News Scrapbook 1981-1982

BLADE TRIBUNE JAN 1 2 1982 m-A- ssertiveness Discussed SAN DIEGO School of Education at 293- 4585.

BLADE TRIBUNE JAN 1 2 1982 _U_.:;.SD Offers Workshop For Teacher SAN DIEGO - A "Make It-Take It," workshop in School of Education and instruction on how to develop, Continuing Education, is $50. reinforce, and remediate

DA ILY CALI FORNIAN JAN 1 2 1982 ASSERTIVENESS/· Assertiveness Training for Teachers" is the subject of a workshop offered at the University of San Diego from 4 to 8 p.m. Friday and from 9 a.m to 5 p.m. Saturday. The workshop, sponsored by USD's School of Education in cooperation with the Division of . Continuing Education will be held in DeSales Hall, room 209. The cost is $50. For information, call 293-4585

'As ertiv n s Training for T achers" i the ubject of a wor hop to be offered at the University of San Diego on Friday, Jan 15 from 4 to 8 p.m. and Saturday, Jan. 16 from 9 a.m to 5 p.m. m De ales Hall, room 209 The workshop, offered by USD's School of Educa\i~n: in ooperation ~1th the D1V1~1on f Continumg Educat10n, rovides one unit of Pro-- fe tonal Development, ~r mserv1ce, credit The cost is so. For information, call the

Participants will learn to effectively express feelin,ss, cope with upsets, assess body language, and develop better listening and classroom management skills. Led by USD assistant pro- fessor of education Dr. Susan Zgliczynski, the workshop will include lecture, demonstration, movies, and role-playing. Registra~on includes all readmg materials and activities.

listening,

to perceptual skills -

Participants are asked

perceptual skills will be held at the University of San Diego Jan. 22 from 4 to 9 p.m. and Jan. 23 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.inDeSalesHallroom209. Tuition for the workshop, co-sponsored by USD's

tas~, follow\ng usmg learning

lunch; s~ayin_g on

sack

a

bring

beverages will be provided. dir~c~1~ns -

re- ~ctlVlhes and games, l~arn- mg centers, mampulatives,

and

information

For

servations call 293-4585. Designed for regular and and. special education teachers, 11va1lable the workshop will provide 1eachers. --------~- current to

technology classroom

LEMON GROVE REVIEW JAN 1 4. 1982

SENTINEL JAN 1 3 1982

SAN DIEGO NEWSLINE

Teacher training offered "Assertiveness Train- ing for Teachers" is the subject of a workshop to be offered from 4-8 p.m. Friday at the University of San Diego. The sem- inar continues from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. It will be presented in DeSales Hall, room 209. The workshop, offered by USD's School of Ed- ucation, in cooperation with the Division of Continuing Education, provides one unit of Professional Devel- opment, or inservice, credit. The cost is $50. For information, call the School of Education at 293-4585. Participants will learn to effectively express feelings, cope with upsets, assess body language and develop better listening and classroom management skills. Led by USD assistant professor of education Dr. Susan Zglicynski, the workshop will in- clude lecture, demonstration, movies and role-playing. Registration includes all reading materials and activities.

Procurement System Seminar at Univ. S.D. A business seminar will be held at the University of San Diego, in the School of Busi• ness Bank of America Room, on Jan. 21 and 22, from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. "The Procurement System" tells how to best beat infla- tion and recession and come out a winner. The seminar is designed for management ex- ecutives, purchasing agents, marketing and plant mana- gers, comptrollers, and produc- tion p'lanners. "Shortages of money, mate- rials, supplies, dwindling prof- it margins, and zero · growth in productivity necessitate the implementation of cost•effec- tive systems," asserts Dr. Da- vid Burt, associate professor as USD who will lead the sem· inar. A $345 registration fee will include materials, luncheon and refreshments. Enroll by calling 293-458.5.

