- - - ------------ Wedesay Aris2 :08 Th Mchga Dil I 6 > he ichga Daly Weneday Apil , 008 An unwvanted leg9ac y As much as some might like to forget about them, the legacy of the Fab Five isn't going away IAN ROBINSON I DAILY SPORTS EDITOR 44WE WANTED TO MAKE SURE THAT WE HAD A LEGACY FROM WHEN WE PLAYED. THAT WAS ONE OF OUR GOALS, TALKING ABOUT IT AMONGST OURSELVES. JIMMY KING QUOTES OF THE WEEK "I would prefer he became a nice Jewish doctor or lawyer rather than an arms dealer." - MICHAEL DIVEROLI, father of Efraim Diveroli, an international arms deafer and owner of AEY, Inc., which has distributed armsand ammunition to the Afghan National Army through a contract with the U.S. government. Diveroli has been called to testify before Congress after it was found that his products were shoddy Chinese equipment from the 1960s. "He was under some stress because of the Lenten season and Easter." - FRANK PREVITE, a sergeant at the Lewiston Police Department in Ohio, explaining the three-day disappearance of New York-based pastoraCraig Rhodenizer, who was found inside an Ohio strip club. Dancers there said he had been drinking and had received 3 or 4 private dances. The Bentley Historical Library on North Campus is the deposi- tory for everything related to the University's past. Simple registra- tion and request forms will allow access to the annals of Michigan history, from Jonas Salk's research to James Angell's papers. In the basement, though, are two classified, rolled-up pieces of felt a normal visitor can't view. The banners, which read "1992 NCAA Finalist" and "1993 NCAA Finalist," were lowered from the Crisler Arena rafters after a self- imposed punishment in 2002 and remain confidential. Visitors must get permission from the Athletic Department to see them, and that permission has been granted just once - for an Associated Press reporter and accompanying pho- tographer. The banners were meant to cel- ebrate Michigan athletic achieve- ment. Fifteen years later, after scandal tainted those records, the University keeps their legacy com- pletely out of sight. That legacy, though, is inescap- able. The banners essentially repre- sent the accomplishments of the Fab Five, Michigan's freshman class of 1991 that, in two seasons, reached two NCAA Championship games and forever changed college basketball. Chris Webber, Jalen Rose, Juwan Howard, Jimmy King and Ray Jackson comprised the legendary class that was the first all-freshman starting lineup to reach the Final Four. The class also included a top NBA Draft pick, three All-Ameri- cans and four NBA Draft picks. It might be the most talented class ever, but that barely tells the story. The Fab Five transcended the game. Three of their games still rank among the five most-viewed college basketball games of all time. "Never before in the history after dunking on them, talking to the television camera, exchang- ing words with an opposing team member about to shoot a free- throw. "It's a style a lot of people don't agree witb," Webber said in an interview with The Ann Arbor News his freshman season. "The criticism is something I'm going to have to live with because I decided to play this way." The referees often disagreed with that style. Frequently charged as being too harsh on the Fab Five, the officials took offense to the antics. Veteran referee Ed Hightower, who has worked 11 Final Fours, is rumored to have called a technical foul on Rose simply because he looked at him. But Hightower has since changed his view. Now he describes Rose as "one of his favorite kids (to ref)." "They were a great group of kids who loved,- have fun," Hightower said. "You can just tell it on the floor. ... They brought a new excite- ment to the game of basketball. I'm not sure we were all ready for it at that time." While the referees took offense to the Fab Five, there was even a segment within the Michigan fan base, often referred to as the old Blues, that didn't appreciate the freshmen's pace of play and show- manship. "It was kind of a very creative approach to the game that was more akin to jazz - or to hip-hop - than to the more structured clas- sical music," said former University President James Duderstadt. "It was a completely different style of how to play basketball. Much dif- ferent than anythingthey had seen before, and people don't like to be challenged by change." These fans were unwilling to acceptchange or flamboyantbehav- ior. The Fab Five were the opposite of what the Old Blues wanted to see in Michigan athletes. TALKING POINTS Three things you can talk about this week: 1. The Fed's new Wall Street regulations 2. True Love Revolution 3. Mugabe's eroding power And three things you can't: 1. The Olympics 2. Gmail Custom Time 3. Hillary in Bosnia rBY T HE NUMBERS Criminal counts Anibal Acevedo Vila, governor of Puerto Rico, is charged with because of a campaign finance scandal Years Acevedo could be incarcerated Campaign debt, in dollars, that Vila and his associates tried to illic- itly pay off in the scandal Source:C NN "If you're going to stick it out, I'm going to hit it." - BOBBY ROGERS, a sheriff's deputy from Denver, on why he slapped his colleague on the butt after he bent down over his desk to get his keys, according to documents obtained by the Rocky Mountain News. Rogers has been suspended for 45 days after his colleague claimed he was "humili- ated" by the