“Tough Defensd Holds "Hawks Out of Range By TEX MAULE : The Southern Methodist Mustangs, an icy calm and deadly basketball team, shot down high-ranked Kansas University Saturday night, 81-61. The Jayhawks came to Dallas ranked 12th in the United Press national basket- ball poll and 18th in the poll of the Associated Press. They were never in the game with the cat-quick, aggressive Methodists. Doc Hayes’ polished team controlled the rebounds, outran the Kansas fast break, disorganized their pattern plays and, through it all, fired with beautiful accuracy from all ranges to puncture the Jayhawk defense. Probably the strongest factor in the surprisingly easy Methodist victor was a tremendous defense which shut Kansas out of the easy- shot area under the basket. In the first half, the Jayhawks could work| "2 the ball in close only six times and|M hit three of the shots. - The Mustangs, hand, had nine shots from point blank range and scored on all of them, They sometimes outran the|Car Kansas defense with a sizzling fast break for a quick goal, but more often they bided their time, moving ' the ball quickly and well around the perimeter of Kansas defenders! Yo until they could pull a player out|#}§ of position enough to find running Pa ater room for a driving shot under the hoop. — This was probably the best SMU See PONIES, Page 4, Col. 4 on the other|Lee MUSTANG RAMBLE a | bu i HOoNNwocouawhosa’s 2 SMU fg. Showalter cesses ddsdescces ° & Scharffeniberaer O’Kel bole vaan Pinridse Seeiaen® eee 3 PPP aceon: Pi Sob mtocriace Fe 0-0 0-0 Siice eeveenacere eenvecee 1-2 Totals w2031 19-29 19 KANSAS fg. Brainard we ok | oopHeSSesHees SHSCSAONKEANNE HN eeeereereseenese vt 3 eeosenesaeeeaes Be et ANI | eeoesouesenins | prororsricraitases beocoriseises Totals Halftime—SMU 39, Kansas 30. Ponies Rip Kansas, 81 81-61, Continued From Page 1 ‘team effort of the season; it may lhavé been the best of two seasons. You would have a hard time picking an SMU here in the game. Big, lanky Jim Krebs hit 11 field goals, got 10 rebounds and hovered ‘over Kansas Center Lewis Johnson ‘that Johnson managed only one field goal, _ He tried nine but more often than not the ball was capped by Krebs’ big hand as it started toward the basket and when it wasn’t, Johnson was shooting under pressure. - Larry Showalter played brilliant- ly. He got SMU away to a quick lead with a pair of high, cleanly arched 1-hand set shots from 20 feet out» but his shot-making was only the spectacular part of. his contribution. Showalter was a strong point in the SMU defense and he rebounded vigorously, pick- ing off nine. Joel Krog, the SMU captain, gave the Mustangs their blanket control of the backboards, though. Krog, who is 6-3, rebounds like a giant, He plays the banks like Wille Hoppe shooting a 3-ball com- ‘bination and he took 21 shots off ‘ the backboards, only two less than the whole Kansas team. Kansas made a game of it through the first half, although ‘they. never got close enough for a tie. With Showalter’s two quick field goals, SMU was off ahead. The Jayhawks pulled up to within three points quickly, on long set shots by Johnson and Maurice King, but Krebs sent SMU winging ‘when he piled in five field goals in the next six minutes. He lofted a soft hook shot over Johnson from. the side. He jumped and fired 2-handed from near thé basket for another goal. He got a tip-in when one of Showalter’ s long shots just missed and he worked free to take quick passes under the hoop for two more field goals. Kansas couldn’t get in close against the pressing, tough SMU defense. The Jayhawks fired 32 shots in that first half and 24 of the attempts came from beyond the free throw line. Dallas Dobbs, Kansas’ leading scorer, hit three times from far out, but the rest of the Jayhawks’ were missing and the Mustangs covered the rebounds voraciously, It was 39-30 at half-time and the standing-room-only crowd in Per- kins Gym was still on edge. But SMU pulled away rapidly in the second half. In ten minutes, the Mustangs had a 17-point lead and Doc’ Hayes began taking his shock troops out. As each starter left the game, the 2700-plus crowd! roared acclaim. , Bobby Mills, the husby little guard who has so capably filled Art Barnes’ shoes, turned in the prettiest play of the evening. He stole the ball from Dobbs just in)’ front of the free-throw line, raced the length of the court with Dobbs and Maurice King on his heels and plopped in a lay-up. The play set back a Kansas rally which had pulled the Jayhawks up to within four points of SMU. This was Kansas’ first defeat) after three victories. SMU _ has won six and lost one.. SMU hit 42.5 percent of its field goal attempts while Kansas, under unnerving pressure nearly all the time, scored 18 of 62 for 29.0. The Kansans made only six field goals) in the second half. The Mustangs had a whopping) 56-23 advantage in rebounds. Oklahoma Ambles. By Porkers, 69-59 NORMAN, OKLA. — (UP) — Oklahoma University broke a ‘|three-game losing streak Mere Thursday, defeating by 69-59 a -| winless Arkansas team. The Sooners took th¢’lead early in the second half and kept a spread of three to fouy/points or more the remainder of the game. collected 20 points in leading Oklahoma to ory of the year. Teammate Bill Pinkerton, ith 18. vit Freeman Hits Hot 35.7 Clip, ****Tops Scoring inoiay: 0 Ses Seana! oe ; ; AMERRBOB sccsttcorsiecveebs #0 20-0 By Associated Press Oklahoma .eecccee evceececs OS 36-69 ‘A college basketball player 1] Abbey 3| King 1|Pink’ton BH EROHORaAD TIVE VESRE Cte NPoad eS DPoOwBwWorse OS Peocsm Eee ? = © BUFFS ON FREE THRO\ OREGON STATE ON SHORT END 63-53 SCORE. |Colorado, Outshot, 24-18, Fr Field, Has a 27-5 Margin From the Charity Line, © Corvallis, Ore., Dec. 4.