T Michigan spirit and spirits remain solid A city upon a hill. There's some historical significance to that simple little phrase, I think. Something about the Puritans. Or maybe it was a quote from Thomas Jefferson. Whatever. It's just another random offering from my education, something I learned somewhere along the line in high school or in college. The point? Well, basically, that I found it. Perched at the highest point on campus, tucked away near the back of Forest Hill Cemetery, is that city upon a hill. That place - a shrine, if you will - where the mystique of two distinct colors and a fight song originates. I WISH TO REST WHERE THE SPIRIT OF MICHIGAN IS WARMEST That is the inscription on the tombstone next to the John grave of Fielding Harris Yost, a man who lives in/N/ Michigan lore as coach of the legendary Wolverine "point-a-minute" football squads. Not far away - facing Yost's tombstone in fact - is that of another Maize and Blue hero, Bob Ufer, a man who will always be remembered as the voice of Michi- gan football and as the torchbearer for something called the Michigan spirit. We paid them a visit recently. Being seniors -two of us - suddenly on the verge of graduation, we felt it was the least we could do. 0 Pay them a visit. Check in, in a way, before checking out. """ Four years ago - it seems like yesterday, really - I came to this Univer- sity knowing that football was king, basketball was a newly crowned champ, and that I was about to become a part of it all. College, of course, means different things to different people. But for me, and for countless others, the football Saturdays and the Final Fours are what will stay with me forever. There will be others, sure. But few memories, at least for this Wolverine, will stand out more blatantly than these five: The Fab Five's First Final Four: Yes, it ended with a disheartening thud. But the adrenaline rush they provided on the way was, in a word, fabulous. I remember See SPIRIT, Page 11 ENDER EQUITY showed repeatedly that they did things only one way -theirs. Women's soccer in, men's gymnastics out. That was the decision made by the athletic department in or- der to comply with the Big Ten's gender equity policy. Feelings abounded both yea and nay. Soccer players are now preparing for their move from club to varsity status while the gymnastics team ponders its future. HOCEY 7 David Roberts (bottom) and the rest of the Michigan hockey team certainly left a legacy for future skaters to follow. Although the CCHA title never materialized, the team marched through the NCAAs until its semifinal round meeting with Maine. The Black Bears dispatched the Wolverines in over- time in a classic college hockey battle. Overall, it was a great season for Michi- gan puck as the team won 30 games for the third straight year. F OOTBALL 3 Tailback Tyrone Wheatley (top) led a Wolverine charge in Michigan's Rose Bowl victory over the favored Washington Huskies. That, however, was not the only storyline during the 1992 football season. The team won its fifth straightBig Ten cham- pionship, made up for the loss of Heisman trophy winner Desmond Howard and survived amidseason quar- terback controversy. GYMNASTICS 4 It was a tale of two programs last season for the men's and women's gymnastics teams. The women won their second straight Big Ten champi- onship andfinished ninth attheNCAAs. Beth Wymer led the way for the tum- blers and was named All-American for the second year in a row. The men did not fare nearly as well. Numerous inju- ries, lack of experience and news of the team's impending elimination proved to be too much for the men to handle. WIMMING 5 The Big Ten title is becoming an afterthought for the Michigan swim teams. The men captured the confer- ence crown and then placed second at the NCAAs behind untouchable Stanford. The women grabbed their Big Ten championship before placing fifth at the NCAA meet. Marcel Wouda and Aussie imnort Lam Hooiveld led the B ASEBALL 8 The Michigan baseball team struggled through a difficult start to its season, going 6-24 in its first 30 games. The hurlers regained their composure in the second half of the year to avoid repeating the disaster of 1992. Unlike the previous season when the team posted a school record for most losses, 1993 saw coach Bill Freehan and his Wolverines right the ship to finish 25- 30. XVRESTLING All-Americans Sean Bormet and Steve King guided the Michigan wrestling team to an 11th place finish at the NCAA tournament in 1993. The wrestlers were plagued by injuries all season long but managed to put in a solid effort for head coach Dale Bahr. LLEYBALLIO V WOMEN' S EVAN PETRIE/Dally Greg Giovanazzi began his career as head coach of the Michigan women's volleyball team in 1992. The team reacted well to the personnel change, posting a 15-7 overall record. The Wolverines came up short in their bid for an invitation to the NCAA tournament but served notice that they i Im