event YOUTUBE VIDEO OF THE WEEK Dear loser, it's over Deep inside most of us, there's a host of suppressed memories of adolescence: middle-school crushes, embarrassing breakups and home- coming drama. As much as we pretend these things never happened, they did, and that's what makes this video so funny. Called "You Make Me Touch Your Hands For Stupid Reasons," it's a dramatic reading of a letter from a teenage girl to her ex-boyfriend, tell- ing a story we all know too well. It started when the writer's former flame asked her out so they could go to the dance. The rela nship went awry, as so many middie school flir- tations do, because the guy accused her of cheating on him and called her a "slut." So she breaks u, with him. But her jilted boyfriend just won't leave her alone, so she writes him a letter to say she hates him. The humor is in the reader's deliv- ery, an amalgam of Vincent Price's dramatic flair and Strom g Bad's blus- ter. Thereadermockstheletter'spoor grammar, punctuation and spelling, putting extra emphasis on needlessly capitalized words and speaking mis- spelled words ("bastert," "jealouse") phonetically. With lines like "you make me touch your hands for stupid reasons you accidentally say you hugged me I will never like you again," the line could be bad free verse written in a creative writingeclass. Then again, it could be emo lyrics. Either way, it's something the writer would rather cram deep down into her soul and forget forever. - GABE NELSON See this and other YouTube videos ofthe week at youtube.com/user/michigandaily of the game had there been five freshmen who were able to create that much excitement," said Billy Packer, who has covered the last 34 Final Fours for CBS Sports. Butthe NCAA banners represent much more than on-court achieve- ments. "I think for Michigan, overall, they have been an immensely posi- tive image," Athletic Director Bill Martin said. Packer and other sports com- mentators, though, have a darker view of the feats marked by those banners. "Had they won (a championship) and what transpired thereafter, they would have been remembered as one of the black marks in NCAA history," Packer said. "They and Michigan are probably lucky they didn't win that game." The banners represent the group's lasting impact on college basketball and how, 15 years later, it is still misunderstood. A NEW ATTITUDE Before they played a preseason contest, the Fab Five already brought a different attitude to the game. In practices, they would play "freshman against y'all" scrim- mages with their teammates. Even, on a Michigan team that returned four starters, they clearly were the five most talented players in the gym. And if their teammates didn't know it, the Fab Five would tell them about it - with trash talk, showboating and gamesmanship. The rest of the world would soon learn about those exploits. Rose and Webber, who were good friends in Detroit, were also recruited by straight-laced, tra- ditional college basketball pow- ers such as Duke, Kentucky and Indiana, where that kind of show- manship would have been unim'- inable. But because the duo came -o Michigan together, their familiar- ity allowed their true personalities to shine through. The in-your-face persona the Fab Five's leader ald point guard, Rose, played with it at Detroit Southwestern High School came to Ann Arbor with him. And the other three quickly embraced that style. During media day of their fresa- man season, Howard proclaimed, "We are on a mission." College athletes rarely make those claims. For a freshman to do it is almost unheard of. And with this "shock the world" mentality, they exploded onto the college basketball scene. Their antics became famous: dancing on the scorer's table, stomping on the opposing tean*3 center-court emblem after a road win, staring down opponents THEME PARTY SUGGESTION Hallway hockey - The hockey team is headed to the Frozen Four for the first time since 2003. In order to prepare for the semifinals, you should find a suitable hallway and some devout hockey fans and play a combative game of knee-hockey. Divide yourselves up into the four teams, but make sure to stack Michigan with all the most aggressive players. Forbid people from calling penalties and encourage them to slash. Let the games begin. Throwing this party? Let us know. TheStotement@umich.edu STUDY OF THE WEEK Lack of Internet access causes anxiety A majority of Americans experience some form of anxiety when they are deprived of Internet access or wireless for an extended period of time, accordingto a study published by Solutions Research Group. The group interviewed 4,994 Americans aged 12 and older, asking several questions about internet usage and then rating the participants by considering factors like the intensity of their engagement with the media and their total time spent online. The group concluded that 68 percent of people suffer from "Discon- nect Anxiety," a term the researchers coined. Forty-one percent of those affected are 12 to 24 years old, and 50 percent are 25 to 49 years old. Four main reasons to explain this anxiety are safety, work, social and navigation, according to the study. For those who are anxious because of work, 63 percent of Blackberry users said they have used their phone in the bathroom. Thirty-seven percent reported thattheyuse their laptops "frequently" in the bedroom. - BRIAN TENGEL