JAYHAWKS BAY ADISON, WIS. — (Special) —The Kansas Jayhawks stepped- out o a 35-19 halftime]. ‘ead and then weathered Wis- zonsin’s second-half rally to de- feat the Badgers, 74-66, in a iationally televised game here saturday afternoon. .Wisconsin, as cold as the weather outside at the. start, wice trimmed the Kansas lead 9 six points during the second alf in a valiant attempt to keep 'V viewers in their seats. How- iver, the Jayhawks quelled each 3adger rally with a withering scoring blast and the outcome never was in doubt. Captain Dallas Dobbs started mrost of those Jayhawk scoring bursts and took game scoring honors with 26° points. Dobbs ee fired his ais in at a steady clip, getting 13 in each half. Dobbs had plenty of help from forward Gene Elstun and center Lew Johnson, who scored 14 points apiece. Dick, Miller, a flashy little guard, kept the Badgers within hailing | Gstauce by scoring 24 points. — ‘Kansas’ victory was its iedeis straight against Big Ten oppo-| : sition this season. The Jayhawks defeated Wichita in their only other start. Wisconsin now has a'1-2 record. ‘The first 10 minutes gave no hint of the rout that was to de- velop. The Badgers had a tenu- ous 11-10 lead midway of ‘the first half, but that’s where the roof began to cave in. Kansas ran in 12 straight points, eight DOW of them ey Dobbs, to build 4 22-11 margin. The Jayhawks yielded a toni, free throw to Curt Mueller be- fore running in 11 more points in a row. That left the Badgers looking ‘a °33-12 deficit in the face, and they weren’t able to do much about it before half- time. xe oe However, Wisconsin opened the second half with seven straight points to make it in< teresting again at 35-26. The first of several second-half rallies was short-lived, as Dobbs: bunched six points in helping build the KU lead back to 45-30. ‘Miller began to find the range then, and the next Wisconsin