News Scrapbook 1981-1982

SAN DIEGO NEWSLINE

SAN DIEGO

MAGAZINE MAY 1982 Computer Training for Educ.ulors- SD offers a prufe~sional development ccr1ificatc progrnm using Apple 11 Plus comnutcrs and equipment used in San Diego ci1v i..11oob . llands-on experience. May I, 14 & 15. Jnfo: 293-4585.

,AY 1 3 1982

SAN DIEGO UNION MAY 3 o 1982..~,~ CONTINUING EDUCA- TION: The University of San Diego's University of

-"Use of Microcomputers In Educational Seuings," a basic cour~e in a series will meet from 4 7 PM today and 9 AM-6 PM on May IS at USO, DeSales Hall, Room 209 291-6480, ext 4296~. -----~--

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BLADE TRIBUNE MAY 12 1982

books on emergency care • nd emergency medicine.

USD Offers Summer School Classe1 SAN DIEGO - The Un- iversity of San Diego's summer school sessions, !acting USD's School of Continuing Education at 293-4585 .

the Third Age will be fea- tured on the "On Campus" television show at 11 a.m. today, on KNBC'~ Channel 4. The Third Age IS for peo- ple 55 and old r The ~p- coming ummer seSS1on will run from July 7 through Aug. 12 Call 293- 4585. Educational Growth Op· portuoities of the College of Extended tud1es at San Diego State University will sponsor an historical tour of w t San Diego on June 8 !so a ri of plays and r lated 1 ·tur will be of- fered an th ca ta log for . ummer cours is avail• able. Most cl es begin in the od week of July, For information on special ev nts and courses call 294- 9466 or v1S1t the EGO office, 4075 Park Blvd. The summer catalogue for the Rancho Bernardo Center for Con uing Edu- cat on, also associated with SD U lS avatl ble. The summ'er cla es will begin on Jun 7 and reg1Stration will be held Tuesday and Wed y in the RB-CCE office, H me Federal Sav- ings, 1 789 Bernardo Center Drive, Suite 202, Rantho Bernardo. Call 487-0464.

Most courses are offered in late afternoon or evening to accommodate schedules of teachers with continuing summer classroom duties. The School of Business Administration . summer curriculum consists of two 6-week sessions, June I through July 9 and July 12 through Aug. 20, with of- ferings on both the under- graduate and graduate levels. Included are Prin- ciples of Accounting, Estate Planning, Computer Prin- ciples and Applications, and on the MBA level, Financial Management, Seminar in Consumer Behavior, Marketing Management,

and Decision Theory. All MBA-level classes are held evenings from 6:15 to 9:30. The School of Nursing offers Advanced Physiology and Health Assessment courses in one six-week session, June 21 through July 30, Other programs available during the summer include English as a Second Language for students from the Sacred Heart College in Japan, the lawyer's assis- tant and paralegal studies programs, and a course leading to certification as an historic site archaeolog technician.

most of them beginning June 1 and lasting through Aug. 20, will offer a broad range of courses to be taken for undergraduate and graduate credit or for personal enrichment. under- graduates has been set at $150 a unit and for graduate students at $155 and $170 depending on the cours~ level. Clergy of all faiths and auditing students will pay a half-price rate. Campus room and board are offered. Further informa- tion is available by con- Tuition for

Forty courses, including Liberal Arts Mathematics, Biomedical Ethics, Applied Social Psychology, Survey of Calculus, Music Appreciation, and In- termediate Spanish, will be offered by the College of Arts and Sciences. The School of Education offers 27 courses, among them fieldwork placement and on-campus sessions in Methods of Teaching Reading, Psychological Foundations of Education, Learning Disabilities, and Organizational Theory.

BLADE TRIBUNE MAY 4 1982

Sigma Theta Tau To Induct Nurse SAN DIEGO - Helen

more than 65.000 member, and 162 chapters nationall}, encourages and sponsors research, promotes the development of nursing leadership and supports the development of nurse scholars. One hundred and twenty nurses will be in- ducted as charter members at the May 7 ceremony. A reception follows the ceremony, Membership in the honor society is by invitation to undergraduate and graduate students, faculty, and community professional nurses who have de- monstrated superior

scholastic leadership and nursing achievements. Dean Palmer will address the major issues confronting nursing today including ''the numbers game, economic rewards, nursing roles and the educational paradox." Officers to be installed 2re: · Karen Zappone, M.S.N., president; Mary Fallon-Smith, 1\1.S.N., vice president ; Mary Caffery, B.S.N., secretary; Christine Trelease, M.S.N., treasurer; Pamela Johnson, B.S N., M.B.A., pre~ident- elect, Patricia Roth, Ed.D., R.N., counselor, Evelyn Anderson, Ph.D., R. . counselor. _____ _

