RELAY PERSONNEL ele 7h, a css a Wf CoMley - DISTANCE OF NAME EACH MAN : LAST NAME FIRST = FO WF ayl dia £O Jenner Jer. i WERE Wa Pet onal Thao. a path ae vL : af! - e , &’ - 5 er [ a. 4 ‘> \ . tee A 2°7 Sony. on qRAOEEAOQe_ZtygMet oe tf ae & ath asofgsté MG % ee. _ — tk 24 Mf ats: o dea q 3S As wd ry : ars , seidsod 2% sgefduod £ % WV 2; Ss we atlO-dbs: LD Lela U lor 14 ancicectgaemen ’ : - : 3 l _ — £ : [ iusoeall ; asleatdell £ £ amore fto 22 obetofod 2f asamet 28 EworelM ; OL mnofeliO :einaed ,egntbnede yab satlT :f£ minsufe 28 sdet® esansd ¢¢d edad swol / TENNIS SCOREBOARD #21 Singles #2 Singles # 3 Singles # 84 Singles #/5 Singles wR SF F RSPP IRSF F i1RSF F in SF P Colorado xx a5 1% Iowa State 1 1 a3 | Koneas State 1 eo a Missourt = 1. | Oklahoma #1 Doublea # 2 Dotbles RSF F 1k SF F Colorado 1 Iowa State Kensas State Kansas. > Missouri Nebraska Oklahoma First day standings, tennis: Oklahoma 10 ; Missouri ies Towa. State 5; Kansas State 2; Nebraska 1; V2 | 2b {— & aed — o- | = 1 ee be qa ae (we 4.,°. [ed Fey CLASS ‘ leze DISTANCE OF NAME EACH MAN | LAST NAME FIRST tos ‘ ee Li few (8 sais Cohfs’ Des (47) re fir drew, fet (F933 Coach ’ 40 - 3 \y ZN a ak cw 4 Y 30 “a Fl - 10 Mes Gq, a i i a a ~ 3.4 / 1 O aq | 4 4 £le3 RELAY PERSONNEL SCHOOL e a Ta NAME RELAY 3 CLASS ee, : - DISTANCE OF NAME “ EACH MAN LAST NAME FIRST Signed Coach Sa sas ee SCHOOL Kor RELAY PERSONNEL NAME RELAY CLASS DISTANCE BACH MAN NAME big seven tournament 10 of 11 for kece star CYCLONE SCOREBOARD Record to date - W L 3 86 Ne Dakota State 603; 72 Texas Teoh 62 3 62 Tulsa 503 72 Colorade A & M 60 3 62 Denver 653 “CLO? Mgt se mao smn igre=ats, 2: ser jae CL088. TUBE Se ee nn < ( ip * “erry y Sandbulte, £3 Gary ‘Thomspn, <2 ee eG ORE. ie fa ogee me Ohu k Vogt , ne | as ¢: S aod re1p ee . EE Le ‘eth. * 4983 all games: 4 ‘LekO | anemone Nand 2bEE a : ft : . Previous tournament Fatstes’ e 1946« Sths 1947 @ Tthz- 1948« Srdj 1949. ~ 8thg 1950 e —_ 128 saomoiteeas: ‘1952 “7th; 19530 Gths 1954. me AAA Th AS RN TR coy ord; Wo L 18 335° eK ]Awb 30 2 GC} RTS S L&SOC20 Remaining preetournament games - none Ce _P4nst_pound_opponeiit’ Je Kansas _ Brake 9330 peme Tuesday J id 1° a & 4 “ewe State will hit the heii act auditorium planks Tuesday with the youngest ‘team in the tenth annual Big “even tournament. Bill Strannigan, vnbenee now gray-tha tohed former Wyoming ace, has only LO8e three posters on his. “entire: squed, and only one of them is a starter. iok re _idbenian theve. are on mly_t three dettermen available, smallest number of Qe any competing teame. And: frequently thymexenpiexeren as many as three iS STUE 208 mpphobbres have been starting through the Cyclones ' first six games. . Bees AB ds | ‘Nonetheless State must ‘be conceded » chance of auplicat ing lant year's: third: place ‘finish, which equalled the high-water emark of Cyclone tournament | Successes and marked only the second time it has finished ‘n the meet's first divisione ae One sophomore, in particular is an important onée He is Don Weasker, 6-8 center. llis presence means the # Iowans will be one of only three toapnammibo di teams to mount a genuine big gm man in the pivote Kansas State and Colorado are the other twoe ac oe ~~ 28 Rev left Fan Statue ‘left | Pep Screen left , ee ngs + Fan Screen RE OFFENSE & DEFENSE — r a Sept.25 UCLA Ha P. oF oP oe Bri : a gr SY FDO RL era | Spread | b gpus 13G0F 26 < “@ = Statue Right 1s. Bb OS 138 F 28 Statue Left af es * E W 59 C.O F2k opp w58 C.0 Pohl opp 69 Blocking mm ay _ 68 E-Blocking Ba. 69 -€.0° F22 opp =. ae eo 68 