(AP) The University of Colorado Bu |faloes made free throws co ‘jas they defeated Oregon Stat 63-53 in last night’s basketbal ‘}game. ‘| Colorado, third in the N. C A. A. tournament last. year |made only eighteen field goal compared with twenty-four for .|Oregon State, the defending Pa- _|eific Coast conference champion, :|But on the free throw line, Colo- ‘|fado outscored the Staters 27-5.! The game was tied three times in the first half and was’ ‘|knotted again with just seven minutes remaini forward, was high {Scorer of the game with twenty- two. He fouled out with six min- utes left to play and his: de- |parture hurt the Staters. ‘| Bill Peterson, Colorado guard, ‘twas high for his team with| ijeighteen. Center George Hanna had sixteen and Forward Jim 3|Ranglos had thirteen for the win- ‘ners, COLORADO—63, Geen AP 8 0 42: 3 2 6 0 4 a, KNB Roonhd Ranglos ... yivoliman ., » Hannah oe terson anfield 0000O~3 1/Crimins ".. ~ OJAllord «i... 4 Shadoin ., 0 0 PYOOHES oY DHOSHOS FW SOONNSUANOD HOORNS oO ray NX] - +--+] Totals ... Totals ..18 27-41 8 : a MPGlOTAGG odin. eres aetiahsc c. 32 31—6, 3 Oregon Sintec. Se dcr he 25 28—5! A VICTORY FOR MINERS. Jay a Keep Big Mark i s KANSAS CITY, Dec. 8.—(AP)— The University of Kansas Jay- hawks squeaked past Wichita’s Wheatshockers, 56-55, Wednesday night to keep the Big Seven con- ference basketball victory streak rolling at six games. — Earlier this week Missouri, Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma and , Kansas State each won over ma- jor opponents. Thursday night’s eard offers Iowa State against Texas Tech at Ames, Iowa, and Oklahoma against Rice at Houston. Texas|’ Tech has lost. by big scores to Missouri and Kansas State this week, Kansas, which opened iis. sea- son in a 91-70 victory over Northwestern on Monday, had to turn on the heat in the sec- ond half to edge Wichita which was dedicating its new field house before a capacity crowd of 10,000. Wichita, which got a 14-point shooting performance from For-|¢ ward Don Woodworth, raced to a 28-23 halftime lead, but wilted early in the second half to allow Kansas to pull ahead 36-31. ; Forward Bill Brainard and Cen- ter Lou Johnson each scored 15 KANSAS (56) - Foe 22. FIA. PE -TP 3 0 2 0 6 WICHITA (55) j av BL WEA. PF ae 2 3 0. 0 0 0 3 0 4 ? | Om ABNOR =~ wv ~ mors ovis kK h es Oo ic i 8S h- an he ed of are aly lli- ied rly and led 55-45. in those last 15 hectic minutes. charged with eight fouls in the cashed in for 13 free throws and the ball game. It was a fairly simple matter for Drake to keep the lid on Wild- cat scoring through the second- half melee. The Bulldogs played a tight man-for-man defense and effectively kept big Jack Parr, 6-9 Wildcat center, from shoot- ing. With K-State long shots going wild, the Wildcats limped out the time. The K-State shooting per- centage fell from 46 per cent for the first half to a meager 35 per cent for the game as the ’Cats hit only 27 per cent in the final 20 minutes. Biggest statistical difference in the two teams’ came in re- bounding where the Bulldogs jtowered far above K-State, end- jing with 43 recoveries to the Wildcats’. 23. Leading K-State scorer was 5-8 guard Pachin Vicens who = had six baskets and three free throws for 15 points. ‘That tied ' Drake’s Red Murrell for scor- ing honors. Parr had 14 on five baskets and four charity throws, but the big sophomore got only five rebounds. Willie Cerf, 6-6, Bulldog senior center, led with 10 rebounds. _ Drake stepped out first, scor- forward, dropped in a free throw in the first minute, and the two teams swapped leads until Parr hit a pair of free throws with three minutes . to pull out 6-5. Building: on that, the Cats shook off the stubborn Bulldogs slowly, until putting on a scoring spurt in the last four minutes of the first half to get the hailftime margin of 11 points. While; Drake could hit but 29 percent, of its 69 field goal at- tempts, the Bulldogs dropped in 380 of 389. free throws to outdis- tance K-State by 28 points at the line. Part of the rash of Wildcat fouls in the final minutes came as they pressed Drake for the ball. ‘The Bulldogs went into a semi-freeze with four minutes remaining, The win gives Drake a 3-1 rec- ord for the season, the only loss coming by 62-63 to Tulsa here Saturday. The Bulldogs after leading by 18 with 15 min- utes to play. Tonight’s action was almost an exact reverse of that. —_——. a —- ing as Dave Hutchins, 6-2; senior] lost| K-State Offense Falters After Forging 4A-31 Gap BY PAUL DE WEESE Special Correspondent . DES MOINES, IOWA—Kansas State lost to Drake University, 70-64, here Monday night in a wild, scrambling cage display that saw the Wildcats blow a 13-point lead in the second half. — After building to a 42-31 advantage at intermission, and pull- ing out 44-31 as the second half opened, the Cats fought off a determined set. of Bulldogs for five minutes of the second period Then K-State lost its scoring punch—netting only nine points Drake threw up a tight defense that allowed the Wildcats no certain shots, In attempting to make a scrap of it the Cats were, late stages which the Bulldogs Box Score KANSAS STATE a -Ga F-Fa Pf Tp WUMOM coaviephs sven orth en 6. 2 10 DeWitz @earrsses ae 0- 1 0- 1 1 0 Wallate seccccsses O- © 19-0 0 .0 BONG A cswacéiecevic cuerbe. (tebe (o 10 Schneider ..sccces £2 Der Oa 0 WiGCNS Suveteccece? O-ll. 3°43 15 PISUHEDs Leh e es seces oe Bee Lt Hutchins .secesess 0 09 Of 0 0 9 Powell eeeoereeseee 4- 6 0- 2 3 § Parr eeeceseeseses 5-11 4- 6 4 14 Totals seccccee 24-68 16-26 21 64 DRAKE (70) G-Ga F-Fa Pf Tp PONK Fcc oe Sebee can (tO Or wees 8 Gere ts huuenesee tion. Ore 9811 HOECHINSiivewenene va-Le 20-13). 1..14 Dirrell cdsscuesace O-la o- 6 3 11 Peter WethiNGeoe tito: + Oete. 1. 