News Scrapbook 1982-1984

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TIMES-ADVOCATE NOV 1 G J.,t',

DAILY TRANSCRIPT NOV 1 8 1982

USO teachers, students in two one-act operas More one-act operas by college musi- cians are on tap. This time the University of San Di- ego Opera Workshop will offer Sey- mour Barab's "A Game of Chance" and Jacques Offenbach's "R.S.V.P." at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and 2:30 p.m. Sunday In Camino Theater at USD, on Linda Vista Road. Robert Austin is In charge of musi· cal and stage direction, and the cast is made up of faculty and students. Tick- ets are $3.50 at the door, and $2.50 for students and senior citizens. • --~

Real Estate Tax Seminar Set By USD Law School

A New Library Building By MICHAEL SCOTT-BLAIR Educot,on Wriltr, The Son o,ego Union

more than 10 percent to over 1 mil- hon square feet and more than dou- bling the size of the campus library. In the midst of yesterday's stormy weather, the sun made one brief ap· pearance a more than 200 specta- tors watched Copley, publisher of The San Diego Union and The Tri• bunc and vice chairwoman of the USD Board of Trustees, turn the first shovelful of soil for the new library bmlding. She was aided by the Most Rev Leo T. Maher, bishop of the San (Continued on B-2, Col. 1)

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A $15 m1lhon expansion program at the Univer. ity of San Diego was kicked off yesterday with a ground· breaking for a new library building. The expan ion, which al o will in• elude a bu iness chool and confer- enc center, IS the re ult of the suc• c ful completion of a thre -year, $15 m1lhon fund-raising campaign - the university's first maJor public fund dnve campaign chairwoman Helen K Copley announced ye ter• day. The three buildings represent a massive expan. ,on of the campus, in- crea ing its pre ent floor space by

The second annual Real Estate the University of San Diego School of Law in cooperation with The State Bar of California, Taxation Section, will be held at the Hotel de! Coronado on Nov. 18 and 19. Registration for the 1982 Real Estate Tax Institute entitled, "State of the Art in Tax Planning for Real Estate." is $345. Tax Institute sponsored by

institute, of nationally recognized experts who will examine contemporary planning techniques and result-oriented solutions in four areas of real estate taxation. Of special interest to tax at- torneys, certified public ac- countants, trust officers, corporate real estate executves and investors, the Institute will explore the topics: "Planning the Real Estate Venture to Optimize Tax Benefits for the Service Partner;" "Tax Audit and Trial Techniques for Real Estate Ventures;" "Salvaging the Distressed Real Estate Venture;" and "Highlights of Major Recent Tax Cases Affecting Real Estate." Moderators for the Institute are Peter G. Aylward, of Aylward, Kintz, Stiska, Wassenaar & Shannahan; James 0. Hewitt, from the Law Offices of James O. Hewitt; Richard A. Shaw, of Shenas, Robbins, Shenas & Shaw; and Charles O. Thomas, Arthur Young & Company. Lecturers include par· ticipants from Chicago, San Fran· cisco, Beverly Hills, Houston, and Phoenix. Contact the University of San Diego for provisions for continuing legal education credit, California Department of Real Estate con- tinuing education credit and California State Board of Accounting continuing education credit. includes a panel

THE SAN DIEGO UNION

SAN DIEGO UNION NOV 1 8 1982

BLADE TRIBUNE

NOV 1 9 1982

The Son Diego Union/Joe Flynn Union, and Author E. Hughes, University of San Diego president, look at plans for a major expansion at the university.

The Most Rev. Leo T. Maher, bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Diego, left, Helen K. Copley, publisher of The San Diego

Opera Group To Present Double Bill SAN DIEGO - The Un- iversity of San Diego Opera Workshop will present a double-bill production of two onn-act operas, "A Game of Chance" by Seymour Barab and "R.S.V.P ." by Jacques Offenbach on Friday and Saturday, Nov . 19 and 20, at 8p.m. and on Sunday Nov.21 at 2:30 p.m. in Camino Theatre. General admission tickets are $3.50; senior citizens and students, $2.50. Tickets may be purchased at the door, or call 291-6480, ext. 4427 for information. The cast of USD faculty and students includes: Anne Swanke, Lourdes Babauta . Teressa Delano and David Walling in "A Game of Chance," and Cathleen Hannasch, Dino Palazzi, Paul Horton, James Capers, Anita Kuykendall, David Jarboe, and Larry William'son in "R.S.V.P ."

The Son Diego Union/Roni Golgono USO Fund-Raiser: University of San Diego st~dents attend a swap. meet on campus to ra,se money to relieve hunger in the wo rld . The event was part of an international move- ·ment t~at originated with American students atte~dmg Oxford University. Checking out offerings at the meet were Bruce Pileggi and ~artin Benitez, above, and JoAnn Thornton , right. Students participating in the anti-hun- ger program attended a Mass at noon yes- terday and began a fast last night that will end at 11 p.m. today.