6.0. Fu2 opp a Bootleg Rt.Pass nea! + po Bootleg left pass 99 Peet BIS Gath 13 : i ___98 peel Qe CLA 67 HP 2h opp HB 77 panies RE. Over “66H rly: opp -HB_76 Power L.B.over ¢ ST 8B OT Grose = COG SG HB 96 Cross a er" F26 op PB 97 Wedge esas zee. 66 #6 opp. FB 96 Wedge C7 "3 Blocking TT: wuick Pass fe ~—6 6B MR" Blocking 176 — a c 67 Fy2 opp Z yu Ge 66 | P22, OPP, Len @: Te PG Rainbow F600 8 ee Zag Zig Zag keoeeuext #2 wa wa: se oe | _Safoty ous. sate ky. out o | , 2 traps 4 wey 135 Shovel passHijS 25 Wer 46 93he Sh fade ‘F28 R.P ar Blocking, 35 T-F-48 , - Fy Cress eve onghtsP26 go: re _ opp w55T- opp : 95 Cross oe oe chr F268 opp Th Wedge’ ee EB oer hye — 195t F260 opp a, | one oe oe oma, FB O6ST-F26 o ee . HB 6b Se. RP 657 F2 Fal, opp b Ausueeee £8 FB. aipen3 opp — 2 FLO. opps med 22 7p PAS bi wedge | a in “72 Take off ue 7 oe opp gre ee eon Geille opp : se Pe CP NOES PUTS ee a 151 "31 draw aw is — 1 Packie tr poo salu » 608. 20. rpg: 2 ber 4 a a . | : a A _ . io 2 bes Ns 160, F ba ¢ opp _ 9 Pio Rev. meee co atl Rev- Right — Fan Statue Rt ~ “ Pak Peas Rush ke LD Take, Pinch-Wedge. Submarine o : | rT | te 4 Se R atts ® , _ Submarine : i . i? < tae Wp pint 4 Geneve gees } 5 lly po? a a Boe gi 3333 The big loss was Chuck Duncan, brawny 6-5 center, who won the meet agoring, titie Lest. year on 75 points axl ran second to Colorado's Burdette -aldorson in the conference derby with a 2205 means we oN | State was, neaded toward an unbeaten pre-tournament | record until ‘punning inte 4 62065 Loss te Denver at Denver Wednesday. It had = bowled over four consecutive foes s&nx The Gyckones tackle Sonsas State in the secoui game of Tuesday ni ht'’s opening guarétx card. This should bes the best mateh of the first two sessions and will bring together Medsker ani Yack Ferry the Wildcats' 6-9 seophomore pivot , plus Thompson ari Pachin Vicens, the Purple’ s, sturdy backliner flyer whe is a dribbler and x of Gary's Lie Worérade and Oklehoma ring up the curtain in the mre game at 7330 pelle Na ssoura's defemling champions face Nebraska in “einesday night's opener with “ans os ani Cornell followings PAST TOURNAMENT SCORING CHAMPIONS 1948" “sean techies; cece ena ae 1947. Bili “eters, c, _ Oklahoma 6=6 40 / 1948 Gene Peterson, 6, Kansas 6=7 51 1949 - Clyde Lovel let te 50, Kansas 69 64 1950 ~ Clyde Lovel lette, C, Kansas | 6<9 82 1952 “Clyde Lovellette,a, Kansas = 6«9 76 1952 ~»-—dDick Knostman, Gy, Kansas Ste 66 71 1953 Lester “ane, g, %kla:oma 5-10 64 1954 Clmek Dunea, ¢, Iowa State 6-5 75 | - 50 « : Tau ‘WSs eo 2222 _Medsker, one-time alleprep luminary from Englee wood, Coloe, has to expectationse Up to Friday | pe! meteh with eteivx Vand ex 1 / pied, re he latest UP. Porky, he. was ¢ avenging a a 1206 points for simes) OG Pe K ete | _ John Crawford, 6-5 New Yorker, is “the other — ae rocktecwhe } had-alpwored every tipoff calle Lyle Frahm, 6+, xnsné and anil at guard Larty Swanson, Sx bokly 3 atvidea wey trey éauty through the first. five “games ‘before jing way be Senter Arnie ~aarde, 5-10 noneletterman from ‘Manning, tae ee Age of chis squad is Gary Thompson, S10, 160= pound guard, and quite poss bly the Big "even's finest clutch playere It wap Thompson who engineered Last year's opening-round RYE e282 upset of Kansas with four consecutive free threws in the last kenek: three minutese tie went on top top all sop.omores in conference play with a 16.0 average over the Genome routes He is s fine pley-maker and defender and Rireeax gives the °yolones poised floor leaderships Up to the Vandervilt game he