THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAnV F4Fv rn3yA l LVL I Three By GIL SAMBERG So what's so different about Dave Fisher? He doesn't look like a football player? Well, who does nowadays? He's 5'10," weighs 215 pounds! and can run the hundred in 10 seconds? Well, did you ever see a slow cannonball? He's got a Mercury that looks like the Fourth of July? Well, he got it in an even-up trade for a sports car and decided to paint it red . . then blue . .. then add some maize. . . It's just a matter of taste. Yards and ai Cloud of Dust He's in Structural Engineering and carrying a 3.3 gradepoint while doubling as a varsity full- back? Well, his number's 33 and it sounds good and ... But all double-takes aside, Dave Fisher is a football player who loves the game and plays it hard and well. Listen to him: "I can't wait to get out on that field. It's like you gave me a big ice-cream sundae, or a pretty girl.? I don't know. It's just that I love to play. . "I get psyched up for every, game. I take them all seriously because I don't like to lose. . . "And you get out there and your heart pounds faster, and then they call your play. You get eager. It's something that you just can't express to someone. You've got to feel it yourself." Three Yards and a.. . Fisher is a heavy-duty fullback in the old Ohio State tradition, an odd combination of balance, power, and more speed than he has any right having. And it's all lumped together on a compact low-slung frame. "He can be a real workhorse back," says Michigan head coach Bump Elliott. "He's reasonably fast getting up to the hole, has good overall speed. But his biggest asset is balance. When he gets hit he can shake a man off and stay on his feet." Fisher figures that being short affects him to varying degrees. "Because of the way I'm built," he says, "I'm stronger lower to the ground. When a big lineman has to come down to get me he can't use all of his power. He has to lose something." Usually it's Fisher. "But on the other hand, when I have to block I can't be as effec- tive trying to bring down one of those big guys." Sore Spot And it is here that we hit a very sore spot. It is probably the sore spot. Blocking a la Fisher has never been used in instructional films. From where he started when he got to Michigan any way he went had to be up. As his father once put it, "Blocking was not what they wanted him to do in high school." Back at Fairmont High in Ket- tering, Ohio, Fisher, besides foot- ball, played basketball and cap- tained his track team as a sprint- er ("My fastest time for the hun- dred was 9.9, but that was about 15 pounds ago."): On his way to a high school All-America rating and MVP of the 1963 Ohio State all-star game, his family realized that they wouldn't be paying for their son's college education. Little Things It was the little things that told them . . . like the fact that little Davey never lost a yard on the playing field (you remember how he dislikes losing). And it always seemed as if every college in the country that enrolled 10 other men wanted him to make use of their educational facilities. Anyhow, they bought Fisher a sports car in his junior year. "Well one night I was out with my folks' car (the Mercury) and I, uh, sort of smashed it up a little," he tells it. A little later he repeated the stunt with the same car. "My Dad just traded me that one for the sports car." Colorful Car And after it had gone through a few coats of paint and come out of its red (and I do mean red) period, Fisher gave it a blue look in the beginning of last summer. But by the end of the season it had become a true Wolverine bandwagon. But there was still the school to choose. On this one it really went down to the wire. "I knew that I wanted to go to a Big Ten school if I could," he says. "My Mother got her Masters in Music here, but she didn't put any, pressure on me. My Dad wanted me to go to Purdue. Neither one of them wanted me to go to Ohio State." Almost a Buckeye But Fisher knew about OSU, and he knew about how they play-'1 ed their fullbacks. "Three yards and a cloud of dust" appealed to, him. Besides that, some of his friends and a girl friend were headed for Columbus come gradu- ation. With less than two weeks to go before he had to sign a letterj of intent his family was still argu- ing about a choice. In -the end Jack Fouts (former Michigan offensive line coach) HELP WANTED AT DOMINO'S We're happy! DOMINO'S PIZZA is enjoy- ing unsurpassed popularity. To meet the demand, we are expanding our entire pizza service to keep our customers happy too. We need HELP! EARN EXTRA MONEY Take advantage of our full and part-time employment opportunities. Apply in person at 301 West Cross Street or call HU 3-8000 or NO 5-5705 for appointment. DOMINO' PIZZA --Daily-Jim Lines FULLBACK DAVE FISHER powers his way through the Purdue line en route to a first down in Saturday's losing battle against the Boilermakers. The 5'14," 215-pound junior has led all Mich- igan rushers this year with 238 yards in 63 carries. \ i 100% WOOL C.P.O. SHIRTS In Navy or Burgundy... $7.95 NEW SHIPMENT-STOCK LIMITED TURTLE NECK "T" SHIRTS, all colors ... $1.69 I .1 r M LEVI'S GALORE for Guys and Gals... $4.25 up I I mA 122 E. WASHINGTON ST. OPEN MON. & FRI. NIGHTS -NJ Walking History Of a Dead Soldier Ron Zinn was a soldier. He grew up in Illinois, went to West Point, and got shipped to Viet Nam. In Southeast Asia, he was just one of many. He was an American with a rifle. He was faceless, voiceless and meaningless. When he died last July, no one cared in the Eastern world and no one cared in the West. There was no cry of mourning in America; no flags were lowered to half mast, and few headlines carried his name. He was just another good kid who