Ference, first vice presi- dent of the national honor society, Sigma Theta Tau, will conduct an induction ceremony at the University of San Diego Philip Y. Hahn School of Nursing on May 7 at 7 p.m. The induction ceremony will charter the USD nursing honor society as an official chapter of Sigma Theta Tau. The keynote address, "Nursing Present Dilemmas and an Emergent Future," will be delivered by Dr. Irene S. Palmer, Dean. Sigma Theta Tau, with

BLADE TRIBUNE :t 2 3 1982

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Study San Diego History In USO Class

. The La Coslan, Week of May 13 through May 19, 1982 . Intemational law program set

SAN DIEGO - A pecial four-week travel and study program will be offered from June 21 through July 15 by the University of San Diego for persons w1 ·hingto learn more about California and San Diego hi tory, The program may be audited or taken for thn,e units of his-

tory credit and will meet every morning beginning at 9 a,m, for the four-week period. Study tours will include half-day or full-day tours to such places as Heritage Park, the Villa Montezuma, and the Star of India Places

to be visited and where lectures, film and slides will be hown are: Old Town State Park, Cabrillo Na- tional fonument the Royal Spanish Presidio, and Mission San Diego de Alcala. Other tours are planned to V1Sit the Hotel de! Coronado, Julian,

Rancho GuaJome and the Pala Mission . No tours will be overnight For further information write Early Californi~ Tour, Office of Summer Sessions, Univeristy of San Diego, Alcala Park, San Diego 92110.

SAN DIEGO UNION MAY 2 2 1992

The

College, a program runningfromJuly4 through Aug. 7will treat subjects such as alternative energy law, public interna- tionallaw, and in- ternational human rights.Asimilar sessionwill be held July4throughAug. 7 in Paris.Socialist . LawandEast-West TradeLawareof- feredinthe Russia-Poland in- stitute, June6 through July 3. All courses are taught inEnglish by the faculties ofthe institutes, which in- clude professors from GeorgetownUn- iversity, Columbia University, SMU, King'sCollege, the Universityof Pennsylvania, Duke, NewYorkUn- iversity, and Loyola as well as USD. A brochure detail- ing the programs is available bywriting the Institutes of In- ternational and Comparative Law, UniversityofSan DiegoLawSchool,

.JUVENILE JUSTICE PANEL San Diegan Is Named Copley News service WASHINGTON - Steve Wittman, assistant director of programs for the Center for Criminal Justice Policy and Management at the University of San Diego School of Law yesterday was named by President Reagan to the last 'eight months of a ter~ on the National Advisory Committee for Juvenile Justtce and Delmquency Preven- tion. The 15-person committee me~t.s four tim~s a yea~ to review and evaluate federal policies toward Juvenile JUS· tice. Wittman, a 35-year-old lawyer, is a Repub)ic_an who ran unsuccessfully for the San Diego City Council m 1979. AWhite House spokesman said Wittman was selected in part because he is a member ~nd _ organizer_ of the San Diego County Child Abuse Coordmatmg Council. . He will replace an appointee of former President Jimmy Carter and will serve until Jan. 17.

Schoolof Law of the University of SanDiegowill be of- fering its 1982 ln- stitutesoflnterna- tional and Com- parative Lawin England,Mexico, France, Russia, and Poland. The pro- grams are designed to introduce Americanlawstu- dents to foreign law and legal institutions. "Classes abroad," saidSheldonKrantz , dean of the School, " sensitize students to thecultural dif- ferences thatin- fluence effective in- ternational dealing andintroducethemto the viewpoints of foreign experts." TheGuadalajara program, which runs June29throughAug. 4, will focus on civil liberties, immigration law,andlawandde- velopment. Students attending the London Institute, held at King's College, ¥£ill studyComparalive Corporations, Com- paritiveLaborLaw, Government Liability, and other course topics.At Oxford's Magdalen

SAN DIEGO UNION MAY .2 !l 198Z EDUCATION: The Uni- versity of San Diego's Uni- versity of the Third Age will be featured on th. "On Campus" telev1s1on show at 11 a.m. May 30 on KNBC Channel 4. The Third Age is for people i>5 years and older. The upcoming sum- mer se ion will run from July 7 through Aug. 12. Call 293-4585.