trailed only Missouri's Normn Stewart ani Shuck Relies of Core nell on the prestournament scoring tables with a 198 meane “e has been hled under 20 in only one game ° Chuck Vogt, 6*5 junior, and a holdover Jenne, like ‘easels teams with Crawford at forward to give the Cyclones a towering front linge “e averaged 13.0 through the first cae games» | ‘The Cyslones have been getting good secondary weroing tooe Seven of i) wen used against Texas Tech notched at least one “setae ‘The pattern ran 7 of 9 against Colorade A & Mg 11 of 15 against North Yakota State , and six of eight against Tulsa, which State plastered om) with its first defeat pf the “Se@a8ONe KN) OPENS 1953 , ginve emleane, TD = a¢ yes Diet ne? A? defentvd 4&. foro / Ww & Ge Treiled fm poritess for /@ A ; | Cprten ws Mizzou Spurt Hands Illinois 14-73 Defeat COLUMBIA, MO.—(#)—Norm Stewart, Missouri guard, score- less from the field for the first 21 minutes, led the Tigers in a listering second half rally to a 4-73 victory .over Illinois Sat- urday night. Tlinois led at the alf, 41-28. Stewart tallied 31 points, hit- ing 11 of his 13 shots as he led the second half reversal. | In the first half the taller Il- ‘linois team outplayed Missouri ion the backboards and set up a defense which the cold Tigers couldn’t penetrate. The second half was just the opposite. Missouri out-fought the visitors on the backboards, stole the ball time after time and cracked the Illinois defense wide open. Six times Illinois took the ball downcourt and six times Missouri snagged it without Illinois scor- ing a point. Missouri caught up at 45-45, and it was even-up until the close finish. Bill Ridley led Illinois’ scoring with 21 points, and Paul Judson added 20. - Missouri's . shogting average was 40.7 per cent, and Illinois had 39.6 per cent. Mlinois .(73 {Missouri (74) G F P r 5] Ross 3| Reichert 2| Rionsick, 5| Cotter 3|Pladem: 4| Denny 3/Stephens’ 0|Keasitner 1|Stewart 11 Smith Egelthoff 0 Totals 25 28-36 26 26 ‘Totals 23, 25 38-44 24 Tilinois weeoeeeeeseee seecnes 1 32—73 Missouri Esigiice Dicey <8 abe oc 6 0 ole oe 4674 lt Vandy Whips suena || NASHVILLE, TENN, — (UP) | The Vanderbilt Cones led '| by guard Al Rochelle’s 25 points, defeated, Oklahoma, 78-69, Sat- urday. night for their fourth straight victory of the young basketball season. Vanderbilt went in front at the | Bbet, and never was headed al- though the Sooners cut the mav- ‘|gin to five points with 10 min- utes left: WMH eeowooconnm® SRNWoMANoous te But Vanderbilt quickly pulled away to a 15-point lead with © less than three minutes to go. The Commodores led, 36-32, at the half. . ‘|. Rechelle collected 20 of his ‘|25 points on 10 field goals. He ‘|was followed by his running ‘}mate at guard, Babe Taylor, :| with 19. :| Forward Joe King and guard {| JimmyPick each hit 16.for Okls.- ijhoma. Sooner center Leroy Bacher collected 12 in the first :{half but was blanked in the sec- ‘jond half, g | Oklahoma or P| Vanderbilt cra E | Abbey, 3| Gibbs 3-2. 0-13 05 /Fe x 5- 5- Riley 0- 3] Gregor 2- Keller ‘0- French ‘® 2- Totals 25 19-24 23 3| Totals 27 24-40 1s Cyclones Stop Tulsa — AMES, IOWA—(#)—Two 5-10 guards battled each other Satur- day night in a basketball game that Iowa State won over Tulsa. 