24 Schmidt eoeeeeeoee 0-1 0- 0 i Cag Carey eeereeevece e- 6 5- 6 3 li TOtaS Meee aes 20- 70 30-39 17 7 Halftime Score—42-31, K-State. Officials—Wayne Lichty and Bo McAl- ister. t F SS a 2 Ses) os oosiers Squeeze i 1 Aizzou, 81-78 ee . - COLUMBIA, MO _— (UP) oot The University of ikea, led hy. ‘Wallace Choice aaa Charlie Brown, squeezed by Missouri, |81-78, here Saturday night for its ; third. victory of the season., Choice was the Hoosiers’ leading scorer with 19 points but i was Brown who, besides bagging a total of 16 points, dropped in ‘an insurance basket in the last,40 seconds of the game after the Hoos ers had stalled through shost of the final three minutes. issouri, with center Chock ‘Denny doing most of the scoring, uit up a 41-36 lead at #he half, but the. Hoosiers jumped ahead after three minutes Ahe second half. The Tigers were never in front after siete mir te to play. But Brown’ 's basket was the clincher. Stewart was the high»scorer with 21-points and Bawiny, had a for Missouri. Indiana eb >| Missoust (78) . Choice 5 9-16 a Ross > 11-13 Thom’sn 4 0- 1 ae 0- 0 3| Reichert £2 = Brown oo 1 0 ees 3- 3 { Jbre’sky 5 1-3 5|Stewart Bryant 6 2- 3 Lumpkin 0 0-0 1 Oo o 1 @N WR _ a a re fee ee Totals 33 1s2T 1 | Totals Pr oeaS HS BYU 84, ‘Colorado 53 sity more Col hao, 84-53 Sat- urday night fordts sixth straight win of fhe segfson and second in 2 row 0 e Buffaloes. Friday light the“eighth-ranked Cougars vhipped the Coleresoate, 70-53. Jelorado Ge. P G FP ead 1 8-6 4 Ranglos 6 9-12 4|Pinecar & 0-1 4 Coffman 1 3- 6 3|/Rowe. 4 44-35 7 ‘Helzer .0 0-2 2\Jensen 1 0-0 3 Nichs’n © 0- @ i1\Hirschi J 2-3 0 Cadle 0 0-0 iPeders’n 10 5-6 8 Gingrich 0 0- 0 0|/And’on,B 0 1-2 90 Hannah 3 4-5 4/And@’syJ 3 0-0 0 Tochems 2 1- 4 3\/Tebbs 5 4-4 2 Wilcox. 0 0+ 0 O|And’sn,H 1. 2-2 2 Petersn 2 0-1 0| Lewis %, 0- 0. 0 Mowbry 2 2-3 1|Steinke 0 1-2 0 Norman 1 0-0 0 gi ol 0 0- 0 0 Johnson 00-0 0 Redhair 0 0-0 0 Totals 17 19- “ 19| Totals 31 22-30 1: Colorado @reecessesasesenes e 23 Bi BYU ceccsccccccestengececee 3 49—8: i Houston Beats K-State Houston, Tex. (®)—The Uni- versity of Houston beat fast- breaking Kansas State, 86-79, Wednesday night for their fifth straight basket ball victory. | Danny Dotson’s long side - shot with 5:40 to go gave Hous- ton a 76-74 lead and the Cou- gars were never headed. * Kansas’ State be meee ae) } feof op d pf. Stone . i 0-1 1! Foster 3 2-2 5 Schneider 4-4 3) Helms 5 1-2 4 Parr 6 1-3 5'Boldebuck 7 9-111 Vicens 412-14 1| Lopez ~ 5 2-2 3 Fischer 5 2-3. 1] Dotson .».8 6-9. 2 Wilson 3 1-1 1/Sells O 2-2 2 Wallace (0 0-0 0} Evans 4 0-0 1 bott = 4° 1-38 2) Tucker 0 oy 0 Hutchins 0. 0-1 aon 0 0-0 1 Powell ~ 0 0-0 o y Totals 29 21-30 15] ‘Totals 32 22-28 19 eee by halves—- r ie Kansas State Sew eevoceseses 47 32—79 Houston 1O'0 10188, 0 S198 S80 6 #096 46 40—86 TIGERS COAST IN Norm Stewart Hits 30 Points in 81 to 57 Victory Over : Idaho. NO THREAT BY THE VANDALS, ‘Missouri Takes Command After Six Minutes and Stays on _ Top Thereafter. Se _ (By The stars Own Service.) Columbia, Mo., Dec. 19.| —Norman Stewart scored thirty points to lead the University of Missouri to an 81 to 57 victory over the University of Idaho here tonight. | The Tigers shook out of a 5-5 “tie before the game was six minutes old, and were in abso- Jute command thereafter. Late in the first period the Pacific Coast conference team closed to within six points of the free-scor- - ing Missourians, but by inter- mission time the Tigers had widened the advantage to 42-27, and they raced away to a 30- point lead early in the second _ period and kept an advantage of about that proportion most of the way. Coach Wilbur Stalcup found the secondary scoring he has been looking for to back up Stewart’s regular barrage. Bill . Ross made sixteen, Redford Reichert twelve and _ Lionel Smith ten, despite the fact that the regulars gave away a good! deal of time to the reserves. Jay Buhler was the high scor- er for the’ vandals with twenty-|, two points. Tonight’s game was the last for the Tigers before the Kansas] | City tournament) which starts]? December 27. Stalcup dismissed the M. U. squad tonight, and the fifteen men chosen for the tour- nament trip will return Thurs- day to resume practice. The Idaho squad will continue its Mid-West campaign against Washington. university at St. Louis Wednesday nfght. IDAHO—57. _Barnom Reichert PROBE c'sccase Richards A Stehr ( '... - Egelhoft - Ronsick .. 0 2 aiid Oe CRWHAIDWOWS 1 0 5 0) “2 0 -0 iL SYUNUHSNONSD oooumwHooun'd Kaestner Stephens -6 Stewart .11 5 Smith ss. & 0-0 t % ee . — —_—_ -——- ' Totals 17 23-3119] Totals ..31 19-32 18 "GEN 7 sess duces cc capteowaves venjunnees ‘a lotwex 27° 30—57 fisseari se cceab anit esas Us tas 42 39—81 Officiels—C Og Wichita, and John *yaser, Tilinois. ° : HELP FOR RORY Ly 3 a WNYOKOOHKHOHKNNHU Purdue Tames — Mizzou, 62-58 LAFAYETTE, Ind., Dec. 3 (p— | Purdue’s Boilermakers opened | their pre-Big Ten basketball s | Saturday night with a 62-58 ' | Purdue’s star\6-6 f Lundy hauled | although he | points. Ron Jecha, 6-5 Purdue forward, was high scorer with 20 points, two more than Norman Stewart, 6-5 ‘Missouri guard. ° Joe Campbell, little Purdue guard who is NCAA golf champion, suffered a leg injury late in the game. Its seriousness was not de- termined immediatety. Lenny Dawson, hot passing Purdue quar- terback, made his first appearance in a varsity basketball. game—for 22 seconds at the end.” Purdue: hit 24 of 58 shots from the field for a .414 percentage. Missouri connected with 21 PURDUE SWSOHRAOwRIR ‘J Di Ne OO et ay, per NewrHown me ~ Totals 24 14-28 20 CTE Wheel a eee “28 30—58 ai Gg AE te ee OS .