| routed Nebraska, 89-47. ' Towa State, in the, title round for the first time since 1948, will play Oklahoma for third, starting at 8 o'clock tonight. The Cyclones finished sixth last year. It was a game as far along as 42-39, when’ that second cold spell set in for the Cyclones, but the Wildcats uncorked eight successive points to open an 1i-point lead and kept a come | fortable margin thereafter. | There was a stretch of 7 minutes in the first half when Iowa State hadn’t scored from ithe field. The last one lasted 5 minutes. By the time that Gary Thompson broke it with a fast break bucket, the only three- time winner of this tournament was safely ahead, 54-42. Cyclone center Chuck Duncan, 6-5, toiled mightily again and wound up with 23 points—but it didn’t match the 16 by sub center Jung, plus the 10 by regular cen- ter, 6-7 Roger Craft. Worse, there was nothing Coach Bill Strannigan’s scrappy team, which upset Kansas Tues- day night, could do against the type of rebounding Kansas State had on tap. Duncan kept up in spurts. So did 6-4 forward Don DeKoster, IOWA STATE — - Continued on Page Ten. PIE A RE CR I os Kansas State—70. Iowa Sea. | ‘G.FT. Deeb eer, ft Frahm,f Alleman, f ane Zi Thompson,g¢ eee? 4 Sandbult Sandbul H4 Totals 2 be papdeng | Samocomnoooon a SCWNWOOCSRHH’ NO ey Ol OF OUOWNANS [: ° 3 TT mHommonan Bes ae aE aa Totals 24 22 25 Score at half—Kansas State 38, Iowa State 35, Missed free. throws—Kansas State? Smith, Jung 3, Snyder,, Vicens 2, Flynn 2;. Iowa. State: Dekoster 2, Frahm 3, Alleman 38, Duncan 4, Thompson 3, Wetter 2, Sandbulte.