X:, THE MICHIGAN DAILY sm NDAY, DECEIV 1Vl' lcers Lose, 6-4 Ca gers Fall Volverines Never in Front; gold Shooting Proves Fatal By JIM BENAGH Daily Sports Editor Michigan's basketball attack died with a late scoring blight, and the letdown allowed a good Drake team to win the Wolver- ines' home opener, 71-65, last night. 'The Michigan second half come- back faltered after the Wolverines narrowed a 14-point margin early in the second half to five points in the last three minutes. But the, local quintet failed to take advantage of a half-dozen recoveries in those waning mo- ments and took its second defeat in two games. Drake won its sec- ond straight. Pesky Leader Led by pesky Gus Guydon, a hollering and hotshot guard, Drake looked as if it might run away from Michigan in the first 25 min- utes. After see-sawing with Michigan through the first 10 minutes, the Bulldogs from Des Moines, Iowa, pulled' away to a 43-32 lead by intermission time. Guydon hit for 13 points in the initial half and most of the mark- Statistics DRAKE Mueller Prescott Terre Guydon' McNight Bremner Bowan Waddell Ayers TOTALS MICHIGAN Donley Maentz Farris Miller Tidwell Robins Clark Schoenherr TOTALS PG FT' 2-4 1-1 1-11 2-3 3-15 2-6 10-14 55 3-7 0-0 0-1 0-0 2-10 2-5 4-7 1-1 3-5 2-4 29-74 15-25 FG FTl 1-3 1-1 2-8 0-0. 6-15 4-8 8-22 3-4 4-27 7-11 3-8. 0-1 1-3 0-0 0-0 0-0 25-86 15-25 PF 2 2 4 2 1 1 17 PF 4 2 5 1 1 3 1 1 18 TP 5 4' 8 25 6 6 9 8 71 TP 3 4 16 19 15 6 2 0 65 Halftime score: Drake '43, Michigan 32i Orange Rout Br i 36-8 LOS ANGELES (') - Mighty Syracuse belted UCLA for a 36-8 victory yesterday and, for the first time in 71; years of intercollegiate football, finished the season un- beaten and untied in 10 games. In a strong. bid for the national championship, the top ranked big Orange team got off to a 14-0 lead in the first period, boosted it to 21-0 in the second and then beat back a gallant challenge by the underdog' Bruins of UCLA. Syracuse got off to a quick lead after intercepting ,a pass. It took nine plays to travel 43 yards, with a nifty pass for six yards from quarterback Dave Sarette to Ger- hard Schwedes put UCLA on the road to its fourth defeat of the year. Syracuse's so-called second team trooped on to the field and after a 72-yard thrust that required seven plays, the Orangemen were on the scoreboard again. The touchdown came on a 15-yard pass from Dick Easterly to Mark Weber in the end zone. Early in the second period the score mounted to 21-0. Easterly, Weber, John Nichols and Bob Hart took turns in the drive, ending when Easterly plunged for the final yard. UCLA, with halfback Bill Kil- mer in the starring role as the passer, got into the act before the half ended. Jim Johnson's great 44-yard kickoff return started it off and Kilmer kept it going. He passed to Gene Gaines for 30 and 13 yards, and the final 20 to Johnson for the touchdown. The late conclusion of the Midwest Open Gym Meet pre- vented results to be run in this issue. ers came on outside jump shots. He continued his spree for the rest of the game and, all in all, tallied 25 points. He hit on 10 of 14 field goal attempts. Meanwhile Guydon's major of- fensive opponent, Michigan's John Tidwell, was pressured into one of his worst nights, after a strong first half. Unstoppable in First Half Drake knew Tidwell headed Michigan's attack but couldn't stop him as he cut off a screen and drove in during the first half. He made three baskets and picked up six free throws - mostly on the cut-and-go series. But visiting coach, Murray John, charted a defense at half- time to stop Tidwell. His team put second-half pressure on the 6'3" junior and limited him to one goal. Drake forced Tidwell to shoot fast instead of with his normal, easy-moving motions. When the game was over, the 'Michigan guard had been successful on only