|Nelsenjf «| Kiewel,g Stewart Hits Das Mizzou \Romps, 11-46 COLUMBIA — (#) — Norman): | Stewart, Missouri’s leading point ‘\maker last year, missed eight of his first nine shots Thursday ‘Inight, but still scored 22 poi as the Tigers defeatéd South). Dakota, 71-46. South Dakota tgok over the} lead halfway thrgugh the first), period, 17-11, an there was less|- -\than six minuteg left in the half} two-pointer fi-} igers in front for a South Dakota ~ I reaapinge t 2|Reichert,f 0|Ronsick,f 3|Ross,f 2|Stehr,f 2| Egelhoff,£ 2/Denny,c 3|Stephens,c 1\Kaestner,c 0|Stewart,g Smith,g Richards,;g Paden,g {Hensen,g |Cotter,g oe oe, Totals 141815|. Totals Wold,f Mid’ton,f Haugland,f Jongew’'d,¢ Truelson,c SWRHHOHOND SCKEOOCNONGMSO Hagerty,g ‘|Conway,§ Bl HoHnSoHwonmwonneg | cOnomHOOHOMHaN | eal 4 Sl coor owesewRosoouHy ee 8 Stewart ‘35. Misso Defeats Te COLUMBIA, mMo—(U. Norman Stewart broke an . ‘ltime Missouri single-game scc ing record with 35 points Monda night as the Tigers handed Texas ‘|Tech its first defeat of the sea a illiaat d iecematt ae sortie aa son, 92-60, Stewart, an ‘All-Big Seven guard last season, also set an ins dividual game mark for field goals, connecting on 14 of 28 shots for 54 percent, Hé also points was set jf 1953 by Bob Reiter. The Tiggrs as a team hit a red-hoh 53 percent of their shots fro: ;|could muster only 31 percent. Missouri, with Stewart setting the pace, built up a 51-20 half~ time lead. Tech came back in the second. half with a full-court 4|press, but the Tigers continued to: pour it on with their lead ¢]never cut. é Black’r Newton | Buchan i | Reed * | Under’d # | Cum’ gs & | Redw’e ¢ |Carpe’r | Wilson. :|Missouri | occ eceeeoneces Texas Tech | | Missouri ee 0|Reichert 3|Ronsick 2|Ross 1|Stehr 4|Cotter Sen> t [ae [lee seg ee & 1 SaQerNeAa re) 1 Scaling SSHwMSNONaAHH SHaunboeonntre es Not 1 Smith Gibson | ERReUMwooemHES PY pep Ane 4 Egelhoff . | 8 8 3 Totals 20 20-34 17 Totals | Sel Wows Texas Tech| iteeceseceeeeees20 Buffs 68, Oregon 49 EUGENE, ORE. — (2) — Colo- i/rado moved into an early ‘jand held it all the way to de #|Oregon, 68-49, Monday n: A crowd of 4,867 - Ranglos score two Colorado in the openj and a field goalfo tie the score j at 4-4, But with only four minutes gone Colorado moved ahead to stay on — Mel Coffman’s basket, , Colorado es i Oregon (49) ot 1} Bell 2-2) 3| Franklin 2-4. 5-6 0-0 7-8 0-0 0-0: 4-5 2-2) t 0-0 0| Tuchardt 0-0 0 Totals 28 22-28 15. Totals 17 15-23 16 'Coloradd .eccscs sorcescccese 40. 28-—68 OLERON GY istics eke cesec \s aainee re 21 COSHH NEw m&weM Scectmowmaarw® SCRseoescsweny Sooners Refuse 9,553 Loyola, Victory Parr Cans 26 To Pace Easy Win for Cats : BY DICK SNIDER | Daily Capital Sports Editor | MANHATTAN—Towering Jack} Parr hit 26 points and got plenty of help from Kansas State’s ‘long-range shooters here Thurs- day night as the Wildcats flogged ‘Loyola of Los, Angeles, 92-66. Parr, K-State’s 6-9 sophomore '‘hope~-from © Richmond, Va., ~ hit: ‘hooks, tip-ins) and layups, and} leaped’ high to guide in some shots from far. out as he posted his personal single-game high. Squaring, their season’s. record} jat 2-2, the Wildcats treated a lerowd of about 7,200 to a hot first half in which they hit: 44 per cent of their shots in posting a 43-29 lead, Parr got. six baskets in- the first half, .and Fritz Schneider and Stone wound up. with 12 points. Pate: fayoriie above the op- position that could offer no player taller than 6-4, also col- lected 20 rebounds in the ap- proximately 35 minutes he played. The total is just three ‘short of the K-State record . _ owned by Dick Knostman. K-State ruled bot backboards, { height advanage : paid off wtih 74 rebounds to Loy-| ‘ola’s 43. ‘". State, enjoying the romp against the over-matched. Lions, was even notter in the second half than the first. The Wild-|' cats, after hitting 19 of 43 shots in the first half, connected on 18 of 39 in. the second half for 46 per cent, and 45.1 per cent for the game. ' Loyola put up only four fewer|. shots than K-State, but got only|* 26'of the 78 for 33 per cent. The victory broke a'two-game}: State losing streak taken on the (it ase tlie Getbdd straight here}. this season, however, going with|- the opener against: Texas Tech. Loyola led only once, at 3-2, |. in the first two minutes of the game. K-State quickly erased that and led by 17-7 “ather a minutes. - The loss ye Loyola’s secant The Loyola club is the same one,|; incidentally, which. lost to South- western of Winfield in the NAIA]; tournament 'in Kansas City ‘et { spring. Dave Beknaderet, the only . Loyola starter as tall as 6-4, led his squad with 18 points, and in| rebounds with 10. Little Pachin Vicers, the col- orful K-State guard, had another big night, although he. scored only four points.. He continually|: fired the ball in to Parr, making the big boy’s job easy under the basket. Vicens also spearheaded |an occasional Wildcat fast break. Neither team burned the net|. shooting free throws, but Loyola really was wretched., The , Lions hit 14 of 43 free tosses—a worse|, percentage than they had from|. the field. K-State hit 18 of 40 charities. rd rg (92) ¥g-Fega Ft-Fta Pf Tp Abb "Oe 1” Os 0 } Fischer tie tele hie. M'ave's 2-.4 PASEO: is og cik'sle ee ce « O- 0 Powell «. «2 Se'sisle aise 6-11 Schneide et Vicens “, oe | Wallace Wesee 8 | SSREOSCHRHENH OS Total eee- 31-83 18-40 LOYOLA (66) Fg Fea Ft-Fta Brown. wees eone epees 3- 9 7-12 HOye see ee eneeses McMahon... ose Salvino Benaderet Donahue . Kovely Pingatore © ..