Halftime--K-State, 45-32. ‘NEBRASKA (78) G-GA F-FA PF zP Fagler 2-12 1-1 a os Weber 12-19 6=13 lL 30 Johnson 7JalLh 9-13 . 2 Seger 3-13 1-3 4 - GC. omitha 1-11 5-12 i 7 Hare 1-3 0-0 0 2 Matzke 2=3 0-0 i iB TOTALS 20-70 fanhe 16 78 KANSAS STATE (74) Prisock 11-17 6 5 @ J. omith O=-1 0-0 0 0 Craft 1-4 2-2 2 IB Jung 1-3 0-0 4 2 Frary 1-2 0-0 2 2 Stauffer 2e11 hwo] 5 8 Snyder 8-16 2-2 ; 1 Wilson 1-2 3-3 3 5 Poore 0-5 0-0 0 0 Stone 313 =k > 3 Bb. Smith 0-0 0-0 1 0 TOTALS 28—={74 18-24 it: COLORADO (63) G F F Jeanger'rd, f a kh 2 Coffman, f Z z 5 Walter, f 0 3 5 Renglos, f 0 L ey Halderson, c 6 5 5 Hannah, c 0 0 0 Mock, g 3 2 h Harrold, g 5 6 2 Morrison, g 0 1 1, TOTALS 18 nN ~ nN ‘Oo IOWA STATE (70) Davis, f 7 7 L Leburn, f 2 3 5 Dekoster, f 2 ° 5 Alleman, f 0 2 0 Duncan, c L 7 L Dale, c 0 0 0 Van Cleave, g 2 6 2 Johnson, g rs 1 2 Nims, g 0 O a Wetter, g 0 3 3 TOTALS aa 28 27 Colorado 7. 19 13 18 «= 6 Iowa State 13.15 22 20 «« 79 Missed free throws: Colorado--Jeangerard 3, Renglos 2, Halderson 2, Mock, Harold, Morrison. Iowa State--Davis 3, Lebuna 3, Dekoster 2, Duncan 4, Van Cleave 2, Wetter 2. KANSAS (79) Davenport McElroy Brainard Kelley Squires Martin Born Toft Alberts Dobbs Anderson Heitholt Patterson Padgett Wolfe TOTALS COLORADO (62) Jeangerard Ronglos Walter Coffman Holdorson Hannah Mock Morrison Grant Harrold TOTALS BIG 7 TOURNAMENT Dece 26, 1953 a re: FY = 4 at 2 4 1=3 3=3 4 5 ee ee . 3 6-10 3-3 h 3 ict 6 [= 5-0 0 i 2 a Gul 06 1.3 inl G60 . 2 6=9 1=3 > ao 0 09 . 4 2 =O ; 4 a6 @22 3 28 2=3 37 + @ 12 @6 ; 4 26-57 27=hh nt. 6 OUP 9-22 58 3 23 3-8 2—k 5 8 i: es 4 3 1-k 00 i 2 hm13 5 =6 5 13 6-2" Beh — 2-4 h—'7 4 8 5 inf [23 O66 0-0 . 4 le5 3s «0-0 : 4 Ti-b, 20043 22 62 Halftime score--Kansas, 35-27 KANSAS (69) Kelley Brainard Patterson McELroy Born Alberts Davenport Padgett Dobbs Squires TOTALS MISSOURI (67) Parks Fowler Reichert Stewart Denny Cruts Reiter Hoist Filbert Elmore Schoonmaker Henson Casteel Sally Hughes TOTALS Halftime score: Officials: Dec. 29, 1953 BIG 7 TOURNAMENT 42-33, Kansas Enright and Craig G-GA ss F=FA re 6F a gee > il 0-3 seo O 3 iseh - Oe > £/ Q-O 5el2 4 5 beth: Gri a: & 1-2 L=L 2 3 1-3 lel A 3 1-6 0-0 2 2 g-ih | AB 4 8 0-0 O-O QO O 21-61 27-43 28 69 ha’? 2—5 a 40 O=L Q=O0 1 0 Q~1L Q-O0 0 0 hel 6-10 > = 1=2 1L-1 4 3 O=1 1-3 5 - helQ 2-2 5 40 LaD 2—h e 20 O-2 O-O 1 0 0-2 1-2 i 1 L—’7 LO - «de O-O O-O i 0 1-1 L=2 2 3 1-2 dim} 4 3 O-O Q-2 O 0 23-59 21-4 30 67 KANSAS (82) Patterson Kelley Born Dobbs Davenport McELroy Squires Padgett Martin Wolfe | Heitholt Toft Brainard Anderson Alberts TOTALS OKLAHOMA Lane McEachern Waller Jones R. Blue Hart Hamilton Morrison Muller Mason Newman Brown Thompson McConnell T. Blue TOTALS BIG 7 TOURNAMENT Dec, 30; 1953 G-GA F-FA Fe TF 3—11 6='7 3 Le 6-15 5=6 , 27 he] 5=7 a ae 2~-k 0-0 5 h 2~7 3-5 3 7 O=0 QO-0 0 0. Om 5 l= 0 i O=Q l=1 s i 0-1 QO=-2 0 0 O=-L 1-2 i i 0-0 0-0 i, 0 Q-O O=O 1, @) he5 Lh-l9 2, an 0-0 0-0 1 0 2=3 O-2 A 4 23-59 36-55 32 62 hel9 8-13 S. 46 1-2 3=5 5 > 1-8 2-h, 5 h h-6 343 . . he. 5el7 = 2=5 5 is O=mL 7-11 i 7 3=h 1-1 5 : 0-0 2=2 2 2 1-3 3-4 - 5 0-0 0-0 O 0 Q=O O=O I Q 1-1 2-2 1 IB 0-0 0-0 S 0 Om] 0-0 0 0 0-0 0-0 iL 0 20-62 33-49 38 73 KANSAS STATE (81) G-GA F-FA rr... TF Prisock 8-19 3-5 3 19 Graft 1-3 1-1 0 3 Frary 1-1 O-1 0 zZ Jd. Gmith hel 5 5=7 5 ae Wilson 1-3 0-0 iL 2 Jung 645 jal . 