. More than 20 years later, the program is a nationally recog nized organization, and a model for its curriculum “Making Par enting a Pleasure.” The curricu lum is distributed at more than 300 sites nationwide, including elementary schools, YMCAs and homeless shelters. Save $$$ “f on 1 Textbooks! | Bring your textbook information to Smith ramify Bookstore • Author • Title • Edition We'll help you find used copies that will save you $$$ W ill/ Sell us those texts, paperbacks & magazines you no longer use.