+. Totals Halftime. score: "43-29, K- State. Ww Hea gg we be Officials: Cliff Ogden (Kansas City), Howard Connors (Vermillion, Ss. D.). Freeman Hits 40, Buckeyes Rip OU, 89-68 COLUMBUS, OHIO — (®&) — Ohio State’s Buckeyes, with the sensational Robin Freeman toss- ing in 40 points, beat the Okla- |homa Sooners, 89-68, here Mon- | All-America Freeman, a senior guard, hit 12 of 20 field goal tries and lobbed in 16 of 20 from the free throw line to bring his four-game average to 36.75. The Buckeyes got off to an 8-0 lead as the game opened, and the Sooners never again came) closer than eight points, despite a strong comeback effort in the last half. Ohio State led, 40-17, at the half. The Buckeyes, who lost shsty home opener a week ago, won their third contest in four starts. It was the third loss in four starts for the Sooners. | | etiniiome: (68) Ohio State (89) - Ge ore G Sidle HERG RAS Roto Come DO 4- Millard 4 0-1 Totals ' 23 22- 31 2 Totals Ohio State cess ce vecesewh'sevee 40 49-—89 Oklahoma eweerocnesson eaeseen 17 51—68 Colorado 60, lowa 57 BOULDER, COLO. — (4) | Colorado University, defendin: '|Big’ Seven Conference basketha. champion, defeated Iowa’s Big 1 titlists, 60-57, here Monday nigh ‘\before 6,800 fans. Towa (57) | Colorado - Gon Pee 1- 2 4|Coffman 3] Ranglos 5|Hannah 1| Peterson | 3|Mowb’y 3|Helzer 3|Jochems 2INichol’n a HH OWWHORAS = sh ~ nce ae NOSANUAH Totals 19 49-80 23 23 Comnade: : Past Huskers For 60-51 Win IOWA CITY, ‘IOWA — UP) — Iowa’s highly-ranked basketbal _|team opened the: seaSon ‘Satur-}) day with a 60-51' victory. over Nebraska to record: its 67th con- -|secutive non-conference triumph on the home court...The game was nationally televised. ~ Iowa, Big Ten Conference 1. {champion last: year, moved out! to an early lead but at halftime -thad only a 38-34 advantage. The game moved slowly most of the way and was marked by ragged/ ball-handling by both sides. A crowd of 7,800—about half of capacity—was on-hand. Bill Logan, Iowa’s 6-6 center who has averaged 15.3 points per game the last two seasons, led the scoring with 16 points but gpt only four of those in the second half when forward Carl Cain warmed up to bag 10 of this 15-point game total.. Nebraska coach Jerry Bush started four sophomores and junior Rex Ekwall. Nebraska couldn’t get its fast break “give” and go” offense going |} against Iowa’s defenses, how- | ever. Charles Smith, with 13 points, and ‘his sophomore teammate Don Schmidt, with 10, led the scoring for the ' visitors. i d the sale gin of victory i . The ose, was unusually j 18 minutes gone, Iowa had only 18 points ana Ne- braska: 13. | Iowa's percentage of field {goals made in\the game was .308 against an average of .389 for its 22-game season a year ‘|ago. Nebraska had a .357 field goal average. | Iowa, |Nebraska GF P 2| Smith, 1/Smidt 2| Arwood 0| Mercier 4|Ekwall . 8|Thom 3| Reimers 1|Kubacki 0) Coufal a Nannen aeeree : 4 George 0: “ Sebolt _ 0: j 4 7 Cain: 84 2. Hine 0- 0- 0- 20 20-28 16|Totals 20 11-24 17 aes eee esaseesccnscenes seeder ae ——O0 [Nebraska tyereesessreccneeedesdér17—O1 lowa State Wins, 86-60 AMES, IOWA —(#)— Gary \Thompson, point-making guard on the Iowa State basketball SoSoneoroHan CORWMNOH ROS Seswvwuwpoonan wee ee ‘Towa State | y{ North Dakots State crawford _Voght Peterson ° PwWHOHAAROEH Sandp’ te oe ees Totals. 27 32-44 17 Totals 23° 14-26 22 Towa. State .rsecccevececcsces et3-43-—86 ‘North Dakota State, reer ence -a0edl— 60 Michigan Tips Huskers, 77-71 ANN ARBOR, MICH.—(®)— Led by football star Ron Kramer}. and a 6-6 sophomore Pete Tillot- pens Michigan clipped Nebraska,| | 77-71, Saturday night for its | first basketball victory of the ‘Season, Kramer plunked in 20 points]. | and Tillotson 16 to overcome the |hot, deadeye shooting of Ne- |braska’s. 6-1, forward .Charlie Smith. Smith Jed -the scorers. with | 24 points. Michigan never trailed, build-|‘ ing up a 50-39 hailmtime lead, but fighting off the Cornhuskers late in the second half when Smith’s accurate shooting brought them within one point of the Wolverines at 67-66, | The Wolverines. had a good! 42.8 shooting percentage in the! first half and grabbed 23 re-' bounds to eight for Nebraska. The taller Michigan team. contin-, ,jued to dominate the backboards) _|with 37 rebounds to 14 overall, |but its shooting cooled in the sec-, :{ond half, Michigan netted 382 field .| goals in 84 shots for a 38.1 ‘| average. Nebraska sank 21 of 56 shots: for 37.5. Nebraska’s Don Smid collected 17 of the Cornhuskers’ points and Jim Kubacki had 14. It was Kramer’s three straight jbaskets .with 514 minutes left that enabled Michigan to widen -jits one point margin. Tillotson rjentered the game late in the first half and chipped in four. straight ‘baskets in overcoming peener ‘|Cornhusker rally. Nebraska (71) - Michigan °-(77) G F P G F Smid 6 ss 9 2|Tarrier 1 Smith 8 8-13 2/ Stern Qt Thom 0. 0-0 3\/Kramer 10 Arwood 2 2-2 3]/Williams Doebele 0 0- 0 0/ Tillotson Kubacki'}3 8-12 S| Webeee Reimers 1 3-4 2/Jorge’son Coufal : 1- 2. 0|Shearon: 0 Mercier Mannen 2- al Raisor’ 0- 0| Lingle a Barron eoenare peenbebn eens | Totals 21 29- a 17 Totals 52, 13- “24 27 Leena SIGS 04a heise ¢0i6 69 coe 32—T1 Michigan 0 eegereces 50 27—77 Fact Indian es Wine bears uberis a : threw away an 11-point bulgel@ @ |during the second half, then|§ f |fought back to put Washington’s|§ lof a 74-69 decision here Sat- i if appeared the Wildcats were] i i. give this one away. With sixi# jleft the Wildcats with a 3-2 *|for the season. The loss dr ped ‘jlong time ‘| Huskie stand all night, flipping: in: nine field ‘|goals and seven free shots for Cats Survive Closing Rush To Save Win BY FRANK BOGGS Daily Capital Sports Writer MANHATTAN—Kansas State i tall Huskies on the short end urday night before 7,800 howling fans. For a time late in the game,|. going to play Santa Claus and|§ minutes to go the Huskies had|@ forged’ a 65-63 margin butir Wayne Hutchins, a 6-6 sopho-|} more reserve from Winfield,| tipped in his only basket of the night to pull the Cats even ati§ 65-65. From there in it was a hectic]; affair but the K-Staters were on top to stay when little Pachin Vicens canned a couple of free shots with 4:42 