Wednesday, March 14. THE MICHIGAN DAILY V®ge Nine Wednesday, March ~l ~I. THE MICHIGAN DAILY i~age Nine Michigan Men's Glee Club BRUINS EVERYONE'S FAVORITE: UCLA Cla s 7 directed by WILLIS C. PA T TERSON By BRIAN DEMING The UCLA national tournament is underway and it's the Bruins against the world. The UCLA na- tional tournament, formally known as the NCAA Championship tourna- ment, began last Saturday and for the seventh-straight year it appears that no one will disturb the omni- potent basketball kings from Los Angeles. "My optimism going into the NCAA playoffs is about the same' as last year's-I wouldn't trade my chances with anyone," says John Wooden, head honcho of the mighty Uclans. Wooden's charges - Bill Walton, Keith Wilkes, Larry Holly- field and company-begin their an- nual journey to triumph Thursday' I against Western Athletic Confer- ence champion Arizona State. To earn the dubious opportunity to challenge UCLA, the Sun Devils whipped Oklahoma City 102-78 in the opening round of the tourney. In other first round action in the west regional, Pacific Coast Athletic Association titlist and third ranked Long Beach State scored a 88-75 victory over Weber State, Big Sky Conference repre- sentative. Long Beach State will encounter West Coast Athletic Conference winner San Fran- , cisco, Thursday. In the Mideast regional at Day- ton, Saturday, fifth ranked Mar- quette topped Mid-American Con- ference champion Miami of Ohio, 77-62, while Austin Peay, Ohio Val- ley representative, upset Jackson- ville 77-75. "Marquette does not have the one dominating player like two years ago, but has a starting five that is better," remarked Miami coach Darrell Hedrick after Mar- quette humbled his Redskins. The Warriors from Milwaukee will show down with Big Ten Champ Indiana tomorrow night at Vanderbilt. Austin Peay lost a 15-point half- time lead in the closing minutes of their game against Jacksonville but won on a tie-breaking shot by freshman James "Fly" Williams with four seconds left. The Gov- ernors from this Tennessee college will face Kentucky of the South- eastern Conference after the In- diana-Marquette game at Vander- bilt. In the Midwest Regional South Carolina eliminated Southwest Conference champion Texas Tech 78-70 and Southwestern Louisiana dumped Houston 102-89. The second round of the Midwest regional will take place tomorrow night at Houston where South Caro- lina will face Memphis State, Mis- souri Valley Conference champ, and Southwestern Louisiana will take on Kansas State of the Big Eight Conference. Kansas State clinched the Big Eight crown last Saturday when it drubbed Colorado 76-66 while Missouri downed Nebraska 86-70 to ;ic' proceeds earn a berth in the National In- dence soundly gained vi vitational Tournament. St. Joseph's, Pennsylvan Eighth-ranked Maryland will be- first round game. gin their bid for the NCAA crown Penn's Ivy League when they face Syracuse tomorrow champions came from b night in Charlotte, North Carolina. losing a nine-point leadt The Terps defeated Syracuse ear- John's 62-61 in the tour lier this season 90-76. round. Representing the Atlantic Coast The discipline, the coa Conference, Maryland replaces un- talent of UCLA makes t defeated and second-ranked North by any assessment, u Carolina State. N.C. State is in- With the absence of the r eligible because of a one-year pro- ising challenger, North bation imposed by the NCAA for State, the Bruin fortress alleged basketball recruiting ir- pregnable. But Goliath regularities. structable, the Titanic w, Led by Ernie DiGregorio with 25 able, and Thomas Dewey points in the second half, Provi- dent. ctory over nia, in its basketball ehind after to beat St. ney's first aching, the he Bruins, unbeatable. most prom- Carolina seems im- was inde- 'as unsink- was resi- SPRI Gd Co CERT Wolfpack, 49ers trail Walton andCo. in poii LOS ANGELES (I)-For the fifth said that now, with the regular time, UCLA has been voted thea season over, "teams 'aren't going No. 1 college basketball team in to be on a crusade to beat us. In the land in The Associated Press' the regular season, if someone had final poll and for the fifth time beaten us, they'd have celebrated John Wooden says: as if they'd won the national cham- "It's very pleasing, but you know pionship. But it's sudden death for the real national championship will everybody now." be decided on the court." Everybody, that is, except North Wooden says polls are more Carolina State, the nation's No. 2 meaningful in football, where teams teah, which is ineligible for post- don't usually play each other. He season play because of recruiting Saturddy, March 24-8:30 P.M. Hill Auditorium TICKET SALES BEGIN, TODAY!!!! $1-$2-$3 at Hill Box Office, 9-5 M-S S0F E JOUR ALISS The UNIVERSITY OF' MICHIGAN CENTER FOR RUSSIAN AND EAST EUROPEAN STUDIES annlflOun Ces its course offering for the Fall Term 395 SURVEY OF THE SOVIET UNION-an inter- disciplinary survey of the history, politics, government, economy, social institutions, literature and arts of the Soviet Union and its relations with the rest of the world. 