Iowa State led most of the first quarter and ended that ses-' Sion with a 25-22 edge. But the) Cyclones went for three min-} utes’ and thirty-five seconds without a field goal in the sec-} ond quarter, collecting . only} three free throws in that length} of time, and wound up trailing! by nineteen points at the half. | } The Cyclone scoring was still) jin the. deep freeze in the early, jthird quarter. Counting the |goalless streak in the second iframe, the Iowans went eight |minutes and ten seconds without |scoring from, the field. During |that time, the Wildcats upped ithe lead to twenty-three points. The Cyclones rallied to trail by only fourteen. at ‘the three- quarter mark, 58-72. Cut Margin. to 13. : The Cyclones succeeded. once in the early fourth period in chopping the margin to thirteen points -but couldn’t hold on. K-State suffered. at least the itemporary loss of Jerry Jung, \6- foot 11-inch center, who was ‘injured in the’ game. He fell to} the floor after a collision under} the K-State defensive basket and, was struck in the forehead. Jung was taken to St. Mary’s| hospital, where he was. kept) overnight for. observation. At) the hospital it was reported that. Jung had not suffered a. severe injury and was resting comfort- ably. Kansas State hit a hot 46. 9) per cent from the field, thirty-| eight goals in eighty-one shots.! Iowa State had only 28.7 per) cent, twenty-five field goals in| leighty-Seven shots. The ones | jhad a rebounding edge, | Six to forty-two. Jesse Prisock was top scorer [for the Wildcats with sixteen! land also snared the most K-} |State rebounds, eleven. Charles} | Duncan of Iowa State had game} lscoring honors with twenty-one. | |He also was top rebounder with| | twelve. | KANSAS STATE. IOWA STATE. | Prisock, fis He yj COnNND Fh onoooumiswmcoas ys B | bcontnm aco o im cotoes 40 : yj : A] Homonomnmnna® N B huctiecoukaag / et x