remaining. Kansas State’ went on to mount its lead to 72-65 before the Huskies made it close by nailing two straight baskets to make it 72-69. Eddie Wal- lace, little 5-9 junior, hit the final Wildcat bucket a the gun to sew it up. The victory kept Kansas State’s home string for this sea" son alive at three in a. row a; the Huskies to a 2-3 ree 25 points—most of his fielders coming on brilliant hook shots. Jim Coshow, a 6-6 hotshot, added another 18 points for| ‘Washington and snagged 16 re- bounds to lead both teams. in| that department. Vicens, getting half. his points from the foul stripe, led the Wild- eats. with 20. points. Jack, Parr, |the Cat’s 6-9 sophomore center; MOE HLOS% to top who had averaged 19.5 per game, i Fischer <.eevsvewe Powell ceseveweoce 2} PatnOe ccacecveses, 7| Until Saturday, c J |six points. He got te all in the}, |first half and left via the foul |: route with 11:05 remaining. | > Kansas ° State ‘hit 24-of-57 shots from the field for 42.1 per cent,’ It was a ‘thriller throughout, : the first half with the score tied four times and the lead switching hands nine times. Finally, K- ;|State pulled, into a 41-34 half-|; time. lead and it sepia like it might be over, ‘| Kansas . State haorsea to a 47-36 margin after 1:10 had elapsed in the second period as Dick Stone, Gene Wilson and Jack Powell connected while ‘|Coshow was sinking one for the | Huskies. , | Then the Pacific Coast club began pecking away and ‘finally; pulléd even. at 57-57 when Boin | hit a free throw following Parr’s |, |fifth. infraction. Coshow’s fielder | .jabout three minutes later gavel) s\the Huskies their first lead of |; -|the second half at 63-61. a| K-STATE (74) ba] Ce JStone sevvacceeces Hutchins secosses ee Parr sescoccesesse Schneider sesecsece VicensS seccisevceee Wallace secseceeve «| WIISON seqrececnon Totals ~ . Jes es eee S WASHINGTON (69) . COShow gecseecveve ST OISEI. wees vials aes 07 ROIN “0's dew'bic og e ee 6 Nelson sesccecvcne Strugarsceseceace | Perkins .weescecvse Sunitsch ewseenvese ‘uft eeereoeoerere TotalS iececscsevese sori » 23-39 Kansas weet eee gser essere esen ese Wabhington «..c.cesee : Officials: _ Thornton 5 enkins, - “(Colum- bia, Mo. ae ; John Lloyd (Denver, Colo.) [ ; ae EG whNOwWHoHaTy Sl Mowmemuece EEStonsocointd Bl ov Sosutaes Parr Buckets 22 to Ramrod | Wildcat Rout BY V. L. NICHOLSON - Daily Capital Sports Writer MANHATTAN—Jack Parr and Larry Fischer, a pair of sopho- mores with more promise than] j a couple of politicians, helped] j Kansas State open the basket- ball season with an 89-70 victory} ; over Texas Tech here Tuesday} night. | Parr, the Wildcats’ 6-9 center ‘from Richmond, Va., led the scor-| | jing with 22 points and pulled in 1145 rebounds, also high for both iclubs. Parr was just as spectacu- lar on defense, consistently knocking down the Red Raiders’ shots in midair. _ Fischer, a 6-4 forward from Pratt, scored 18 points, includ- ing the first four points in each half. He retired to the bench with more than 13 minutes left to Hing : A crowd of 7,500 watched the Wildcats emerge from a welter of eight lead changes late in the first half to grab a 40-33 margin at halftime. They had led by 17-9 after eight minutes of play, but a mild scoring drouth allowed Tech to catch up six minutes, be- fore intermission. The Red Raiders still were © only six points back, at 56-590, with 43 minutes remaining, but they rapidly went from bad to worse. The 19-point margin at | the finish was the largest the Wildcats ever had. Se K-State displayed more po-| tential than polish, but this| - Hooked like the squad that might lead the school back up the bas-| ketball heights. The victory was| not surprising, in view of Mis- .|souri’s 92-60 win _over the same) team Monday night, but it was \gatisfactory for an opener. - K-State connected on 19 of 31 field goal attempts in the sec- ond half for a blazing 61 per cent average. The Wildcats hit 31 of 67 attempts over-all for a game percentage of 46 per cent. Jim Reed, a pesky 6-4 forward, |kept the Raiders in contention for awhile with his 18 points, but he fouled out with nearly 11 minutes still to play. - Parr. and Fischer had plenty of help. Fritz Schneider scored 14 points, all on field goals, and Pachin Vicens, the clever little Latin from Manhattan, added 11 and played his usual fine floor game. EEr LPNewton siececeecs ally never had much tfouble. Fischer got the Wildcgts off hit a | eight straight free Parr gave a hint o to come when he scored the Wildcats’ next four points, on) tip-ins. The big center acted as a human backboard on several of his baskets, shoving teammates’ missed shots back into the net- ting. i Reed and -Du-Wayne Black- shear, who hit 14 points, sparked Tech’s best rally. A pair of free shots by Reed gave Tech its first lead at 25-24, and the teams} swapped one-point. leads eight) times before K-State finally) pulled away. The Wildcats outscored the] Texans, 10-2, during the final four! minutes of the first half. Parr’s tip-ins accounted for fou of those points, and, Vicens also got four on a short jump sho and a pair of free throws. That was the ball game for all practical purposes, and jcoach Tex Winter let the subs begin mopping up with eight minutes still to. go in the second half. K-STATE (89) * ad = Fg-Fga Ft-Fta Ne abe oO ne ray Fischer Powell: « Stone, spvecercres \| Hutchins Parr, -cibiee ese Schneider mS OO “300 REL Wilsoh ... Totals TEXAS TECH (70) | Heesomonom oa o J GIPSON: ise Sse 8k Blackshear 4..aere Underwood .....0s Buchanan geeorees Carpetitér sees ce. Scaling: sess. ovvwe Cunimings sei seue Totals 0 visiseees 24-69 1 Halftime Score: Kansas State, 40-33. Officials: Kenneth Pryor, Tom Glen NK WISHES H NSW. Indiana Gains Early Bulge, Rips K-State (Continued