3 Stone 0-3 1-1 0 3. Snyder 7-1Lh 0-90 2 14 Stauffer 2-6 2-2 1 6 Poore 2~7 2-2 0 6 TOTALS 32-86 17-26 16 81 WASHINGTON (75) Bryan 3-9 1-4 1 7 Patnoe 1-6 1=2 0 3 Tripp 3-18 2-3 2 8 Parsons 11-18 2-k 3 2h Coshow 3-6 3=k 2 9 Johnson 3-6 =8 1 10 Halle Om1 0-0 2 0 Voegtlin O-1 1-2 0 i Perkins 6—12 le2 Lag Olsen O-1 0-0 A 0 TOTALS 30-79 1529 16 75 Halftime score--42-39, Kansas State Officials--Nash and Rust ERSMGBSERE 2 9 BSBVURBeSe 8 “ Syd in a series of 4 Most important itemxexpected question expected to be answered in the eighth amual Big Seven tournament, opening Saturday night in Kensas City, is a forecast of how much tightening will be for hcoming imx from top to bottom in ths 1954 conference racee It already is being conceeded that the twin Sune flower powers, Kensas and Kansas State, will not hotdxthedyx be able to restrict the fl ag chase to a private affex duel by mid-season as they have done the past three seasonse “t also is bel elved that Nebraska, Oklahoma ami Missouri will be impr oved. The question thus resolves into these points;l) How much weeker are Kansas and KeStat ef 2! Can thax NU, OU, and MU improve enough to overheail them ? First test in this department will be provided by Kansas State am Nebraska which lead off Monday's first-rouni set at & pm. Oklahoma is matched against this year's guest five, Washington, at 9:45 th same ewninge eb. Kansas meets Coloraio in Saturday's 8 Pelle lid~ lifter wi th ‘Wis sour 4 ami Iowa State following. As Phog Allen, Kunsxex coach of Kansas' defending league menpion , pointed out «+... " Apparantly there is no cutstandin g team in ow conference at present. This means a tougher tournament in Kansas Citys It could be the best we've ever had. " This thought can be transferred wholesale to the '54 conference race. For in five of the seven previous meets, the tournament chanpion or rujner-up hxsxgtmevatay thavweagvtextkex also has captured the circuit races The only emceptions were 1946. when SMU ed ged Kansas in the f inal, and 1949 when Missouri clipped Oklahoma Not a single team will cane into the meet unbeatens As a metter of fact, only Kaneas State at 4-1, and Iowa State at 2-1, owned winning records through ganes of December 19. Colorado was winless in four starts through the same date. Opponents are hoping fora Kansas g defensive sag this : year, after one and a half seasons of being subjected to the most merderous defy mes picketing the cenference ever has seene In losing bo Tulane and LSU and beating Tulsa, 9erea © oOo oO oO oe 2nd in a seriss of three A 6-9 lencth of lefthander, Kansas' 8% H. Born , SY pe the prime euardian of bhe post-man's unbroken string of individual Bip Seven tournament scoring champions when the eighth ‘teed. néet gets out of the sterting blocks Saturday wien’ tn Kansas City. , Hite yhenenencn of pivoteman dominancs of th e tourney peint race Was dripiadted by Oklahoma's “erald Tucker in 196, — the meet was founded in the final year of the old Bi 2 Six. fhe hefty, bol Sooner center rimied 6) ooinks over the three- game route despite OU's first weed upset at the hends of;, Kansas State. This whood ex a tournament record for x four yoars pefore the Jayhauker Colussus, Clyde Lovellette, fingered home 82 markers as a junior in 1950. Since Tucker's auspicious start, the loop's 42 Ge teh Vee Has centers Laven! allowed the individual point flag BEX escape the “keyhole brigade in seven consecutive meets. Bill Waters, the pon- derous hoes sho suceeded Tucker as 0U's top pivet, also followed him as tournament scoring monarch with hO points in 194.7. This rep- vegente the*-all-tine low for «4 meet BEXRX point title but it still was good enough to edge Larélid inion, “ar forward of Keneas State's