THE TiiCfiiGANW .DAILYv. rTUI&AY, 'M' Overwhelms 'Pore L'1 Boy Chappuis, Bump Elliott Scor s,' 35 O; Twice Wolverines Run Wild over Hoosiers As Offensive Gains 363 Total Yards Early Training Sent Sickels Towards Gririron Greatness Maize and Blue Regains High Scoring Form;j Sickels Turns in Finest Contest of Career By BOB LENT ANN ARBOR, Nov. 9-After being partially stalled for two Satur- days in a row, Michigan's high-scoring grid machine moved back into high gear by rolling over a game but out-gunned Indiana eleven 35-0 before a chilled sellout crowd of 85,937. Flashing the power and daring that made them almost a point-a- minute outfit in their first four games, the Wolverines scored three times in the first 19 minutes, going all the way each time they got their hands on the ball. "Big Three" Make Difference As expecte-, it was the Maize and Blue's first set of backs which made the big difference. Michi-v Yerges lateraled to Fonde who went over. Brieske made good his seventh straight conversion to wind up the scoring at 35-0. Line- Ups gan's "Big Three" (Bob Chappuis, Bump Elliott and Jack Weisen- burger) accounted for 324 of the Wolverines 363 yards and had a hand directly in all but one of their touchdowns. Chappuis got 103 of these through the air and 48 on the ground and passed for three' touchdowns. Weisenburger got 91 yards in ten tries and Bump picked up 55 and scored twice. Chap Takes Charge The Chap personally took charge of the first two touch- downs. After the opening kickoff,' he sparked the team on a 72 yard sustained march that ended with one of his passes hitting Yerges for yards and the first score. After Indiana punted to Michi- gan's 41, Chap went right back to work and in nine plays Michigan had another touchdown. He passed for 6 to Bump, 22 to Mann, and then tore 15 yards off tackle to the four. Four plays later, Elliott dove over for the second tally. Four minutes passed and Bump did it again, only, this time it was Weisenburger who set up the score. Starting frohi his own 34, the slippery fullback took a lat- eral from Yerges, picked up a key block by Stu Wilkins and scooted 60 yards down the sidelines all the way to the Indiana six. Chap- puis then passed to Elliott in the flat and the Bumper drove over. Brieske made good his third straight kick and the score read 21-0. Bump's Turn to Sparkle In the second half it was Bump's turn to lead a drive down the field. This one went 84 yards and took just eight plays. Thrice the 178 pound red head drove for 10 yards a crack and then reeled off a beautiful 26 yard run to the Indiana 12. A fifteen yard penalty nullified the play, but Chappuis hit Rif- enburg with a 51 yard pass on the next play to hoist the score to 27-0. Indiana's season-long fumble mania caught up with them with two minutes of the game left and Crisler's boys capitalized on it to score their final marker. The ball bounced off McInnes' chest'and Wilkins broke through to down it on the Indiana fourteen. Three MICHIGAN Mann. Rifenburg McNeill Ford Hershberger Wisniewski Hollway Hilkene Pritula Wistert Kohl Johnson Dendrinos Tomasi ... Wilkins Heneveld Sickels Soboleski McClelland White .... Dworsky Brieske Yerges. P. Elliott Kiesel Chappuis C. Elliott Derricotte Teninga Fonde Kuick Weisenburge Peterson ... T ........Wagner Rawl Moorhead Roper Morrical ...G ........Brown Barthiewicz R. Grossman Smith Witecki . . I ..... . .. Polce Sikora Q .....Grossman Sebek Young H ...... .Groomes McDonnel Taliafero Russel Deranek McKinnis er F......... Jagade Robertson Pos .E .. INDIANA Ravensburg Mihajlovich Hopper J. Barthiewicz Lyoshir By PRIES HOLMES Psychologists have been argu- ing for decades that the way an individual performs in later life is greatly dependent upon habits formed, and behavior of that per- son during his early years. Here's some more proof! Quen- tin Sickels' father was athletic di- rector and coach at the junior high school Quent attended in Benton Harbor. With the incen- tive instilled in him by his father, Quent naturally included athletics in his activities, and was an out- standing performer in junior high. Spectacular Tackle With a firm foundation for his football career already behind him as he entered high school, Quent followed up with three spectacular years at tackle. Superb on de- fense, he consistently stopped ball carriers all over the field. In his senior year in 1943, his team won the championship, and he received All-City and All Con- ference ,awards. In June of 1944 the ubiquitous Mr. :Sickels came to Michigan. That fall, under the war-time rul- ing allowing freshman to play, even though he was moved over to the