News Scrapbook 1980-1981

EVENII\IG TRIBUNE

1 Aztecs turn corner against BYU, hit the road

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SENTINEL

FEBlb Toreros to host tourney The University of San Diego men's tennis team will host the eighth annual San Diego In- le r co11 e g i ate Invi- tational, one of the na- tion's premier college tennis tournaments, beginning tomorrow. Entered are such national powers as No. 3 ranked USC, No. 4 Pepperdine and No. 5 UCLA. The tournament will be held at USD and the San Diego Tennis and Racquet Club tomorrow and Friday, then shift to the Morley Field Tennis Center in Balboa Park for Saturday's finals. The event will run from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. each day. (See TENNIS, B-2) Tennis- (Continued from B-1 ) Five All-Americans are expected to par- ticipate including USD's Scott Lipton, who lost in the No. 1 seed finals last year. The Toreros Peter Herrman will be back to try and win the No. 2 seed singles for the se- cond straight time, while teammate Chris Jochum will try to avenge last year's No. 3 seed loss in the finals. USC is the defending champion and will bring such notables as La Jolla'a Jack Druger, San Diego junior champion Roger Knapp and Billy Nealon. UCLA will be led by Robbie Venter, Marcel Freeman and Blaine Willenborg.

Portland last Thursday night, fell to Gonza_ga two nights later 68-54 m Spo- kane, Wash. USD, now 2-7 in the West Coast Athletic Conference and 9-12 overall, received 12 pomts from center Dave Heppell and 10 from for- ward Bob Bartholomew. The Toreros lost it at the free-throw line, where they were outscored 28-8. USD will be on the road for its next two games - at the University of San Fran- cisco Friday and St. Mary's Saturday.

Alter scoring perhap bigge t victory in in Western Athletic Conference play, San Diego State's basketball team only hopes things are on the three year its

College basketball

SAN DIEGO NEWSLINE

W The Aztecs defeated 15th- and 11-10 on the year. •· e ranked Brigham Young played just as well against University Saturday night Utah - maybe even better 73-72 m the Sports Arena, defensively - but we shot and that up ·et wm came the ball better against BYU. after they played well la t Thts is the biggest win smce Thursday in a 63-52 loss to I've been here. the University of Utah's "The crowd (6,883 fans) sixth-ranked Utes. was behind us. Thal was It was the best the Aztecs like a sixth man for us to- have played m the two night. We played well, but I years Dave Gaines has been thought Tony. Gwynn at the helm. and the coach the difference m the game. see better things ahead Gwynn, San Diego State's "You might say we've senior guard, played_ pe~- turn d the corner, but I haps hi finest game m his thought we turned the cor- four years on Montezuma ner against Utah," said Mesa He scored 21 pomts. Game', whose club upped hitting nine of his 10 shots, it record to 4-7 in the WAC dished out 10 assists and did

not turn the ball over in the second half when the San D1egans desperately were hanging on to a lead. In fact. the Aztecs held a 10-point advantage with 57 seconds to play in the game and almost watched it slip away from them as Danny Amge, BYU's All-America guard. took charge down the stretch He ended the evening with a game-high 27 points. San Diego State will hit the road again this week- end. traveling to Nevada- Las Vegas Friday night and then to Colorado Springs for a Saturday night contest with Air Force. The Aztecs return home Feb. 24 for a game against the Universi- ty of Hawaii.

FEB 1 8

-The first USD business seminar this I year will be held at the Executive Hotel from 7 ·30-9 AM. $15 registration 293 4585. . •

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Meanwhile, the U niversi- ty of San Diego's basketball team, after finding success again t the University of

Tl MES-ADVOCATE FEB : 8 1981 Symposium on behavior to focus on children SAN DIEGO - The Sixth Annual

TIMES-ADVOCATE FEB : 7 1981

losers; it's all a matter of playing skills." Bahr received bis B.A., M.A. and D.B.A. degrees from George Wash- ington University. He has taught at the University of Southern California as well as at George Washington and at three mWtary colleges. His experi- ence includes consulting for govern- ment and industry. Additional seminars in the UP- DATE series are as follows: Feb. '17, Productivity Crisis and Tomorrow's Managers; March 6, Tools for Im- proving Interpersonal Effectiveness; March 13, Real ... state Invest.Ing for the OOvertaxed Professional; March 20, Tax Shelters; March '17, Negotia- tion Strategies; April 3, strategies and Sltills for Career Success; and April 10, Business Cycle Development 1n the eos.

"Strategies for Growth in the 80s" will be the subject in the first of the University of San Diego's UPDATE breakfast seminars on Friday, Feb. 20, from 7:30 to 9 a.m. at the Execu- tive Hotel in downtown San Diego. The speaker is Dr. Fred Bahr, Associ- ate Professor of Management at USO. UPDATE is a series of eight semi- nars designed for women and men in bwiiness and sponsored by USD's School of Business Administration every Friday morning through April 10. Advance registration is required. Series tickets and group rates are available, and single sessions are $15. "Growth strategies In the IIOs will be increasingly dominated by the risk component in evaluating bwiiness op- portunities," says Dr. Bahr. "There will be bigger winners and bigger

eral public and $12.50 to students; lunch and dinner are Included. The symposiummay be taken for credit at an additional cost of $25. For details, call 293-4586. The program is sponsored Jointly by USD's School of Education and Office of Continuing Education. It is divided In t,vo parts, with a pre-symposium workshop on Friday, from 4 to 10 p.m.; and the keynote address on Sat- urday at 9 a.m., followed by 10 workshops which will be repeated again In the afternoon.