lost his life in a dirty war. Too bad. Ron Zinn was born to walk, not to creep and crawl behind enemy lines. If he was born to battle, it was against the Russians in the Olympics, not against a guerrilla in the middle of a jungle. Ron Zinn was the greatest walker in American history. He ex- celled in that funny looking sport where people have to stride like ostriches to make sure their heels hit the ground before the balls of their feet. He finished sixth in the Toyko Olympics, and he was the first American to beat a Russian. There's something strangely gentle about being a walker. A boxer hits people and a football player tackles them. A lawyer needs to be tough on cross examination and fruit peddlers find satisfaction in throwing overripe peaches at meddlesome youngsters. But a walker is different. All he does is walk. Nothing can be more detached from war. It's the first skill an infant learns and it brings tears of joy to a mother's eyes. It's the simplest and safest method of transportation known to man. The greatest threat to a walker is a corn.,. In some countries Zinn would have been idolized. His death would be a national tragedy. He wouldn't have been allowed to serve in a war because his talents would have been deemed too valuable to risk losing. America, however, is a democracy., Everyone goes. Married men and bachelors, bearded folk singers and opera stars. In fact if you try protesting, they just get more anxious to draft you. So Ron Zinn the walker got no special privileges and went with everyone else. That's the way it is when democracies wage war. Now he's being given an award posthumously. It's not a purple heart or a silver star. After all, he really didn't do anything that special. He just got killed. No, he's only getting an award from the Amateur Athletic Union for being the best amateur athlete in Illinois last year. Nothing special, just a plaque or a trophy his parents will accept for him. There must be smoother and more pleasant paths for a walker to follow than the one way road from America to Viet Nam. -CHUCK VETZNER brought him to Michigan. "I guess I was the worst blocker that ever came here," comments Fisher. "I know it was one of the reasons I didn't play much last year. The other reason was that I was never in shape. I could only practice two or three times a week because of afternoon engi- neering labs. And it's very easy for me to get out of shape because of the way~ I'm built. Even this year I didn't feel really good until the Georgia game. "But as far as my blocking goes, this season I've been working at it every spare minute I've got. I know I have to improve." Getting the Feel Elliott thinks that Fisher has been making real progress. "It's experience which makes him bet- ter," explains the coach. "Last year he just wasn't in enough to get the, experience he needed. I think he had his best game last week against Purdue.," Fisher makes it clear that he feels he owes everything he does to the coaches: Elliott, Tony Ma- son, and Hank Fonde. "They've really been my ;greatest inspira- tion. I think I'd give my right arm for them. Coach Fonde works with me on blocking. Mason is always with me, teaching me about run- ning, and really giving me the confidence I lacked last season." But here he is in the middle of a season full of unexpected de- velopments. He tries to explain it: Salvage the Rest .."When we started out we want- ed to win them all. Well, that's over. But we're really out to win the next five, and that's no bull. "It isn't a matter of not being able to go to the Rose Bowl.- It's just that last week we finally jelled. You, can go along making fumbles, being sloppy, not playing like a team, and then suddenly... Well, you know you can't really' put your finger on it. If you could you'd be the greatest coach in the world. "Last year we were lucky. We started to put it all together in the Air Force game, real early." His future is open. He is study- ing structure in Engineering School and hopes to go into Busi- ness Administration later so that he can eventually become a con- sulting engineer for a large com- pany like Bethlehem Steel or Pittsburgh Plate Glass. But there's still football. "Sure, I'd love to play pro ball if I got the chance," he admits. "But I'm not making any plans, that's for sure. "Football has really been such a big part of my life. . . . Ever since the eighth grade I've been out there every day and I love it. I have to wonder wyat it would be like without the experience." A couple of years ago he had to make a tough decision. "I knew right away that I'd never regret my choice," says Fisher. "I got a chance to visit Dartmouth and Harvard in the East, and I'm sure that Michigan is as good academically. In my heart I really believe that it's the greatest school in America. "The guys on the team are the finest I've ever met. When I go in I really want to do well to show my appreciation. I want to make them proud. "I know I'll really feel it when I leave Michigan." CAREER PLANNING VOCATIONAL APTITUDE TESTING COUNSELING ANN ARBOR COUNSELING AND GUIDANCE 321 SOUTH MAIN ST. Suite 213, Whitker Building Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108 665-3635 665-7902 By Appointment DEPENDABLE IMPORT SERVICE We have the MECHANICS ,and the PARTS. NEW CAR DEALER Triumph-Volvo- Fiat-Checker We lease cars as low as $4.50 per 24-hr. day. HERB ESTES AUTOMART 319 W. Huron 66-3688 & U- Wash ad TM I r,.' N.-, ( / ,., + I' . The Lee-Pr~st "Classic" above (with belt loops and cuffs) is only one of the new per. manent press Leesures. Come in, see them all and pick several of the best-looking slacks you'll never Irons ONLY 79- * LEESURIS* BY LEE 302 S. State St. Ann Arbor, Mice. 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