THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1960 Fitzgerald Typif ies New'egime By FRED STEINHARDT The score-Michigan State 14, Michigan 10' With less than five minutes re- maining in the first half, the favored Spartans had taken the lead for the first time from a determined and surprising Michi- gan team on a four-yard thrust by Gary Bailman.. Bobbitt kicking off for State, McRae and Fitzgerald back for Michigan. Toe meets ball and 76,000 pair of eyes are riveted upon McRae and Fitzgerald. The strategy is to keep everything away from McRae, a speed mer- chant and fine broken field run- ner. The kick sails high and deep, towards Fitzgerald. Gathers in Ball Fitzgerald gathers it in on his own one yard line and slants toward the middle to pick up his blockers. A feint with the shoul- der, another with the head, and two green jerseys fly by him- missed. Suddenly he cuts to the right sideline and there is no one there. Defender Felled The 35, the 30, 25, 20. The last Michigan State defender with a chance to catch him is closing in across the field. But he is felled by a perfectly timed block by Mc- Rae who has kept pace from the one-yard line. Touchdown, Michi- gan. Michigan leaves the field at halftime, leading 17-14. Dennis Fitzgerald, starting right halfback for Michigan, typifies the new regime at Ann Arbor, now in its second year under Bump El- liott. Fitzgerald is not big, as half- backs go. He stands 5'9" and plays at 180 pounds. He is not fast. But he is tough, tough enough to have won the Big Ten 167-pound wres- tling title last spring. Fitzgerald remarked that the run represented "a good effort by everybody." Although he is fre- quently called the holler guy of the team in press releases, Fitz- gerald claims that Michigan's great spirit is not the contribu- tion of any one individual Hard-Nosed Team "We have a lot of- players that came up the hard way,_ and we all take pride in playing with a tough, hard-nosed team. you can never let up because there is al- ways a guy waiting to take your place." "This team goes into every game with the feeling that it is as good as any in the nation," he contin- ued, and if the opposition is bet- ter, it had better prove it on the field." How does Fitzgerald see the Big Ten race? Teams Tough "I don't think there will be an undefeated team because there are just too many strong schools. Every team in the conference can punish you physically even if it never wins a game. They play bruising, tough football and you have to be sharp every game, not only to win but to keep a team in good physical shape." Fitzgerald is one of the few Ann Arbor boys who went on to star at the hometown University. He graduated from Ann Arbor St. Thomas in 1954 where he was captain in his senior year. ... Y . I After three years in the Marines, he enrolled at the University. He is enrolled in Physical Edu- cation and would like to obtain a Certificate in Physical Therapy. After graduation he intends to maintain his amateur status with a long eye ahead to trying for the 1964 Olympics in wrestling, Of course he will be back ,to CARLOS MONTOYA Ann Arbor High Fri., Oct. 7 8:30 P.M. I__ ___ I defend his own title this winter and try to help Cliff Keen's squad retain its team title. This Saturday when Michigan attempts to trip up a Duke team that has won its first three games, keep an eye on number 18 with the old style Michigan helmet reminiscent of Michigan glory of the past. He's not big and he's not fast. But he's tough. PAPER-BOUND BOOKS 50 Publishers Represented PROMPT SERVICE On SpecialOrders OVER BECK'S BOOKSTORE I s -David Giltrow FITZ HITS-Wolverine halfback Dennis Fitzgerald puts his shoulder down and barrels for yardage against Michigan State. Later he returned a kickoff 99 yards. Chandler Lost for the Season i- PEUGEOT Buy Your PEUGEOT from Stanord Brothers Authorized Renault-Peugeot Dealers SERVICE 25900 Outer Dr. DU 6-0699 Lincoln Park -- Outer Dr. of Fort For those who were unfortunate enough not to get a bike at the auction, we have new ones. THE POPULAR SPECAL (A Raleigh Product) had gone down yesterday and Fullback Ken Tureaud has a there is hope that the speedster bruised hip, while linemen Paul will be ready for the Duke game. Poulos and Tom Jobson have McRae also received a shoulder chipped teeth. All three are ex- bruise in the game. pected to play Saturday, however. IT Ii .% 1 Upsets and romps highlighted last week's Grid Picks contest, but in the final tabulation, it was necessary to resort to the closeness of the scores of the Michigan game to decide the winner. Martin Piehl, of 337 E. William picked 15 correct games as well as coming closest to the actual score. He is the possessor of two free tickets to the Michigan Theater, now showing "Elmer Gantry". You, too, can win two free tickets. All you have to do is decide the winner of this week's games and the score of the Michigan-Duke game. Entries may be picked up at the Daily office and returned by hand to the main office on the second floor or mailed to Grid Picks, Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor. All entry blanks must be in by Friday midnight to be eligible. I $S 95 ---fj~f- - 12. Miami (Fla.) at Pittsburgh 13. LSU at Georgia Tech 14. Notre Dame at North Carolina 15. SMU at Navy 16. Wake Forest at VPI 17. Baylor at Arkansas 18. Oklahoma at Texas 19. Missouri at Air Force 20. 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