champions by two lengths. KU's Gene Petersen , although a forward most of his career, ‘iaeed the post in the 1948 meet and thereby main- tained a skein by bagging the scoring pennant at 5l. Here is the breakdown on the current streak: Year ane i 7 Team PG 486=PT PF TP 19:6 Gerald Tucker, ¢klehome Ss sf S 6h: 19:7 | Bill Waters, Cklahoma 16 8 7 ko 1948 Gene Petersen, Kansaa 20 32 8 51 ‘A9h9 Clyde Lovellette, Kensas 25 1 10 64 lose. | Gipas Lobelintte, Keene O37 lO lil 953... Glyde “wveliette, Kansas 321 Li, 1 76 1952 Dick Anostmen, Kansas Ste 23 25 10 71 ort the basis of the conference's early outings » Born is the “hetr apparent to this roster. In the Jayhawkers’ three Suyhavx getiace.'c's aii shey'll play bofore ‘he tournanenbes«. he has natied T/ points for @ 2506 avarage to lead al) league pointeamithss The lean southpaw got 27 of these against LSU when ho duelled another 6-9 @lieAuerican, Lob Pottit, on even Serma on the la: ota home court even though the Bengals whip;ed- Kansas, 694636 both wen harvested 27 ypointse Born wes the tournament's seven-ranking scorer last year with his pobwtas cut he came along steadily du%i ng the season to beat Mnostam ovt of the circuit scoring champicnship with @ 2265 average gad etehed a 15.7 for ali gutese | ig Born falters, three other pivots will be cn hand to keop che torch away from che forwards «ii guardSe Missouri's Bob &eiter, # 6-8 junior, lg averaging 17e7 points per start to rank next bo. Born $n the league's eiibly scoring savlese Hebraskata | Bil! Johnson and Bob “aller, Oklahoma's versatile shooter, are —@arrying ljs7 meanse | 19 Throug hh games of December 2& here's how the Big Seven's gop ten merkaman lineup as “hey head for the foureda y . derby in Kensas OLby: 7 | pt OPP CSTR OAN tame Team Poss#eame ¢. = Beli » Born, Kenses, © , Say 9. Af 77 2506 Bob ig liters Wspourdy c Si - 27.) aT 1h 7 Ll7e7 puteh Van Cleave, lowe Statosg 3 we gy 8 SE a Fred Segars Behr askay & hy 2.8 11 66 1605 Gene” ‘Stauffer, Rensas Statess 5 a a Re. Leste Tua Sg “AeLalionidy g ky. a 43 40 61 1563 ie Bob Wal ere ielehorey c Re Is 1S 59 = Lye Bill 9 gehr sng I Peb: ‘aka, 6 hy ee ee ee ee ” | Bob Joungerardy ‘Dol OP REO y f nm » Bs 9 hB 120 3 12 8 i2 32 «1006 vee Al ede? Frensas, t plerce How many ambushes await favorites in the eight annual Big Seven basketball tournament which gets out of the starting gate Saturday in Kansas City's Municipal auditorium? What odd outcrop- pings of team performance and bizarre player incidents will mark the affair? Those are the magnates that again will draw sellout houses in the 10,000-capacity roundball palace at least three of the four playing nights and continue to project the affair as one of the nation's finest, despite its comparatively youthful existence, This is the meet that already has produced two high-scoring overtime matches without precident in regular league play, Kansas! 90-88 win over Kansas State in the 1951 semifinals and Stanford's 103-102 edging of Iowa State in the first consolation round of the same meet. This is a tournament in which Iowa State, a team that hasn't won a league cage flag since 1945 and has dropped 13 consecutive conference decisions to Kansas State, is the only club which holds an edge over the Wildcats in tourney play. It is only 1-0, the Cyclones having captured the only match between the two. But State is 0-7 against a combination of Missouri and Kansas while State holds a bulge over all other comers. The meet also has seen a stellar performer like Missouri's