EVENING TRIBUNE MAY 2 2 19 San Diegan named to U.S. advisory post Ccp!ey News Service

sity of Oklahoma football coach, to bead the committee. In all, Reagan named nine men - mostly judges and lawyers - to the advisory panel Wittman, 35, a Republican lawyer, is assistant director of programs for the Center for Criminal Justice Poli- cy and Management at the Universi, ty of San Diego School of Law. A White House spokesman said Wittman was selected in part be- cause he is a member and organizer of the San Diego County Child Abuse Coordinating Council. He will replace an appointee of former President Jimmy Carter and will serve until Jan. 17.

WASHINGTON - Steve Wittman, an unsuccessful candidate for San Diego City Council in 1979, bas been named by President Reagan to the last eight months of a term on the National Advisory Committee for Ju- veni!e Justice and Delinquency Pre- vention. The 15-person committee meets four times a year to review and eval- uate federaf policies toward juvenile justice. The president yesterday also se- lected Charles B. "Bud" Wilkinson 66, board chairman of the Publi~ Emplo~ees Benefit Services Corp. in St. Louis, Mo., and a former Univer-

SOUTHERN CROSS MAY ?. 7 198t

AlcalaPark,San Diego92110, orby phoning 293-4597.

USD offers 'pastoral' courses SAN DIE ,0 - The University of San D.cgo is offering a number of contmu1~g reh!(tOlh education programs tht Institute: Pauline Biblical Themes, June 14-18, with Jesuit_ Fath~r J?seph Fitzmeyc r of the Catholic Untverslty of America

Members are paid only days the committee meets.

surnnm from June 14 through July 16 und,•r thr title, "J'astormg to Todav's ( hn It 1n Community " Olforrd through U. D's Office of ontll1uing E

• Fr e Like God,June 21-23, with Je uit Father Walter J Burghardt of Georgetown Universitv. • A Ministry of Enchantment, June 21-25, w11h Jack liflleton of the Universit) of San Francisco • Ea t Meets West, June 21-25, with Or. Jo cph J, Spae of the Uni,ersity of Chic:i.go. • Ethical Studies, June 28-July 2, wtth Father Charles Curran of Georgrtown Universuy. • Prayer Seminar, July 6-9, with Jesuit Father Mark Link of Loyola Univer ity of Chic.1go. • Moral Person: Moral Society, July 6-9, and Love and Sexuality _in Chri tian Perspective, July 12-16, with Father Paul J. Surlis, t. John's Univ rsity, Jamaica, N.Y. Info, m t1ion regarding fees, registration, time and pl~cc of eac~ cl~s and continuing educattons credus 1s av ilablc by ralltng 293 4585

BLADE TRIBl,.INE :t 2 3 ,ssz law School Offers Courses Abroa

DAILY TRANSCRIPT MAY 21 1982 • • •

SAN DIEGO The School of Law of the Un- iversity of San Diego will be offering its 1982 Institutes of International and Com- parative Law in English, Mexico, France, Russia, and Poland in programs designed to introduce American law students to foreign law and legal in- stitutions. "Classes abroad," said Sheldon Krantz, dean of the School, "sensitize students to the cultural differences that influellce effective in- ternational dealing and in- troduce them to the view- points of foreign experts." The Guadala ·ara 11ro- -

gram, which runs June 29 through Aug. 4, will focus on civil liberties, immigration law, and law and develop- ment. Students attending the London Institute, held at King's College, will study Comparative Corporations, Comparitive Labor Law, Government Liability, and other course topics. At Oxford's Magdalen College, a program running from July 4 through Aug, 7 will treat subjects such as alternative energy law, public international law, and international human rights. A similar session will be held July 4 through Aug. 7 in Paris. Socialist Law and

East-West Trade Law are offered in the Russia- Poland institute, June 6 through July 3. All courses are taught in English by the faculties of the institutes, which include professors from Georgetown University, Duke, New York Un- iversity, and Loyola as well as USD. A bl'ochure detailing the programs is available by writing the Institutes of In- ternational and Com- parative Law, University of San Diego Law School, Alcala Park, San Diego 92110, or by phoning 293. 4597.

Robert B. McKay, director oft e Institute of Judicial Admini:1t·ation, will deliver the commencement address Sunday at the University of San Diego School of Law Exercises at the school's stadium, starting at 10:30 a.m. The 259 members of the graduating class will witness the presentation of degrees to McKay and USO Distinguished Professor of Law Kenneth Culp Davis. Of- ficiating at the ceremonies will be Dr. Author E. Hughes, USD president, and Sheldon Krantz, dea of the law school.

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