62-50, Near the end one of the 4wo |Gary Thompson, kept the Cy- ‘clones out of. hot water. Junior Born of Tulsa lead his teammates with 22 points. Center Don Medsker paced Towa State with an 18-point total. aking seven out of 11 ‘shots rom the floor, At halftime Borr ad scored 14 of Tulsa’s 22 points. During the second half Thompson eRe we woONooNnS Prisw SOPRA $1 Pink’ton’ 3 {jyBalding 2 ry Te Om Pe a date erase 2| Andress 1| Gore Jones Stewart a Totals 19 24-35 15 15] ‘Totals 19 12-24 owa State .... eee Se neiin - 2s Whi e PEPPLEEP e | 2oecoeoNesrse tI Caan as Towa State’s ' Cagers Romp Thompson Scores 22 in 86-60 Breeze . | Ames, Ia. (@)—Gafy Thomp- | son, veteran guardgon the Iowa set the scorin¥Y pace Saturday night as the Cyclones set back _| North Dakota State, 86-60. | Thompson, a junior, hit seven | field goals and eight of 10 free throws.. Medsker tallied 18 points to match Forward. Gene Gamage of North Dakota State. Iowa ve. dy {| N. Dakota By 3 pt. a ote oght Peterson WWSoe oOoOonnt H PRE NAPOOWN owe oF Anderson Haas Brenteseon Akaso Ludwig ¥ = OHONKROOOwW ? a OCONWSS Thompson Swanson Frahm Gaarde Farwell Sandbulte Lowery 1 SHONSSSOWA,» 1 COHQHNH OMA RF NWWHOHAABOHS COoOHRHONAH RECON SOorPHN CNNwa CHE AD [ | | | Totals 27 32-44 alo « Totals \23 14-26 22 Sone ay halves— Towa. Sta eee -43 -43-—86 Norta Dakota State sees oe 1129 31—60 Kiacousl Bows Lafayette, Ind. (@)—Pur- due’s Boilermakers opened| their pre-Big Ten basket ball) season Saturday night with a | 62-58 victory over Missouri, which couldn’t get the re-|" bounds. from Lamar Lundy,/ Purdue’s. star 6- ule 6 football end. Lundy hauled down 17 re- bounds. He scored only © eight | points. . ‘ Ron Jecha, 6-foot-5 Pardue forward, was high scorer with 20 points, two more than Nor- man Stejwart, 6-5 Missouri guard. — _ Joe Campbell, little dice guard who is NCAA golf cham- / pion, suffered a leg injury late |in the game. Lenny Dawson, hot passing -| Purdue quarterback, made his first’ appearance in a varsity | basket ball game—for 22 sec- -}onds at the end, Missouri ( ee | Purdue ( oe Reichert 3 Ross Ronsick Denny Stephens mith Ruelhoft Stehr Stewart Paden Totals 21 16-28 1 Scoring by halv MISSOUN << 66. staie sis. 6 le0, bale vee 30—58 ms. ae all Dp 1 sone ; SBOONNSIY DOOOUDHWE* | Ian | Lorenz eae | Thornburg Dawson SLOSPNISOYW,. i Ruowhner So oo mtoctrer econo OM OHHwow-~e 1 OSHAWA Totals 24 14-28 20 | Purdue +. s+. liees 83 20—62. 14 ‘ “year,” ast us ‘from their e of the ake Totals 30 25-32 21/Totals 25 17-31 21 Score at. halt: SMU, 61-37, . Rams 60, Colorado 58 FORT COLLINS, COLO.—(®) Colorado A&M upset the Univere {sity of Colorado, 60-58, here Thursday night when Rich Gre- gory tipped-in a rebound with four seconds left to play. - Colorado had the biggest lead of the game at 19-9 midway of the first half. The Aggies clung to Colorado’s heels through the entire game, howWéver, and over- int deficit in the Then guard Jack Bryant ‘hit a drive-in and a quick jump shot from’ the keyhole for the Aggies, and Gregory canned a layup to ‘|}push the Aggies ahead, 57-56, and was fouled on the shot. He made the charity toss to make it 158-56 with 1:52 remaining. Colorado (58) , |Colo. A&M (60) | P M’bray S on 2 1}Bryant 7 4-5 9 Johnson 1. 0-0 ijStuehm O O- t 6 Nic’lson © 2-2 1/Chri‘sen 0 0- 0 O Pet’son O O- OG 4/Grant Peg. 3 2 C’fman @ 2-3 1\Gregory 4 4-5 4 Jochems 6 0-% O|Hibbard 7 0-0 1 Helzer Oo 0- 0 O/And’son L O0- LE 1 Ranglos g . e Siatbeth 3 45 3 Totals 28 ibs 19 13\Totals 23 14-20 11 Colorado . Ceosereveaveoacsen 26 32—58 Cold, ASME erensectavccgecse St Sor OO fi a ene ‘ Wao. ere By, GEORGE FRANCO Denver Post Executive Sports Editor FORT COLLINS, Dec. 20.