Win Wilfong blanked from the field for a full game. And it once produced an all-tournament team, the 199 five, that did not ine clude a single member of Missouri's championship five. Also consider these rare facts: Only postemen ever have won a meet individual scoring championship. Yet none holds the single- game point record. Three men, Oklahoma's Sherman Norton, the re- cord-holder with 39; Minnesota's Maynard Johnson and Kansas State's 2/ Dick Knostman, with 38 each, have nailed more points in a single tournament game than K.U.'s Clyde Lovellette, greatest pointsmith in conference annals. | Two teams, Colorado in 199, and Stanford in 1951, have come into the meet with undefeated records, but never even reached the finals. Nebraska once outscored Iowa State, 19-1, in the overtime period to notch an 86-67 consolation triumph in 1948. Jim Stange, who still is co-holder of the school record for most points and most free throws in a single game, potted a goal for Nebraska in this one, wheeling into the wrong goal after smaring a jump ball, The last two finals have ended in tears, boos and rhubarbs. SMU set 2 patterns for the unexpected in the inaugural meet by winning the championship as one of the two invited guest teams. — did so by clipping Kansas, 9-6, in the finals. No other invited five.....Washington is completing the eight-team bracket this year.....ever has won the crown. Kansas State added impetus to what has become an annual surprise motif in the same meet by ambushing Oklahoma's eventual NCAA runners-up, 59-55, in the opening round of the meet despite a 2l-point salute by Sooner pivot, Gerald Tucker. The Wildcats since have become the tourney's most dominate team, winning three championships....no other club ever has won more than one.....and clearing the first round in every meet. Yet that blank against the Cyclones persists. It was accom- plished chiefly by a pair of midget guards, S-9 Bob Petersen and 5-8 Don Ferguson, who rollicked for an aggregate of 23 points as the Iowans scored a 56-53 upset in the 198 third-place playoff, 3/ Missouri won the 'h9 title by edging Oklahoma, lh-l2, in the finals, after disposing of Colorado, 62-51, and Michigan, 47-46. Yet none of the Bengals' starting five of Bill Stauffer, Don Stroot, Jerry Fowler, Bob Wachter and George Lafferty earned a first-team all-meet berth, Wilfong, since lifted by the armed forces, drew his handcuff in last year's meet from Kansas guard Dean Kelley who restricted him to four points from the free throw line. Had the versatile Tiger sentinel merely notched his season's average of 11,1 KU could not have scored that 66-62 semifinal upset. Norton cut his record in the opening round of 1951 as Okla- homa upset Stanford, 77-71. The lean 6-l, Redshirt harvested 13 baskets, nine of them lay-ups out of Bruce Drake's patented "Shuffle" with which the Sponers hoodwinked the Pacific Coasters all evening. Purthereere Norton canned every one of his 13 free throws tries which also is a meet mark, Stanford had come into the tourney with a string of eight consecutive early-season victories, Colorado met a similar fate in ')9 won it lugged a ribbon of seven straight triumphs into the hall, only to suffer that 51-62 sacking at the hands of Missouri, the champs’! widest winning spread of the meet, in the semifinals. That record Stanford-Iowa State match was chiefly the pro- duct of a rules experiment which 1) Forced the offended team to shoot all free throws and 2) Gave the offended team ball posses- sion