four of 27 attempts. But the defeat wasn't only Tid- well's. Michigan had several hacking fouls in its attempts to regain the ball from Drake and was penal- ized further for careless fouls. The personals cost Michigan its center, Lovell Farris, for the ear- ly part of the second half as he went to the bench with four fouls. And the rest of the team joined Tidwell in cold shooting. Michigan finished with a 29.1 percentage from the floor and made just five of 13 free throws in the second half. Blow Several Chances Michigan also blew several good opportunities once it got within striking distance of Drake In the last minutes. Although they were much short- er than the Bulldogs, Michigan forwards Farris and Scott Maentz pulled down several key rebounds. But the Wolverine quintet failed to score because of faulty passing or erratic shots. Michigan did deserve credit for its comebacks and, for the most part, was not discouraged by its mistakes. Farris came off the bench to pace the best of these drives. With Michigan down 14 points, guards Rich Robins and Terry Miller combined for 10 points to narrow the lead to 51-46. Farris then re-entered the game and connected for four quick bas- kets to keep Michigan in the run- ning. Meanwhile, Drake went without a field goal in the last eight.min- utes. But Drake re-organized and be- gan a stall. Michigan continued to get the ball, but shabby ball- handling and shooting prevailed. A small crowd of 2,900 was on hand to see the game. SCORES COLLEGE BASKETBALL MSU 61, Notre Dame 56 (ovt.) Kansas 76, Northwestern 67 Ohio State 94, Pitt 49 Iowa 89, SMU 58 Indiana 103, Ball State 63 Purdue 63, Penn State 54 Iowa State 71, Wisconsin 53 Minnesota.72, Vanderbilt 59 Detroit 94, Brandeis 63 Duke 68, Clemson 59 Ga. Tech 68, Louisville 56 Win. and Mary 77, Tennessee 71 St. Louis 67, Kansas Sttae 58 North Carolina 93, S. Carolina 56 Nebraska 68, Air Force 54 Cornell 85, Colgate 54 Marquette 88, Abilene Christian 63 COLLEGE FOOTBALL Lenoir-Rhyne 47,FS. Connecticut 20 Syracuse 36, UCLA 8 Texas A & I 20, Hillsdale 0 Maryland 33, North Carolina St. 28 COLLEGE HOCKEY St. Lawrence 7, Montreal 5 Denverr5, Minnesota 4 EXHIBITION BASKETBALL Wichita Vickers 95, Russian Nation- als 75 NHL Toronto 6, New York 3 Chicago 2, Montreal 2 Detroit 4, Boston 3 NBA St. Louis 113, Philadelphia 112 New York 124, Detroit 108 Syracuse 108, Minneapolis 95 and flipped the puck into the short corner to put the game out of reach. Miss Many Chances Early in the game the Wolver- ines missed many great chances when Young came up with some impossible saves. He robbed Pat Cushing and Kelly of apparent goals before half of the crowd was even settled in their seats. Kolb and Bob White also had good chances, but fired wide as Michi- gan kept the Tigers bottled up in their own end with a great display of forechecking. However, the tale of frustration continued and at 13 minutes and 14 seconds Colorado surprised the Wolverine defense. Bill Goodacre scored on the short rebound of Kahoot's drive. Bleakney started the play from the corner, after carrying in from center ice. The greatness of Tiger goalie MSU Tp Notre Dame, By The Associatied Press EAST LANSING - Art Gowens scored five points during a five- minute overtime and gave Michi- gan State a 65-56 victory over Notre Dame in a tight, low-scoring game watched by 11,375 basketball fans last night. The Irish were held scoreless in the extra stanza. The score was 56-all at the end of regular play with Dave Fahs saving the Spartan cause by tying it with five seconds remaining. Gowens sank a layup at the start of the overtime and added three free throws for all the scor- ing in the extra period. He also was high for his team with 28 points. OSU 94, Pitt 49 COLUMBUS - Unbeaten Ohio State, using a devastating fast break and some deadly