Iowa State had outscored the Sooners from the field, 15 to 10, in the period, but some fancy free throw shooting by Okla-| _homa'‘kept the Sooners in there. Hart threw in ten in a row,]| while his mates added six more. | Towa State hit only five chari-| ties, Stall Against Sooners. The Cyclones used a stall mid- way in the first half to force) Oklahoma out of a zone: defense} which was keeping the Cyclones from getting the ball in to their high scoring center, Chuck Dun- can. _ After early goal trading in the second half Iowa State shot out! to a 53-44 lead on the strength} of ten points in three minutes while Oklahoma went-scoreless. From that time on the Sooners never got closer than four points although the Cyclones were con- tent to play stall ball the latter part of the game. Little Gary Thompson, Iowa State’s classy sophomore, led the hitp arade with a 21-point performance, outshining Dun- can, the Cyclone center, who hit eighteen, Duncan was stifled much of the time by the Okla- homa zone defense. which clogged the middle. Hart’s efghteen led Oklahoma, while| Lés Lane, the Sooner hotshot! who had been the scoring leader| .in earlier games,.had a bad night with only nine. Iowa State had a 37.1 percent-| “age from the field on twenty-six| of seventy shots taken. Okla- homa hit 39.1 per cent on eight- €en of forty-six. The Cyclones had a rebound edge of forty-five to thirty-seven, with Duncan snaring fourteen to lead both teams. OKLAHOMA—64._| IOWA STATE—71. FTF ae 4 2.0 3 a. 2 a2 1 7.3 0 5 3 Free throws missed: Burr 2, Muller, Lane : Peck, a age 2. Iowa State—DeKoster ‘6 7rehm 2, Say emt 3, Wetter Officials: Sik George (Notre "Dame), and John Lloyd {Kansas City).