—Bill ‘(We'll be lucky if we finish sixth) Strannigan isn’t a very good sales- (man. : True, his seasonal employment as basketball coach at Iowa State loesn’t require too much talent long salesmanship lines. But few mong the local group which ard his prediction ‘‘we’ll be >yclones Nix ‘Prophet Bill’ lucky to finish sixth (in the Big Seven conference race)’’ would buy that after. watching his cur- rent Cyclones breeze by Colorado A. & M., 72-60, here Monday night. But the dapper tutor gets an- other chance to prove—or dis- prove, if you would—his prophecy when he brings his team to Den- ver to meet Hoyt Brawner’s Pio- neers Wednesday night at the D. U. Fieldhouse. | Little Gary Thompson, the 5- m\ter of the final mar, #|Crawford, a hustling’ 6-foot 5-inch ‘test 8-inch home-grown (Roland, Ia.) product, was Strannigan’s ‘key agent in the victory, total-. ling 24 points by nearly every conceivable method and twice personally putting the damper on determined Aggie rallies. The first came after A. & M.’s most serious threat midway in the first half when Aggies’ Stan Albert and Boyd Grant shot their mates into a 17-16 margin with 10 :45 played. This was the only time A. & M. managed to lead. ‘}I-STATE AHEAD TO STAY Thompson immediately put Iowa Staté ahead to stay after Grant’s. long - one-hander had fetched the Aggie edge. First, he hit a driving layup after team- mate Arnie Gaarde’s neat theft and followed with two more quick fielders to put Iowa State ahead, 22-18, with 14:45 played. Then, in the second half, his mates helped _ erect ‘a more comfortable 8-point edge with 8:30 played only to have Aggies’ Dick Gregory re- duce it with three quick points. Thompson canned two free throws, a layup, a jump shot -and a second layup in that || order to double A. & M/s out- || put and give | Towa State/ a 54-45 edge with 12515 playe 5 After that it was. jyst.a. mat- as John re, and vet- Lyle Frahm | |CAN’T CHECK LONG SHOTS | ryant, the veteran Ram #|guard. Albert popped in seven of {12 field goal attempts and went é six-for-nine at the free throw line]. to lead the Aggie scoring with 20 points. Bryant hit five goals, each|' one from at least 20 feet out, and]: added. a single free throw for 11 = | points. Gregory was. practically A. & M.’s lone inside threat, collect- ing two tip-ins and a keyhole “Jumper among his five goals. He also added five free throws |; for 15 hard-earned points. — ‘Don Medsker, the one-time Colo- rado state. prep: all-stater from| Englewood, had a bad night in his first “‘home’’ appearance since de- parting two years ago. The 6-foot 8-inch soph managed only two goals in 10 attempts and one-for- ,|two. at the free throw line for al. ‘}meager five points. IOWA STATE (72) __ Ss FT FTA PF 4 4 L iz 4 0 0 1 0 i neg OO OT Ht a < Rl oHoowuwHa loxrao I NN» COLORADO. A&M 3 3 Ses RP cae eee O,- | Bl ooo OwWOMD a wl CooHoHHwu [2 BN H 4 Potalseet oss vaste 22 Score by periods: Iowa State | 6 j } oe a sepenesnn a sae —_ oniiunimpeaainet ee eee Ts ape eR { ; we omen heer esta ie NWA et NAPIER NE REAGAN TER ART EN TANS EERE ASE EN NARI BRIG EMR SOA EE RN ne eee a BME Re PU aE Ra AE 9 we a pat. = ia ieea4 i | - Oo t" Viet 1 v - Sao _ f At QC | © | o d,. +. A — 2b i> 2S 2 ~OVUOERRIA « * ...\..