shooting, waltzed to an easy 94-49 basketball triumph over Pittsburgh last night. Sophomores Jerry Lucas and Mel Nowell paced the point pro- duction for the winners, netting 24 and 20, respectively. Indiana 103, Ball State 63 BLOOMINGTON-Indiana Uni- versity's veteran basketball team came out galloping tonight, scor- ing repeatedly on fast breaks in a 103-63 victory over Ball State Teachers College. Walt Bellamy, 6'11", made 21 points and 6'7" Frank Radobich added 11 while the regulars were functioning. * * * Minnesota 72, Vandebilt 59 NASHVILLE - Slender Ray Cronk speakheaded the, Minnesota Gophers to an impressive 75-59 intersectional basketball victory over Vanderbilt's Commodores last night. Young showed up again during the final three and a half minutes of play in the period. At 16:25 Wayne Gee, of Colo- rado, was sent off for boarding and just 22 seconds later Jerry.Maiko went off for slashing. Foiled Again For the next minute and 38 sec- onds Michigan with a two man advantage did everything but score. They even put the puck in the net when Kolb blasted the puck home out of a goal mouth scramble, but Referee Marty Pave- lich disallowed the goal, 'ruling that a Michigan man was in the crease at the time and interferred with Young. The second period was much like the first with Michigan domi- nating the play, but Colorado do- ing the scoring. They lengthened their margin to 2-0 at 12:09. Tommy Love intercepted a Michi- gan center ice pass, broke around Statistics MICHIGAN COLORADO Coyle G Young Watt D Moscal Palenstein D Cochrane White C Gee Bochen W Love Mattson W Boychuk FIRST PERIOD: Scoring: Color- ado, Goodacre (Bleakney, Kahoot), 13:14, Penalties: Colorado, Gee (boarding) 16:25, Maiko (slashing) 16:47, Gee (charging) 18:36. SECOND PERIOD: Scoring: Col- orado, Bleakney (Love) 12:09, Mich- igan, Kelly (Cushing, Mateka) 15:11, Colorado, Solymos (Cochrane) 18:14, Penalties: Michigan, Kolb (hook- ing) 15:25. THIRD PERIOD: Scoring: Color- ado, Love (Boychuk) 8:58, Michi- gan, Kelly (unassisted) 10:00, Bo- chen (White) 12:43, Kelly (Mate- ka) 16:28, Colorado, Bleakney (Ka- hoot, Love) 17:48, Haychuk (Gee) 19:42, Penalties: none. Saves 1 2 3 T Coyle 6 5 8 19 Young 22 9 12 43 Michigan 0 1 3 4 Colorado 1 2 3 6 Looking for a Good Haircut" * 11 Haircutters 0 No Waiting Try THE DASCOLA BARBERS near Michigan Theatre -Daily-David Giltrow DEFENSE HOLDS-Michigan captain Bob Watt (2) battles a Colorado College player for the puck in last night's action. Wolverine goalie Jim Coyle, forward Bob White (10) and defensemen Butch Nielsen (4) eye the puck to the left of the Michigan goal as they prepare to clear it. Colorado emerged victorious, 6-4, scoring two goals late in the third period. TIGERS TRIUMPH: Two Late Goals Halt Michigan Bid (Continued from Page 1) Y Ir Tm the Wolverine defense, passed to Bleakey, who lifted a back hand shot past Coyle. Kelly Scores First Kelly with his first goal of the night narrowed the count to 2-1 at 15:11 on a beautiful set-up pass from Pat Cushing, but the Tigers regained their two goal edge just three minutes later as Les Solymos got his first goal of the season for Colorado. Love triggered his first goal to open the third period scoring at 8:58. This set the stage for the Michigan rally, which greatras it was proved to be futile. IL ~ Formal Wear at Ease For men who prefer comfortable, light weight dinner clothes, our 8 oz., all-wool worsted will come as a welcome addition to their wardrobe. Tailored with either a Peak lapel, with grosgrain facing, or Shawl lapel with Satin facing, and vented coat. Black. only from $7500 NIGHT OPENINGS till 8:30 .: pan130vt1 WEDNESDAY, 9th MONDAY, 14th WEDNESDAY, 16th OXXFORD CLOTHES BURBERRY COATS MONDAY, 21st TUESDAY, 22nd ANN ARBOR DETROIT 6t II I. . 3 ., " R : ., c ,. .. v:x ~_, OUT? i1 RAmAmber! r