Symposium on Behavior and Leam- ing Disorders will be held at the Uni- versity of San Diego Fridlly and Sat- urday, /.pril 3 and 4, In the board room of De Sales Hall.. The symposium's focus will be "Llvlng In the ·Real World: Realistic Approaches to the Instruction of Chil- dren with Behavioral and Learning Disorders." Advance registration is requested. Fees for each day are: $25 to the gen-

UPDATE • series featured

SENTINEL

SAN DIEGO NE-WSLINE

FEB 1 USD's Ricciardulli will be honored

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TIMES-ADVOCATE FEB 1 9 1981

of what USD athletics is all about," said coach Bill Williams. "It's been a pleasure to watch him grow academically, socially and athletically here at USD and become such a well- rounded human being." The Pittsburgh native joins three other Toreros who were named as the NCAA College Divsion III Scholar-Athletes of the Year- running back Steve Goodbody, 1977; linebacker Barney Rumps, 1978; and free safety George Calandri, 1979. Ricciardulli will join the USO football staff this fall and work with the inside linebackers.

- The '"Princess of Black Poetry", Nikki Giovanni _will speak and read her poetry at USD in Cam,no Hall at 6.30 PM. Ticket, are $1, non-student, 50 cents students. 291-6480.

Guy Ricciardulli, USD's defensive player of the year this past football season, will be honored for his out- standing academic and athletic achievements March 6. Ricciardulli will be one of the guests of honor at the National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame's Scholar-Athlete Awards Banquet honoring San Diego County's college and high school student- athletes. A pre-law major, he maintained a 3.8 grade point average at USD while captaining the football team and •working part-time. "Guy is a living model

BUSINESS BRIEF B Economy series begins Friday

'17, he will tell his secrets for negotiat- ing. "Strategies and Skills for Career Success" will be presented April 3 by Dennis Briscoe, a Ph.D. and assistant professor of management and person- nel. He will tell what skills business- men need to manage their careers, and will suggest ways to assess them- selves, to find.Jobs and to move up the organizational ladder. On April 10 Charles Holt, Ph.D. and associate professor of economics, will end the series with "Business Cycle Development In the 80s." Holt will put today's Inflationary economy In per- spective and predict what's ahead in the 1980s. The price of individual sessions is $15 each, The full series costs $10&. A group discollJlt is available. The breakfast meetings will run from 7i30 to 9 a.m. each Friday and will include a continental-style breakfast. Advance registration is requested, since space Is limited. The sessions will be held at the Executive Hotel board room, 1055 First Ave. Call 293- 4585 or contact the USD Office of Con- tinuing Education for more infonna- tion, or to register.

ment. Hunsaker, the series organizer, will tell how matching behavior to in- tentions can lead to success at work and in personal life. She will also tell bow to improve relationships by seek- Ing responses from others and being blunt. "Real Estate Investing for the Breakfast seminars to tell how businessl'nen can cut taxes and improve careers Overtaxed Professional" will be the March 13 topic of Donald Helmich. He is a Ph.D. and professor of business administration. He will tell how high- Income professionals can cut their In- come taxes. "Everything You've Always Want- ed to Know About Tax Shelters, But Were Afraid to Ask" will be the March 20 topic. James Daniels, Ph.D. and associate professor of account- ing, will tell bow tax shelters work and how to make the most of them. "Negotiation Strategies - How to Get What You Want," will be the topic of Gary Whitney, Ph.D. and assistant professor of management. On March

SAN DIEGO - A series of business breakfast talks will be given on eight consecutive Fridays beginning today. The first topic is "Strategies for Growth" In the BOs. It will be present- ed by Fred Bahr, DBA and associate professor of management. (The Uni- versity of San Diego Office of Continu- ing Education is sponsoring the lec- ture series; all eight speakers are USD professors.) Bahr will talk about bow businesses must consider risks in evaluating opportunities. Because of greater investments needed to do business, there will be bigger winners and losers in the future. ''It's a matter of playing skills," Bahr said. "The Productivity Crisis and To- morrow's Managers" will be the topic of the Feb. '17 lecture, given by Cyn- thia Pavett, Ph.D. and assistant pro- fessor of organized behavior. She will talk about the nation's low productlvi· ty in recent years. She also will pres• ent recommendations of leading man- agement theorists on how to reverse the decline. "Tools for Improving Interpersonal Effectiveness" will be presented March 6 by Phillip Hunsaker, OBA and associate professor of manag-

LEMON GROVE REVIEW

l ---- Friday Rugby Game At USO for Charity Univer~ity of SD presents its first annual charity rugby game Friday at USD's foot- J-oall stadium at 7 p.m. USD will ho. t U. of British Columbia in a confrontation identified as "The Great Rug- by Match." Tickets will be available the day of the game.

READER

FE.B~o1

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Sports College Tennis, th, eighth annual San Diego Inrcrrnllegiat.:, lnvi1a- t1onal Tennis Tournament spon- sored by U '[) and the San Vieg11 Unum. will feature sixteen teams 111cluJ1ng th~ Jefondingchampions U 'C, Thu"day, Fcbruaq 19 and Fridav, Fchruary 20, USO and San D1ei.:o Tennis & Rac4uct Club, 4848 Tecolotc Road. San Diego; and Saturday, Februal) 21, Morley Field tennis center, Balboa Park. Free. 291-6480 x4272.

TIMES-ADVOCATE

POETRY READING Poet and columnlst Nikki Giovanni will speak and read her poetry at 8:30 p.m., Feb. 19 In Camino Hall, USO.

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