The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, April 2, 1997 -11 ears of frustration culminate in championship for Olson INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Arizona's last road trip was better than any vaca- tion Lute Olson could have imagined. With only one starter returning and a freshman at point guard, the Arizona coach figured early on it was safe for him and his wife, Bobbi, to take a vaca- tion this week. The week turned out like no other. Olson was flying back to Tucson yester- day with his Wildcats, the champions of college basketball. Arizona beat Kentucky, 84-79, in overtime Monday for its first national title and became the first team to defeat three No. 1 seeds. "We've had other teams here, out- standing teams, more experienced teams." Olson said. "But I'm just so proud of these guys. It's been a never- say-die group. They've had faith in themselves, they've had faith in their teammates." No one, not even Olson and his play- ers, could have predicted this kind of run when the season began. The Wildcats (25-9) had lost four starters, and Miles Simon, the only returning starter, was academically ineligible for the first I1 games. Olson knew his team was good, but he also knew it was untested. He fig- ured this would be a warmup year, a time for the Wildcats to get some expe- rience so they could contend for the NCAA title next season. That was how most of the season went. Arizona lost four of its last eight games, and finished fifth in the Pac-10, the worst since Olson's first season at Arizona in 1983-84. It was seeded fourth in the Southeast Regional, but top-ranked Kansas - the favorite for the NCAA title - loomed in the regional semifinal. Then something unexpected hap- pened in the tournament: Arizona refused to lose. There were comeback victories in the first and second rounds, the shocking upset of Kansas and an overtime victory over Providence in the regional final. Once the Wildcats got to the Final Four, they acted like it was their person- al playground game. They saw the sights like fans, had a food fight during their team dinner Friday and went about their business like this was any other game. "We had nothing to lose," Arizona guard Mike Bibby said. Even with leading scorer Michael Dickerson having an off night, there were no jitters as they beat North Carolina, another No. 1 seed, 66-58 in the semifinal. In the title game, Arizona shredded Kentucky's vaunted fullcourt press, and then put on some pretty good defense of its own. Kentucky's All-American forward Ron Mercer was held to three points in the first half, and finished with 13. So how did the Arizona players cele- brate? By mussing up Olson's impecca- bly coiffed hair, something they'd been wanting to do all season. "It still doesn't seem like it's real. To have such a young team, I'm surprised we made it this far," Arizona forward Bennett Davison said. "All we kept.say- ing is, 'We can't believe we're there. We're such a longshot.' But we dickit as a family." Now that the Wildcats have their title, the focus immediately turns to next year. Their top eight players are back, and they're likely to be the preseason No. 1 choice. Work Across Differences AP PHOTO One day after winning his first national title, Arizona coach Lute Olson proudly ois s the championship trophy before the Wildcat faithful. UM Korean Studies Program Winter 1997 Colloquium Series "Place-Based Imagination: Globalism and the Politics of Place" ARIF DIRLIK Professor of History, Duke University Wednesday, April 2, 1997 4:00 - 6:00 pm Lane Hall Commons Room Professor Dirlik specializes in Modern Chinese History. This presentation will look into the relationship between globalism and place-based politics, examine some of the politically varied manifestations of the concern with place, and discuss the counterhegemonic possibilities place-based politics offers as an alternative to life under global capitalism. Note: This is the last Korean Studies Colloquium for Winter 1997, Please join us! Dialogues among different groups: - Women & Men - People of Color & White People - Lesbians, Gay Men, Bisexuals & Heterosexuals - Jews & Christians - Women of Color & White Women Intergroup Dialogues are face-to-face meetings of individuals from a variety of identity groups. Dialogues, readings, experiential exercises and journals are incorporated into the process of working across anc within lines of difference and similarity. Have you participated in an Intergroup Dialogue or a FIG Seminar? Do you want to know where to go from here? Friday October 24-Sunday October 26 Applications available at the IGRCC office, due April 9 For further information contact: The Program on Intergroup Relations, Conflict and Community 3000 Michigan Union 93-1875 / IGRCCumich Adu R See executive. He has a job opening. See college graduate. He has a tattoo. to tattooed college graduate. Surprised? Don't be. Because it's not what you wear. "'C' 90 percent of Fortune 500 companies run Microsoft.Office: *Computer Intelligence, 1996