from Page 10) with consistent shooting by Pow- elell, Stone, Parr and Vicens. Most encouraging to coach| Winter’ was the shooting of Stone, who in the opener against Texas Tech hit only three of 16 shots. Here he read six of 14, after finding the range late in “!the second half. The loss gives K-State a 1-1 “jreading as they move on to Drake University at Des Moines, SiIa., for a Monday night game with the Bulldogs. Indiana now has two straight wins at home as they prepare to meet St. | Louis at Bloomington Monday’ ‘night. aoe State (72) G-Ga a PF T - Se eeeesreeeseee “1 vr & S| @eaessecceseses UM 4 Geesereesereces i- 4 Powell Bereesegecerecne 4-13 TT cccvvicccceccses S18 Li Hutchins wsccccceescese O- 0 Vicent. ce eoavecsseseves 4-13 Schneider” sicccsvecees 1-10 ! Kiddoo osecsncesesccene oF . Wilson _peeecececgsenene 0- 0 Totals esecceeeeeres + 20-80 20-! Indiana (96) G-Ga F-Fa CHOICE secesesescceesee I-14 Brown .ccscesceosesese 3” 8 Thi ne 81 oonaANban see bl eHOScowANOA BS loawtS tan’ by aeereoeeseoe 3- &. ompson Bell eaveseccvccsesoces O- & Beeesecereeerese 7-13 seeeeegesereeses 0- 4 os CUE ROHWONE 8 | waxBeokaaad Lumpkin peecceuentanne 1- = Totals eis de kes eee 24-31 it Halftime Score—52-28, Indiana. Officials—Don = and Cliff oe: > “Sl RECORD BOOK FOR TENTH ANNUAL BIG SEVEN BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT December 27-30, 1955 -- Municipal Auditorium Kansas City, Missouri Prepared for Press, Radio, Television Harry G. Burrell, Director Sports Publicity Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa RECORDS FOR TENTH ANNUAL BIG SEVEN TOURNAMENT Tournament Winners 1946 -» Southern Methodist 1949 = Missouri 1952 - Kansas State 1947 = Kansas State 1950 = Kansas State 1953 = Kansas 1938 - Oklehoma 1951 - Kansas 1954 - Missouri Top 1954 Scorers: Games FG FTA FF rr TP Chuck Duncan (IS), c 3 : @ ie 7 OS Lester Lane (0), g 3 25 a6 17 7 $7 Norman Stewart (M), g 3 23 «8619 17 8 63 Bob Jeangerard (C), f 3 ae 21 1: 3 Gene EHistun (K), f 3 a 18 A OSS Bob Reiter (M), c 3 i, ae 23 is OST Medford Park (M), f 3 1s 68 = 616. 5S Burdette Halderson (C), c 3 16.6C tia 21 , ss Bob McKeen (California), c 3 at. Uo 10 ee Jim Peck (0), g 3 ee 17 . ff All-Time Top Scorers: Clyde Lovellette (K), c 3 or a2 8 11 = =82 (1950) Clyde Lovellette (K), c 3 a1. 22 14 iz «676 (1951) Maynard Johnson (Minn), c 3 28 824 19 6 75 (1950) Chuck Duncan (IS), c 3 ee 13 7 73 (4954) Dick Knostman (KS), c 3 2s 8 a. (OO. 72 952) Jim Buchanan (N), g 3 2. 6 11 8 67 (1951) Jim Ramstead (Stanford), c 3 7 COU 17 3 67 (1951) Lester Lane (0), g 3 a 8 626 17 7 67 (1954) Sherman Norton (0), f 3 2 33 21 4 65 (1951) Most Tote! Points All Tournaments Clyde Loveliette (K), c 9 93 «684 os 4 26. aa2 Lester Lane (0), g 12 64 74 46 39 174 Burdette Haldorson (C), c 10 54 74 So 26 16} Chuck Duncan (IS), c 9 so. O6S 266 COS ia Jesse Priscck (KS), f 9 49 53 a Fee ‘im Buchanan (N), ¢g 9 20 «= sCo88 is 5 136 Bob Reiter (M), c 12 47. = s« SO oe 6 42. OA Dick Knostman (KS), c 9 46 54 oe 4622S Bob Jeangerard (C), f 9 40 57 44 15 124 Meaford Park (M), f-g 12 2 665 “o 2. ID ‘TOURNA MENT RECORDS Most points 1 team 1 game - 103 by Stanford vs Towa State, 1951 (overtime) 98 by Kansas State vs Iowa State, 1953 (regulation time) Most points 1 team 3 games =265 by Kansas State, 1952 Most points 2 teams 1 game - 205 by Stanford (103), Iowa State (1062), 1951 (overtime) 182 by Missouri (95), Oklahoma (87), 1954 (regulation time) Most field goals 1 team 1 game - 38 by Iowa State vs Stanford, 1951 38 by Stanford vs Iowa State, 1951 38 by Kansas Stete vs Iowa State, 1953 (more) #2 Most field goals 1 team 3 games 98 by Kansas State, 1953 Most field goals 2 teams 1 game - 76 by Iowa State (38), Stanford (38), 1951. Most free throws 1 team 1 game - 37 by Missouri vs Oklahoma, 1954 Most free throws 1 team 3 games - 91 by Missouri, 1954 Most free throws 2 teams 1 game - 69 by Kansas (36), Oklahoma (33), 1953 Most free throws missed 1 team 1 game - 23 by Colorado vs Kansas, 1953 Most free throws missed 1 team 3 games = 52 by Kaneas, 1953 Most free throws missed 2 teams 1 game - 42 by Colorado (23), Kansas (19), 1953, Fewest free throws missed 1 team 1 game - 0 by Colorado vs Oklahoma, 1947 0 by Kansas vs Michigan, 1949 Fewest free throws missed 1 team 3 games - 8 by Kansas, 1950 Fewest free throws missed 2 teams 1 game - 5 by Oklahoma (2), Colorado (3), 1948 > by Kansas (2), Oklahoma (3), 1948 5 by Kansas (0), Michigan (5), 1949, Best free throw percentage 1 team 1 game - i,000 (14-0) Colorado ve Oklahoma, 1947 1,000 (9-0) Kansas vs Michigan, 1949 Best free throw percentage 1 team 3 games- .811 (43-10) Oklahoma, 1948 Best free throw percentage 2 teams 1 game - .839 Kansas (9-0), Michigan (17-5), 1949 Most personal fouls 1 team 1 game - 38 by Oklahoma vs Kansas, 1953 Most personal fouls 1 team 3 games - 87 by Kansas, 1953 Most personal fouls 2 teams 1 game - 70 by Oklahoma (38), Kansas (32), 1953 Most points by a winning team - 103 by Stanford vs Iowa State, 1951 (overtime) 98 by Kansas State vs Iowa State, 1953 (Regulation) Most points by a losing team - 102 by Iowa State vs Stanford, 1951 (overtime) 87 by Kansas vs Kansas State, 1952 (regulation) 87 by Oklahoma vs Missouri, 1954 (regulation), Widest winning margin --42 points by Colorado (89), Nebraska (47}, 1954, Most points in overtime - 19 by Nebraska vs Iowa State, 1949 Fastest fouling out - 43 seconds playing Jack Froistad (C) vs Iowa State, 1950 Most points 1 forward 1 game - 39 by Sherman Norton (0) vs Stanford, 1951 Most points 1 center 1 game - 38 by Maynard Johnson (Minn) vs Colorado, 1950 38 by Dick Knostman (KS) vs Kansas, 1952 Most points 1 guard 1 game - 31 by Lester Lane (0) vs Colorado, 1954 Most points 1 forward 3 games—- 65 by Sherman Norton (0), 1951 