guard slot it had no injurious effect, and he played a full season. Besides winning his "M" he re- ceived a 2nd team All-Big Nine berth. Sweet Victoryl It wasduring this season that Quent experienced his "second greatest" thrill in the game of football. His brother, Duane, was I QUENT SICKELS . outstanding lineman of the day, playing on Northwestern's eleven that year, and now Quent is for- ever reminding his brother of the score of 27-0. A year and a half stretch in the Coast Guard put a gap in his foot- ball biography, but he returned to don the Maize and Blue again last fall. This year he is enjoying the "greatest" experience of his long football history. "We've come so close to winning the champion- ship the other two years I played here," he says, "and now that we've made it this year-and the Rose Bowl--it's great." Playing on such a star-studded team hasn't kept him from haul- ing down a few more honors. TROJANS! WATCH THIS PLAY--This is the Wolverine pass play that many expert sport observ- ers have termed "unstoppable." Used sparingly this year despite tremendous success with it in 1946, this play shakes loose one of Michigan's least watched pass receivers, the quarterback. Here Howard Yerges stands all alone ready to catch the first touchdown pass against Indiana on a 12- yard toss from Bob Chappuis. The Wolverines went on to take the game, 35-0. A plays moved it to the one, and Kempthorn 'Statistics I M First downs .........14 17 Forward passes at-. tempted...........13 14 Forward passes com- pleted..........7.. Yards by forward passing . ,..........72 113 Forward passes inter- cepted by..... ....1 2 Yards runback of inter- cepted passes.......4 43 Punting average (from scrimmage) . 32 44.4 Total yards all kicks returned ..........57 55 Opponent fumbles re- covered............1 1 Yards lost by penalty 40 25 WASH DAY: DRUD E Y ENDS HER'E YOU SHOP-while BENDIX does your wash! 0 BRING YOUR LAUNDRY TO THE "LAUNDERETTE" AND PLACE IT IN THE BENDIX. EACH BENDIX TAKES UP TO 9 LBS. YOU CAN USE AS MANY MACHINES AS YOU NEED. ADD SOAP-WAIT OR SHOP WHILE THE BENDIX DOES YOUR WORK AUTOMATICALLY. TAKE YOUR LAUNDRY HOME IN 30 MINUTES-CLEANSED, SWEET, WHITE, DAMP-DRY. Approx. 9 lbs. 30c Soap Free 86,000 Chilled Football Fans See Wolverine Juggernaut Roll 4 A shivering throng of nearly 86,000 yesterday saw the mighty Michigan Wolverines shatter Indi- ana, 35 to 0. The mercury took a dive shortly after the game got underway, as a chill wind sent the temperature to the low thirties. And the second sell-out throng of the season got a taste of winter as the wind whip- ped scattered snow flakes across the field. With cold weather in evidence for the first time this year, the time honored fire-water flask also put in an appearance. However, local police report little traffic in inebriates. And local liquor stores revealed that business had fallen far below last week's sales which were boosted by the influx of homecoming alumni. The lone, red-clad Indiana cheerleader seemed to be the only Hoosier rooter able to muster a cheer after the Wolverine jugger- naut started rolling. His exhorta- tions failed to move the 2,400 sad- dened Indiana fans who made the trek from Bloomington. Special guests of the game to- day were 80 hospitalized soldiers from Percy Jones Hospita and 501 veterans from the VA center at Fort Custer I. /: ? : I Keppel's liandcraft Mart 8 02 SOUTH S TrE ANN ARBOR, MICILIGAN P r e s e a t s such nationally kown. artists as 1ILMER JAMES . CERAMIST of Los Angeles CLAIIIE WVIMAN - ENAMELS of-Cleveland Pennsylvania Dutch Greeting Cards Four Winds Non-Shedding Angora Yarn in All Colors W H OLESALE RETAIL . , :: ,I . h ni '.1v . f ". '> :. . . ... rt, ; >;;. . .4 I I: r- _._. _v sdl ,ON {I~ . s 4 ~d 4 4 For Her First First Party Frock For Her Wedding Gown For Her Anniversary Dress THE WOMAN OF TASTE Thinks First of Hiutze's Over a thirty-six year period Hu-tzel's has become the style e'er for w "n who appreciate the difference quality can make in such important things as their first part dresses, their first formals, their wedding gowns and anniversary frocks. It's the store in Ann Arbor where IGP GfAtiN IN G ABAR DIN E I L 4 4 4 .I mothers and daughters come first . . . and keep coi back after the first Mime. 'y) t Only The Finest Quality At Prices That Are Fair JACKET DRAMA IN WINTER WHITE KAY SAKS OF CALIFORNIA creates for Jacobson's of Michigan this "shorty" coat with button-on hood that cowls down your back like a cape. Flowing lines and flaring back of Botany's all-wool, gleam- Y ing supe Sizes 101 rchan gabardine. Truly sheer perfection from any angle. to 16. 69.95 lo: - 4 "I