JAN 13 1982

BLADE TRIBUNE JAN 1 2 1982

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t:b-0 Communication Skills Are Taught SAN DIEGO - A "Com-

-A ..Communication Skills" work• shop will be held at USD beginning today and running through Jan. 16. $1CJO. 293-4585 ,

9 30 p.m. with an overview Co~sultants, Inc. _New York; program including topics in adJunct fa_culty mclude the listening skills, expectations, Rev..Darnel J·. Dillabough and barriers to communica- and Sister Bonme Pelloux of tion. The workshop resumes the Diocese of San D,iego. sessions Friday and Sponsor~d by UCD School Saturday, Jan.15 and 16, from of Continwng Educ~llon and 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m and con- the Co-Vocations O~ice of the tinues Thursday, Jan. 28 from D.ocese o~ San. Diego, ~he 5;30 to 9:30 p.m. and Jan. 29 orkshop is des1gn~d to 1m- and 30 from 9a.m. to 4 30 p.m. prove effectiveness mdealing with others by the use of Principal speaker for the techni9ues in listenin_g skills, workshop is John Lawyer, assertion, leadership and president of Henneberry Hill conflict management. ,#

mumcation Skills" workshop will be held at the Univer ·ity o( San Diego Jan. 14-16 and Jan. 28-30 in lJSO's Camino Student Lounge. Registration for the workshop is $100 and includes material · and refreshments. A brown bag lunch is ·uggested. For information and reservations, call 293- 4585. "Communication Skills" will begin Jan 14 from 5·30 to

LA JOLLA LIGHT

JAN l 4 1982 Founders Gallery -

"Watercolor San Utego," an exhibition of paintings by members of the San Diego Watercolor Society, will open Jan. 24 and continue through Feb. 16. University of San Diego, Alcala Park, S.D. 442-7960.

LA JOLLA LIGHT JA 1 4 1982

'Assertiveness training' offered ••Assertiveness Train- feelings,

LA JOLLA LIGHT JN14198Z

cope with

Education, in coopera- tion with the Division of Continuing Education. For information, call the School of Education at 293-4585. Participants will learn to effectively express

will be held from 4 to 8 p.m. Friday and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Satur- day, provides one unit of professional develop- ment, or inservice credit. The cost is $50. The class is sponsored by USD's School of

upsets, body language and develop better listening and classroom management skills. Led by USO assistant professor of education Or. Susan Zgliczynski, the workshop will in- clude lecture, demon- stration, movies, and role-playing. Registra- tion includes all reading materials and activities. assess

ing for Teachers" is the subject of workshop to be offered at the Univer- sity of San Diego tomor- row and Saturday, in Room 209 of the univer- sity's DeSales Hall. The workshop, which

• I USD sets education workshop A "Make It-Take It" perceptual skills -

to bring a sack lunch. Beverages will be pro- vided. The workshop is co-sponsored by USD's School of Educa- tion. Designed for regular and special education teachers, the workshop will provide instruction on how to develop, rein- force and remediate

such as listemng, staying on task and following directions-using learn- ing activities and games, learning centers, manipulatives and cur- rent technology avail- able to classroom teachers. For information and reserva• ions, call

workshop in perceptual skills will be held at the University of San Diego Jan. 22-23 in Room 209 of the University's DeSales Hall. the workshop, which will be held from 4 to 9 p.m. Jan. 22 and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Jan. 23, is $50. Participants are asked Tuition for

SAN DIEGO UNION JAN 1 4 1982 -U-SD Strives To Improve No. 2 Image, Hosts Gonzaga

293-4585 .

By BILL CENTER StaffWr,ter, ThfSanD,egc,Un,on

What USD wants is a balanced program - men's and women's departments - mtion for the school without bankrupting it. How Jong that will take is anyone's guess - but it wont happen overnight. USD's stringent entrance requirements automatically exclude. many would-be recruits. Then there's the financial end of the equation. · Tuition at USD runs $4,475. A full ride - tuition, books, runs $7,148, nearly double the scholarship cost at most public universities. Basketball is the only sport given the support of 15 full rides. Baseball has 10 tuition grants and two full rides. There are 4 1 2 full rides in both men' and women's tennis, eight in women's basketball, 1x in volleyball and two in women's swimming. All this, plus the cost of operating the programs. 1s paid directly from USO's operating budget. .. It will take us a I ttle time to grow to that level, but I think we'll be rompetitl\e m th WCAC with other schools like us.· says between that will earn recog- room -

competing with schools that have tradition and identity on their side. "I never believed success would be instant. Time and patience, especially in our situation with the_ extremely high academic standards that are the most stringent even m our conference. I'm proud of that." Sttll, Brovelli can cross off 60 percent of all the athletes who show interest in USD. "Many times, it comes down to Stanford or us with the players we're after," he says. 'Stanford or us." USO has 3,400 undergraduate students. Last year, t~e graduating class numbered 800. There are another 1,300 rn graduate school. There are no P.E. majors. Yet, more ,han 80 percent of USO athletes graduate within a year of the1r class. "The guidelines do not bother me at all," says Brovelli. ''All we really need is one or two premier players. We have a strong supporting cast. sound, complementary. We re deeper than ever. we·ve made great strides.'' But it must be said, the Toreros have a long way to go. Thei~ is a regional program. To eventually win the WCAC, USD must defeat a national program, the Univer- sity of San Francisco.