Most points 1 center 3 games - 82 by Clyde Lovellette (K), 1950 Most points 1 guard 3 games - 67 by jim Buchanan (N), 1951 67 by Lester Lane (0), 1954 Most points 1 forward all meets ~ 135 by Jesse Prisock (KS) Most points 1 center ali meets - 222 by Clyde Lovellette (K) Most points 1 guard all meets - 174 by Lester Lane (0) (more) #3 Most field goals 1 forward 1 game - 13 by George Hess (IS) vs Stanford, 1951 13 by Sherman Norton (0) vs Stanford, 1951 Most field goals 1 center 1 game - 15 by Maynard Johnson (Minn) vs Colorado, 1950 Most field goals 1 guard 1 game - 13 by Lester Lane (0) vs Coloredo, 1954 Most field goals 1 forward 3 games - 25 by Jesse Prisock (KS), 1953 Most field goals 1 center 3 games - 37 by Clyde Lovellette (K), 1950 Most field goais 1 guard 3 games - 28 by Jim Buchanan (N), 1951 Most field goals 1 forward all meets-- 49 by Jesse Prisock (KS) Most field goals 1 center all meets ~ 93 by Clyde Lovellette (K) Most field goals 1 guard all meets - 64 by Lester Lane (0) Most field throws 1 forward 1 game - 13 by Sherman Norton (0) vs Stanford, 1951 Most free throws 1 center 1 game - 14 by Dick Knostman (KS) vs Kensas, 1952 14 by Bill Brainard (K) vs Oklahoma, 1953 Most free throws 1 guard 1 game - 10 by Medford Park (M) vs Kansas, 1952 10 by Medford Park (M) vs Iowa State, 1953 Most free throws 1 forward 3 games - 29 by Medford Park (M), 1954 Most free throws 1 center 3 games-- 28 by Delmar Diercks (IS), 1952 Most free throws 1 guard 3 games - 18 by Medford Park (M), 1952 18 by Lester Lane (0), 1953 18 by Gary Thompson (IS), 1954 Most free throws 1 forward all meets.- 64 by Medford Park (M) Most free throws 1 center all meets - 53 by Burdette Haldorson (C) Most free throws 1 guard all meets - 46 by Lester Lane (0) Most free throws missed 1 forward 1 game - 7 by Willard Fagler (N) vs Iowa State, 1952 — 7 by Chuck Duncan (IS) vs Nebraska, 1952 Most free throws missed 1 center 1 game - 8 by Clerence Brannum (KS) vs Oklahoma, 1949 Most free throws missed 1 guard 1 game - 8 by Sam Morrison (C) vs Kansas, 1953. Most free throws missed 1 forward 3 games - 10 by Spencer Schnaiter (Yaie), 1952 10 by Harold Patterson (K), 1952 10 by Gary Bergren (KS), 1952 10 by Don Weber (N), 1953 10 by Stan Frahm (IS), 1954 Most free throws missed 1 center 3 games-- 14 by Bob McKeen (Cal,), 1954 Most free throws missed 1 guard 3 games - 12 by Norman Stewart (M), 1954 Most free throws missed 1 forward all meets - 21 by Medford Park (M) Most free throws missed 1 center all meets - 29 by Chuck Duncan (IS) Most free throws missed 1 guard all meets - 28 by Lester Lane (0) Most personal fouls 1 forward 3 games - 14 by John Gibson (KS), 1950 : 14 by Spencer Schnaiter (Yale), 1952 (more) Most personal fouls 1 center 3 games - 15 by Delmar Diercks (IS), 1950 Most personal fouls 1 guard 3 games - 14 by Roger Stokes (C), 1950 14 by Dallas Dobbs (K), 1953 14 by Doyle Perkins (Wash,), 1953 Most personal fouls 1 forward all meets-- 32 by Jesse Prisock (KS) Most personal fouls 1 center all meets—- 42 by Bob Reiter (M) Most personal fouls 1 guard all meets - 39 by Lester Lane (0) Best free throw mark 1 player 1 game - 13 of 13 by Sherman Norton (0) vs Stanford, 1951. Best free throw mark 1 player 3 games - 16 of 16 by Bob Peterson (IS), 1948 Best free throw mark 1 player all meets - 19 of 20 by Kendall Hills (C) Most consecutive free throws 1 player - 20 by Sherman Norton (0), 1951, ALL-TIME COMPOSITE ON CONFERENCE TEAMS ONLY WoL ee 18 9 741 . 667 (630 996 .333 aaa .259 Kansas State Kansas Missouri 17 10 Oklahoma iS i2 Iowa State 9 18 Colorado 8 16 Nebraska 7. 2 Pet_ FG 665 639 561 591 962 514 567 Offense PIA FT FF TP FG Defense _ ie ff FF TP 498 576 459 577 463 548 529 591 487 600 442 542 445 553 736 680 701 772 767 681 721 ALL-TIME COMPOSITE ON GUEST TEAMS* WL Pet 0 1,000 1946 Southern Methodist (1) 3 1946 Arkansas (4) 1947 Oklahoma A&M (2) 1948 Harvard (8) 1949 Michigan (5) 1950 Minnesota (2) 1951 Stanford (5) 1952 Yale (4) 1953 Washington (8) 1954 California (6) *final ranking in parenthesis, mM Or NM MD Oh bw wD Hee Oe bd . 099 333 FG FTA FT PF 99 61 41 45 54 64 42 67 43 63 48 56 539 69 46 66 36 76 SO 30 76 63 46 59 90 94 69 85 61 98 $9 65 Si 92 30 67 69 106 62 79 2333 667 667 .-667 667 .000 333 1828 1737 1585 1711 1611 1470 1579 181 592 596 528 592 638 517 665 738 464 760 484 704 465 741 8489 731 49494 659 422 697i 452 559 1521 990 1673 590 1770 506 1456 564 1782 TP_FG FTA FT PF TP 151 150 134 156 162 198 249 212 200 51 49 43 69 67 76 8? 101 63 89 64 48 83 69 79 36 54 33 37 43 59 25 37 70 64 71 91 38 38 64 62 60 64 83 61 52 64 135 155 129 193 159 189 248 190 249 219 93 105 133 HISTORY OF BIG SEVEN RIVALRIES IN FIRST 9 TOURNAMENTS Kansas- State-Oklahoma 1946 - KS 59, OU 55 1947 - KS 55, OU 48 1949 = OU 55, KS 50 1950 = KS 55, OU 53 1951 = KS 84, OU 69 1952 - KS 93, OU 69 KS-5, OU-1 396-349 Kansas State-Kansas 1947 = KS 56, KU 42 1948 = KU 60, KS 46 1949 = KS 58, KU 48 1951 - KU 90, KS 88 (0) 1952 - KS 93, KU 87 KS-3, KU-2- 341-327 Kansas State-Nebraska 1948 = KS 48, NU 34 1950 = KS 72, NU Se 1951 - KS 87, NU 67 1953. - NU-78, KS 74 KS-3, NU-1 281-232 Kansas State-Iowa State 1948 = IS 56, KS 52 1953 = KS 98, IS 77 1954 - KS-70, IS 60 KS-2, IS-1 220-193 Kansas- State-Coloredo 1949 - KS 59, CU 46 KS-1, CU-0 59-46 Kansas State- Missouri 1954 - MU 89, KS 71 MU-I, KS-0 89-71 Kansas-Iowa State 1946 = KU 55, IS 37 1949 - KU 64, IS 43 £900 = KU 75, 18 51 1954 - IS 82, KU 81 KU-3, IS-1 275-213 Kansas-Colorado 1947 - KU 49, CU 39 1951 = KU 76, CU 56 1953 - KU 79, CU 62 KU-3, CU-0 204-157 Kansas- Missouri 1948 - KU 62, MU 50 1951 = KU 75, MU 65 1952 = KU 66, MU 62 1953 - KU 69, MU 67 KU-4, MU-0 272-244 Kansas-Oklahoma 1948 = OU 52, KI 49 1953 - KU 82, OU 73 BU-1, OO-1 131-125 595 1648 557 1596 #5