% 2% i? Zz ms s* y F L Rts bss i Y, 2 q & “ fe ag MS 4 * 4 % , , % > hae % oh? “ech? in 7 i ¢ Q QMS T* g Sp rea of Por MAB tions Right © - oO fue Gor © — Si A urlor Py ¢Hevras Seo fan eV vers ho lf Attempt Yo VE HT MUST BE ALERT Lett a a co © COS OPl\ Com O —, im Ficden/ Pa therns Yo MANS UVE KGS ror tf attemp # xo Kun MUST. BE BLE RT HEN AE ae ETT PO RET EN NEY PERE IEF i enel'a ie is Cech Natt SRK AS OS AGRE ALAN ELE AERIALS NCETM LMG SOME ener A a EES NER ENR ial BR em eo a ar IE NONE 6 NRO ASAE OSES AERA RL Pi as ML Ni aut nines “ a wrencncpmertnannds nieeiteininadedithenretitiontn ~, % : om ae . _ ee “Ss tN ee . ek ov ~~ 3 ss ' Se NE NNN SN EN en en an ee enrener Ps * Q 5 ‘ by REE ead ARATE ENE AR EE Bi in IM nei IE Pe aE ES RRR LA LT RAN x ® 4o-57 i ee pROS ne CRI ae Doe's 5 RATAN Eee adh ecancesmssaastnemicsssersesst sean sciatic ul— 4 Oo ye onbhh 7 a le ">? /6 , Koa aing Play s Vseof 49S4 lanier hath FAVORITE | © San | __ 2 ooo o = +5 Guard Polls % Traps oS oO ° OCOMOC Co fasses Flanker Lert the ee 4 . 4 * z a , ‘ 30 “be 23 aoe ‘ eenciniaadiiietmiadia 5 EPL RRO: Shy 8 ey Sabepe: ORT Gs TMI EE ILM BELT E TT sd SS haw comely eit -* STV TaON Be - | i AS AE ARR WARE ST RPM TNS WE ANP LS 4 HE RTO ie ae ——— ta co eH 4 “ oc \ | 7% % aps ee gfe # eosin Souugan ' ; SaaS SERA NEPAD NEN LANG SEAN OSES gt REI RENAE ROME RTI SH A Me RE OS INS 4a ramen € , appre AOR EG * ; — poe sonny ae wit % *% } a * . eo | th ¢ ‘ ; } eee } 3 a - ‘ . a aan ll : j sf is ¢ eee . ff", ‘i ‘ * i ee : Pad x “~ a cy *, any 4 gee Say % = ts is 5 « . i of STs 2% % Snceset : beth Kees eae treed ; % ‘ iS ‘, “ : cE 4 \ be want : he me oe Re Lae Mea iil PRELIM ER AEE ok ie EM Bee ee ee TAI RPG BBERASEELALE DOLL, DEA SOCLOE ences mmannigtecaenns 6 aan " ~ Fy , £ ., Songs q¢ = > ‘ a. oy <) nts | 6 : Ae - bs ’ Ley: x voit aes? et fy aig tae PR RDI GIERRES ties ATE AiR ie * a ™ % 6 ogy, : / yi é , i ig — 2 a it shee - . Me é i * getty, ; * é ‘ SER RENE BOLERO RGD EEE ERIE ARAL ALSO AGEING AR SA AE OR OME LIMITE FS RR RO NRO RASTA AS ER A mR ME =F ct BA wei * i En AB = te om, @ ‘ ; - des ; we ae . » PA Lyd Thee a ch Fe" "onl “oe enawecl 29 l2E a ARE ag i ie EP AD Ss NE SES Le Ne INT, ED CE a ely HR ET NEN ca By OS RE RON Tae a ‘ a 5 - ‘ * : - —- \|—eitow 1 Oo OC - : £ tees ee t «i : Ne gH at } “4 3 ? * ne k k : / * ; i A ALORA LAHORE CEN TE NEI LIED ES BE yO ON i GREAT A AMTE IE TARE Bt SBA NNT AIM IRA A RE AM AR NR EON A IN mean ay PORE ERE ibe Vena s es i ‘ # é i wreesesitibit Se es + : i a ‘ — er Fonning . Phys been’ 198% eg a fo aj Hoo oO ee Coane Polls on Ene ON dy an En | Ge thru Mole for AG * rn. on cd “ . ee D a ee , ~° Belly Phy Passes” a Strong Let? 5 4! Dive hv ay # GE Algék WA. , tit & weteesme ~Rt.. ; , “a () = 3S CORO Ter “SP 5 * 4% es 2 a4 5 SRE a BE A EE RE + * a My, PE i eM. BRE ne Fela. * : a ar “ 3 ase coh 4 wh : 4 eo _— _. a SU CANYON BSA Nae EE RIN OF SETA EGER DARE LS ED fet = % ; & oy ‘eat \ ; : * Fitton. ‘ : ~~ > } Fete bs Me 4 xa a ? hedln / Ro Me Oe ORT. CATA a OS s.. ruappsttecs DM U APS g ee — SEV AC fm pt, i 5 SS) G3. -* > £ ** ee Fs } Sessa - 2a Sa SEEN ea II RI MG Aa a EM. 8 SRR RIE lg Mille AR 8 3 he ei ene . - i oer RS OTS é a | —— 4-4) °* ORBIT 1 LLL MOEA GEE IE RET DE RAVE ASEM LS A VARESE MEAL O18 < a ce a a ee een fonnin 7 Plays Used 1959 Flanier Rig A¥ . FAVORITE yp © , =e e ° S0foos ° FAVORITE eS : ‘gy es ®, -* § sey ‘ : ‘ ? & ‘A tg e ; : » Spee PBN ja tore " 2 fe ie pt OR ; ‘ a tng e ae DP nse Fe % ne he oO o (Te kT A. Vs 47 g < a Pea * a miter . \ | fd i - Wiks 2. ‘ j - 3 ww & ; c SMU Passes rb) 7 Me Ot @ Mer 0) errr s 7% 3549 b af 22 ele eL Toudy rg HJ 6e-O0- oy At we Ms : = $4 3 . m-— ly A ae T" 19194 Eyes 8 jue 35 fee’: st £7 ,. 1. ly GQ 7 2S 2307 7 -— uz ¢ ah 11.4 “Ts 2. 2 1247 Ny IST FOThao on 8e Side a “So REX~mayhi a . — WRom Lety Aad «: ed. - Runs 2 9 PO (4.5 ~ 1955 Big Seven Pre-Season Basketball Tournament Bracket December 27 - 28 - 29 - 30 COLORADO Loser 1 ~ 1—Tues. 7:30 p.m. Winner 1 OKLAHOMA f c, Sle rei ein Se ea arte Winner 5 5—Thurs. 