Th re ha al\\ays been a er! is of identity at the Uni-

ve 1ty of San Diego The problem

IS without merit. Academically and ur. vers1ty tucked into the hills over- It ton Valley and Mission Bay rivals any t

LA JOLLA LIGHT JAN 1 4 1982

ae thet1cally looking both

titutton.

t onal I n at

Workshop to focus on test-taking skills "Integrating Study

Odo not major m patio and hall-walking.

tu

Dip oma e

d at USO carry clout

But there stilJ i this problem In Amenca today. there a tendency to equate the value of a university with its pr gr m Pity the Nortbwesterns, no matter bow hools of engineermg might be n with the University of San Diego, re- 1 h f red to commonly, unconsciously, as ''the little school There 1s a mt conception that liSD i · a small school. Some people are not aware of the great strides USO has made In the next five years, USD will grow mto one of the great private universities on the West Coast." The speaker was not USO President Dr. Author Hughes. way 11 IS up on the htll. No. 2 pulls together, tries harder No. 2 is al o striding out on its own. USD tonight hosts onzaga Univcr ity at the U Sports Center to kick off the Torero third eason in the West Coast Athletic Con- ference - one of the nation's leading collegiate basket- ball alliances. To be ~urc, USD 1s still a member of the WCAC's lower echelon But there is hope for the future. And the present 1sn t that bad. Membership m the WCAC seems to be putting USD on the map School offlctal say they sense a growing aware- n in th community of what USD is all about. The kid know us now," says Brovelh of the players he r cruitmg "We're advancing. The basketball pro- ram 1s advancing The university is advancing.'' The que uon is how far can it go? Or, how far does it want to go? Certainly USO is limited The Toreros have no radio or L lev1 ion contract. Gate receipt m their 2,500-seat, on- e mpus gym ar minimal and there is no rush to follow n Dwgo tate mto the Sports Arena. I've alway felt ba ketball should be played on cam- pu befor th tudents," ·aid Brovelh. "If it comes to omg to the port Arena because we have to, then we'll go. Tot I private boo ter upport amounts to one fund- r 15mg dmner a year for athletic U D Lot I athletic department budget - including all alancs pl funding for the recreat10n and intramural program com to I million. Across the valley, San Diego tal raises more than that through its support f 1undat101; and pends more than that on football Th n agam USD ha no Division I football program. or d it want one 'W 're happy with football where it is," says Athletic Dir tor Hev. Patrick Cahill, meaning at the Division Ill lev 1 on the htll' th u r th r

beverages will be pro- vided. Participants can earn one unit of professional development, or inser- vice credit. The workshop, led by USO assistant professor of education Dr. Susan Zgliczynski, is designed for teachers of all grade levels. Current techni- ques for teaching learn- ing skills, mathematics and science study skills, increasing work power, spelling, listening skills, memory skills and reading for speed and comprehension will be presented.

SkiUs and Test-Taking Skills in the School Cur- riculum" is the topic of a workshop sponsored by the University of San Diego School of Educa- tion Jan. 23 from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. The workshop will be held in the Far West Savings and Loan Association's Community Room, 9933 Mount Carmel Road. The workshop, of- fered in cooperation with the USD's School of Continuing Educa- tion, costs $50. A sack lunch is suggested, and

Cahill.

"Patience,'' preaches Brovelli, both on the court and in

the way he builds to the future .

"Respect and equality will come with time,'' he says.

•·we are the new school on the block in the WCAC. We're That was the ba ketball coach, Jim Brovelli. That's the ~~-~----~---~---

LA JOLLA LIGHT JAN 1 4 198%

READER .,A:l _ 4 1982

Special Events

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Faculty Concert Series, cellist Marjorie Hart, violinist Henry Ko- lar, and pianist Nicolas Reveles of USO will perform Vivaldi's Con- certo in Bflat with the Civic Youth Orchestra 11, and the Symphonic Wind Ensemble will perform works of Williams, Fucik, and Giovan- nini, Sunday, January 17, 4 p.m., Camino Hall, USO. Free. 234-7227.

University of San Diego - Michaela Rodeno, vice president of marketing and communications for Do- maine Chandon winery, will speak in French on Jan. J 6 at a luncheon meeting of the Alliance Francaise. De Sales Hall, Alcala Park, s.-o. 2?1~6480.

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