4 credits 1. 2.1 .3.1 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.1 9.1 10. 11. 12. 13.1 14. 15.1 16., 17.1 18. 19. UCLA (28) N. Carolina St. (3) Long Beach St. Providence Marquette Indiana SW Louisiana (1', Maryland Kansas State Minnesota N. Carolina Memphis St. Houston Syracuse Missouri Arizona St. Kentucky Pennsylvania (tie) Austin Peay San Francisco V 1V1dWAR,/ The Top 20 26-0 27-0 25-2 25-2 24-3 19-5 23-3 22-6 22-4 20-4 22-7 21-5 23-4 23-4 21-5 19-7 19-7 20-5 22-5 22-4 632 578 477 409 394 288 212 200 197 179 130 129 114 112 62 37 35 29 27 27 LL FFER GS, Get 'r A in the Groove Groovy \\rARoom The following are among the Journalism Department classes for fall term for which adequate published descriptions are not otherwise available. A full listing is in the pre-classifica- tion time schedule. 400-level courses are primarily for un- dergraduates; 500-level are open to both undergraduates and graduates; 700 and 800-level courses are primarily for gradu- ate students, but can be elected by undergraduates with per- mission of instructor.. 500-007 IMMIGRANT PRESS (Marzolf) T3.6 A cultural analysis of the foreign-language press in 19th and 20th Century America. This seminar will examine the growth and decline of the foreign-language press and its response to immigration, assimilation, restriction, prejudice, and selected political and social issues. The press of old and new immi- grant groups and the new ethnic "cause" papers will be cov- ered. (2 credits) 500-14 THE MASS AUDIENCE (Robinson) M3-5 This seminar will explore the functioning of television and newspapers in delivering news and entertainment. The inter- play of the media and other societal institutions will be con- sidered, on such matters as transmitting information, promot- ing societal change inculcating values and stereotypes, chang- ing uses of leisure, socializing children, and influencing con- sumer and voting behavior. (2 credits. 761 CONTEMPORARY PER- SPECTIVES IN MASS COM- MUNICATION RESEARCH (Kline) time to be arranged. This seminar focuses on the breadth of the field of mass com- munication research. The contemporary trends of research, past accomplishments, models of research, and the special tools that are germane to communication problems will be discussed. Individual or team projects will be organized around issues arising from the seminar discussions. (2 credits} 750 INTERPRETING THE ARTS (Field) MF1:30-3 Thi is~ n wAitinnr nt f*C for +kC4 a ,rpfaA in ,writinn n rkai i 500-009 POPULAR CULTURE (Stevens) T10-12 After preliminary discussions about the nature of the media as mass culture, each student will prepare a seminar report on some aspect, such as sports and the media, children's pro- gramming, comics or the lovelorn columns as reflections of contemporary values, genres in literature or the movies. (2 credits 500-017 COMMUNICATION & INNOVATION (Rogers) time to be arranged The class will study how ideas, products, and practices per- ceived as new by an individual, diffuse to the members of the social system. What accounts for the rate of adoption, what attributes are central to the diffusion process, who are the innovators? These questions will form a major part of the seminar. Class requirements will be determined at the first meeting. (2 credits: 805 HISTORY OF MASS COM- MUNICATIONS (Stevens) Th10-12 This seminar introduces concepts, techniques and materials of mass communications history and permits the student to do substantive historical research. It is NOT an overview of me- dia history; rather it concentrates on a specific area. This [C rm that focus will be on the comic strips. Students can ap- p oach their history from many directions. Guest speakers, archive visits, short projects, and one major paper, (3 credits, 406 MASS COMMUNICATION RESEARCH (Kline) MWF9 plus discussions. This lecture/discussion class will pose major questions of the rnh- f temacc mrlinin the acar- ii, ovmi i nrlnrm nn irn Mozartmania A must for all Mozart lovers-an evening with the Moz- arteum Orchestra of Salzburg, under the direction of Leopold Hager, in an all-Mozart program sampling the chamber, op- eratic, symphonic, and choral works of this great master. Rita Streich, renowned soprano, appears as soloist in the first half of the program, and again as one of four vocalists in the second half. Following intermission, Donald Bryant conducts the 100- voice Festival Chorus of the University Choral Union in the "Coronation' Mass. Joining Miss Streich, are four University School of Music faculty members: Rosemary Russell, con- tralto; John McCollum, tenor; Ralph Herbert, baritone; and Marilyn Mason, organist. - PROGRAM - Divertimento in F for Strings "L'amero saro costante" from Il Re Pastore "Deh vieni non tardar" from Le Nozze di Figaro Symphony No. 40 in G minor "Coronation" Mass for Mixed Chorus, Soloists and Orchestra 6WAIVER SITY 'I I i I