2:00 p.m. 7—Thurs. 7:30 p.m. Winner 7 IOWA STATE : 2—Tues. 9:30 p.m. Loser 2 KANSAS STATE Winner 2 Loser 5 Loser 7 3 . a ———$—$—$$ Freel eee \ . : 10—Fri. 4:00 p.m. 9—Fri. 2:00 p.m. 11—Fri, 8:00 p.m. 12—Fri. 9:45 p.m. Loser 6 Loser 8 nent ee MISSOURI Loser 3 Winner 3 3—Wed. 7:30 p.m. NEBRASKA ca 6—Thurs. 4:00 p.m. ‘ i Winner 6 a a 8—Thurs. 9:45 p.m. Winnee Z KANSAS 4—Wed. 9:30 p.m. Loser 4 —_———_- Winner 4 CORNELL No Game Will Be Televised Mail orders for tickets will be received after November 25. Preference will be given those ordering for all four nights. big seven tournament KkeCe star 3:°af a1 SOONER SCOREBOARD Record to date: W21L3 3; 6k 65 Baylor 55 3; h7 Rice 62; 69 Vanderbilt 76; 89 Ohio State 68; 69 Arkansas 59 Returning lettermen - (i) - “a Abbey, f; 4eRoy Bacher,c; Bob Burr, g; Jimuy Peck, g finish (1955 Big Seven £kiakah - 7th , l- a gamess 3-18 Previous tournament see - 19.6 he 19K 7— yes 39L.8—= [sts 1949 - 2na; 1950- oo 1951- fens 1952= Sens 1953- Qnd;-1955- pth w25 B12 Pet . 556 Ante a Remaining pre-tournament games = Dec. 20 Okla homa A & M at Norman; Dece 23 Illinois at Urbana First round opponent + Colorado, 7:30 pem. Tue sd ay 7. traditional Klahoma, the tvadttawat upset team of the Big Seven tournament, again is poised in a prime position to bring off a form reversal when the tenth annual affair opens fusudayvx a four-day run Tuesday in Kansas City's Municipal auditorium The Sooners, re-grouping under Doyle barrack, an in- tenseHss young coach fxumvarwho played for arch-rival Oklahoma A & M, are palired against Colorado in the meet's tipoff game at 7:30 pete Tuesday. Colorado is the team Oklahome ambushed, ¥¥3Vivx 73-71, in an overtime first-roander last yeare The significance of thig conquest can be best understood by this two-edged fact.... CU went on to win the conference while Oklahoma was dead last atxlie®@1x 1-11, The upset of the Herd was one of only three games the Sooners won last year in their final season under Bruce Drake. In 1949 OU toppled Kansas State, sms and eventual eonference tri-champion in the £xtix league season following, 56*§@ This two was a first-round affair, Only last last second 6081 by the Wildcats: 222 Jim Iverson saved State the next year, 55-53. And that was the Purple s best all-geawx time team, going all the way to the NCAA finalse In 'S1 Drake's Shufflers skidg@ed unbeaten Stanford inte the discard in the cpening rounds The Indians had com into the mest undefeated. Colorado and 0w fhusn twoxvsuns are muh more closely matched this Still, the Buffaloes winter tian last, on peeyx paper, at least. #vrvanevsiingyxvhexisravx will rank as solid favorites . toxtxYourverxfivavetawteryx , barring tremendous upheavals in the two clubs! few remaining eng@ ements before tournament time. Even though Colorado last four of five starters which ~ is starting — , tock it to third place in the NGAA last year , it wb xexakextxgysensiet a full team of lettermene In contrast, Oklh oma is Petumvingvxvkvxx fusing two sophomores with one holdover letterman and two returning regulars in its starting fivee Furthermore, Parrack shows only four lettermen on his entire squad, fewer than any conference team, and 4s carrying 10 sophémores on his 18-man squad. An llth , Pred Hood, 6—l. 200-pounder, womts will miss the tourney because of duty with Sooner football fortumes in the Orange bowl. Parrack's rookie starters are Joe King, 6-63 Norman forward who is Bacher's releif at center, and Joe Jones, 6-1g Oklah- oma Cityan,. A third soph, Billi Pinkerton, 6) Oklahoma Cityan , cane i off the bench to score 18 points in last week s 69-59 vanquishing of Arkansase “d Abbey, 6-l, Yenverite , is the lettered junior starter. He plays Opposiitte King in the front line. Bacher, the 6-53 , 230-pound pachyderm with the soft touch, is at center, of course, with Peck, a leaping little guy eut from tlh same cloth as ths departed Lester Lane, pairs with Jones in the backlines 333 This club carries more Svaruykvneivx bal anced height than those ~ig Seven fens are accustomed to seeinge Draketx ~~ ‘became famous for his Dribbling Dwarfs , which often were hubbed by a giant like Bill Waters or “ar cus Pret bevgers Parraeck has no one as towering as the 6-11 Feeiberger, but iverall squad height is the best in recent seasons if not of all time. | Bacher will carry a five-gamr average of 16. into Friday's collision with Illinois at Urbanae Peck is traveliing at 1363 King 12.6. Bacher is successor to Missouri's Med Bark as the league's best maneuveror around tle boards and owns a touch as deft as Gerald Tucker, oU.s Hels Foundation Player of - Year in 19.7 and this tourney's first scoring champion in the front end of that segSONe Petk established himself as one of the Loopts best dribblers and junp-shooters as a sophomore last yeare | fuxvavk The 33-year-old ‘arrack can be counted upon to wring the most from a squad which represents the first step in a hoped-for Sooner rise back to Buavaenkyamyx conference contentione Ag expected from a Hank Iba disciple , Parrack has installed slow- down basketball. Drake wasvauxwxusiivmt could put toegther unsurpassea bali-contral when he wished, but Parrack is likely to go with it all the way. The Sooners have put up an average of 56 shots per games The defense was good enough to limit Temple Tucker , Rice's heralded , fhayptiivmowex itvidey tuxmatvchrwhtav WM wi Notwxwi Viv box 6-10 sophomore, to his season's low of 10 pointsBBecember 8, altho iuukewxv kite yew sv sero ndawit wxavBigvien vivav Oklahoma lost , 47-62. The Sooners tackle their second Big Ten opponent in Illinois, Ohio State flogged them, 89-68, December 12. Al 1-Time Composite Tournament Standings : W L Pct. Pts, Ops Pts Chpse Southern Methodist 1 eee 1¢000 -151 135 i Kansas State > & FT: «thi 1828 1648 3 Kansas 9 38 9 . 9667 1737 1596 2 Oklahom A & M a ee ee ae 0 Niehigan £4 he ee 159 0 Minnesota i+ 2@ i ¢667 a 189 0 Stanford a. £1 ht Oe 238 0 Missouri 9 “he 10 — gh WD 1585 1521 2 Okl ahoma 9 25.22 25% Arka. O67 4 Arkansas 2 i. 2. «30S 150 155 0 Yale 1 ‘(2 «i 190 0 California 1 . £ «ae 200 +219 0 Iowa State 9 9 WB «#333 1611 1770 0 Colorado 8 Oo 26 -.333 AO 14,56 0 Nebraska 9 .7 2 «a ee Oates 0 Harvard 4 Oo 3 . s000 156 193 0 _ dash ington 1 . 3 st =. &S 2h9 0 BIG SEVEN TOURNAMENT KANSAS CITY, DEC.27~30 THE TOURNAMENT'S LEADING SCORERS WITH ONLY THE CHAMPIONSHIP GAME REMAINING , G F FP TP 1, BacHerR, OKLAHOMA 27 20=--54 6 74 gt ? Ph 2, Routes, CoRneLL 287 £RZXE7Z* 2 $, Stewart, iMrssourr 6 ii-i. 6 4, Exwatt, Nesrasxa 1§ 24-29 11 5. Hannaz, CoLorano 15 17-26 12 6, Roperson, CORNELL 70 iGec0 67 71. Pann, Kansas STATE 16 13-19 11 71. Pack, OKLAHOMA 14 17-18 11 97. Xrng, OxLaHoma 414 14-21 il OT, LoSmrrtx, Mrssourr 14 14-19 i1 THE FOLLOWING ARE PLAYING IN THE CHAMPIONSHIP GAME AND GO IN Wi TH THE FOLLOWING RECORDS? Esstun, Kansas 15 9-11 Dosass, Kansas § 1115 Bratwarnp, Kansas G 6=8 9 Jounson, Kansas 6 8-10 7 39 27 2a 20 a3 e9 ol 20 THompson, lowa STATE BR 10-15 Meosxer, lowa Stave 7 15-22 Crawrornp, lowa STATE 8 6-16 Voor, lowa Stare G f= 6 Mn takki sg) fobs Dong f ' va ie cy “ b