Ground Is Broken For USD Library New Building Will Be First Of Three In $ l 5•Million Expansion Program

lions, but the Copley Foundation will always give strong support to institu- tions which uphold the high personal values exemplified by this universi- ty," she said. Other major benefactors of the li- brary project include the W.M. Keck Foundation of Los Angeles, $500,000; the Edyth Bush Charitable Founda- tion of Flonda, $150,000; the National Endowment for the Humanities. $400,000; the Dan Murphy Founda- tion, $100,000: and Wells Fargo Bank, $75,000. Work on thf new School of Bftsi- ness Administf-ation will begin in the spring, followed by the Manchester Executive Conference Center. He said that in 1976, the university estimated its enrollment would in- crease from slightly more than 3,000 students to approximately 5,000 by 1985, and these buildings were planned to meet that growth.

bemg educated, especially with the increasing pressure for academic specialization early in their campus life, Maher said "We offer an education that devel- ops the mind before it starts to spe- cialize the training," and library books are essential to that effort. he said. Hughes echoed Maher's thoughts, saying. "We believe that to hold a book is a far different thing from sit- ting at a computer terminal, and while the library offers and will con- tinue to seek the most contemporary (computerized) equipment, the print- ed word will never be considered outmoded at this ·ampus." Later Copley said it was this kind of philosophy that led her .,and the James S Copley Foundation to con- tribute more than $1.5 million to the new library, tn addition to spear- heading the $15 million fund drive. 'I can't speak or other corpora-

(Continued from B-1) Diego Roman Catholic Diocese and board president. and Dr Author E. Hughes, president of the university. new 38,000-square-foot library buil~ing will be immediately west of Camino Hall, which houses the pres- ent 24,000-square-foot Jame S. Cop- leY, Library When the new building is complet- ea next fall, the entire ltbrary com- plex will be renamed the Helen K. ~nd James S Copley l.ibrary, Hughes said While library expansion has been given a low prionty on other major campuses in the nation. Maher said, l!SD's move to more than double its library space is consistent with its commitment to a style of education that involves all aspects of student ltfe. ~1any young peop!P are being put hrru h univ n ie t but •hat d not n

DAILY CALIFORNIAN

EVEN ING TRIBUNE

SAN DIEGO UNION

NOV 2 0 1982

NOV 2 1. 1982

San Diego, Saturday Civil rights talk Monday at USD Clarence Pendleton Jr., chairman of the U.S. Com- mission of Civil Rights, will speak on civil rights at 12: p.m. Monday at the Univer-. sity of San Diego, School of. Law. 1 The topic of the speech,. to be given in the Joseph P' Grace Courtroom, is "Civif Rights Under Assault: Is There a Basis for Criti- cism?"

SAN DIEGO UNION llOV 1 9 198l

', California D Tuesday, November 23, 1982

USO OPERAS - The University of San Diego Opera Workshop will present Seymour Barab's "A Game of Chance" and Jacques Offen- bach's "R.S.V.P." at 2:30 p.m. today in the Camino Theater, USO. Robert Austin is music and stage director with choreography by Marilyn Green.

Success Story

Pendleton says recession spawns a new underclass

Enrollment at USD this fall topped 5,000 - a figure not ex- pected to be reached until 1985. There has been a parallel growth in the university's academic stat• ure. President Author Hughes. the Board of Trustees, and the USD faculty can take pride in their impressive achievements during a period when many institut10ns of higher learning, both public and private, were struggling to hold their own.

The $15 rrnllion expansion pro- gram getting under way at the University ot San Diego caps an unusual succes~ story m higher cducat10n Only six years ago. USD was operating at a deficit in a diffi- cult transition to independent statu after years of being subsi- dized by the Catholic Diocese of San Diego. Today the universi- ty's budget is in the black and work 1s beginning on a new il- brary business school, and con- ference center

SAN DIEGO (AP) - The nation's re- cess1on~ry economy is thwarting minorit g:oups m. their pursuit of jobs and finaJ. f~al security! according to the chairman of e U.S. Civil Rights Commission. "We're in danger of creating a per- mar:ient underclass in this country if we don t turn the economy around " said Clar~nce Pendleton, chairman ~f com- m1ss1on. Nevertheless, Pendleton, who made his remarks Monday night at a news con- ferenc~ following a speech to University of San Diego l~w students, said that the Reagan admm1_stration's economic poli- cies are a step m the right direction. "~ea~anomics makes a lot of sense to me, said_ Pendleton, who was appointed to the post by President Reagan last

spring. " He said that Reagan 's policies would get the government out of people's lives fl and _get th~ free enterprise system to ounsh agam." Pendleton said that the nation•s schools and colleges should emphasize training in high technology fields to prepare future generations for new jobs in computer- onented fields . In additi~n to the economy, Pendleton ~aid the nation must deal with the "whol issue of hate." e, "Orov_ille is just about wrecked, .. Pend- leton said, referr(ng to the case in that Nor~hern Cahforma city in which a neo- . Nazi lea_der and two youths have been accused m connection with the killing of a young follower and police informant.

SAN DIEGO UNION

NOV 2 l 7982

Founder • Gallery: "A Passion for Detail: Sculpture From the Grand Tour," through Dec. 9. Uni- versity of San Diego. Monday-Fri- day, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Wednes- days to 9 p.m.

EVENING TRIBUNE NOV 2 0 1982

Gene Klein tabbed for university board Chargers President Gene Klein has been elected to the University of San Diego's board of trustees. "We are most fortunate in having Gene Klein on the university's board," USD President Author Hughes said of the appointment. "His business acumen, his insights and his interest in the development of young men and women will be of enormous value to the university."

DAILV CALIFORNIAN NOV 1 9 1983

Animal art - "Beasts," an exhibit of animals In art form. will be on view from noon to 5 p.m. weekdays through Wednesday, Nov. 30, at the Founders Gallery, Founders Hall at the University of San Diego. Admission Is free.

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