after every successful free throw, The KU-KS heart-stopper, played just one game later, must go down as the tourney's greatest bout to date. This saw the h/ Wildcats wipe out two 19-point leads to tie at 72-72 6:0 from the finish, It also saw Lovellette score only five points through the first half and nail 22 of his 27 while carrying four fouls. State forward Hoot Gibson, sent the game into overtime with 2 long tip-ins 9 seconds before the finish to forge ay deadlock, 80-80, Then the two bitter intra-state foes whirled through 18 points in the overtime. Ranking on the same plane was Missouri's 1949 win over OU which saw Guard George Lafferty score ke his team's last seven points to pull the Tigers from behind. With the conference expected to be considerably tighter from top to bottom this winter, the intense firing in Kansas City should be even more acrid, BIG SEVEN TOURNAMENT BRACKET First round pairings; Saturday 8 p.m Kansas vs. Colorado Saturday 9:45 p.m. Iowa State vs. Missouri 8 p.m. Monday: Kansas State vs. Nebraska 9:45 p.m. Monday: Oklahoma vs. Washington o~ 3 4th ari last of aseries ‘big seven tournement If you still beleive in position identification in basketball, four guards are ache duled to stage the finest mass demonst ration of beckline scoring since the founding of the Big Seven tour mm at when the eighth annual affair umfusks yanks up the curtain Saturday in Kansas City's Miméx Municipal auditorium. This quartet includes Gene Stauferx of Kansas State; Fred Segar, ‘ebraska; Les “ane, Oklahoma, am Dutch Van Cleave, Iowa State. Al] four are riding tmx anong tle conference's pre-tourname nt top ta& scorers ani at least one of them should make the stouest bia for the meet individual scoring crown since Nebraska's Jim Bucharan missed by nine p ints egainst Sangas' “polific Pachyderm, Clyde Lovellet te, two years age Of this. gang, only Segar, the 6e4 Cornhusker, finished among tle circuit's scoring elite in league play last yeer with a 13el average for ninth positione “one crashed the tournament's top tenx last yeare "at is only Kenscce!y Bean xietixey yx ure pxekunt ay Limtshad xin vt hs vik ingrawyy andy hexv sentinel to finish in the king row was Kansas’ Dean Kad ley, now graiuated. And le was no better than nénekved khxS5 vavints wv x a ninth-place tie with 35 pointse Although , the guards have three representatives among the Top Ten semes tournanmt career scorers, Kansas States Ernie “arre tt, and Colorado's Wayne Tucker, along with Buchanan, they never have made much splash in any single meet. Buchanan's 1951 effort is the high-water mark md le is the lone & out-court Bmp delegate on the Top Ten Single Tourrammt scorerse With anything appreching their early pace, onmvofx timy fvx any one of the four must be conceeded a chance &px at the tournament scoring pemant. Van Cleave will cane in tied for secomi on the conference pre-tourmmat scaring tebles witha 17.7 average in four gamese Seger is fourth with 1509 in six; Stauffer fifth with 15.6 in five, am Lne sixth with 1565 in foure “ere is the lineup of the entire ten, excluting menbers of Washington's guest team: “om © Pose Team G FG FT PF TP Avee BeHe thins Kenvawex ,c Kansas 3 29 19 7 77 256 Bob “eiter, c, Missow 4 4 27 a ee ee Dutch Van Cleave,g, Iowa State 4 26 19 14 71 1707 Fred Segar, g, Nebrasin 6 37 sos «6 8 - id? Gene Stauffer, g, Kansas State 5 27 “6 1s 6hU©DUC CON Leste “ane, g, Oklahema 4 24 ae ee Bill Johnson, c, “ebraska 6 28 3 18 89 1409 Bob “aller, ¢, Okla home 4 22 is 15 SO %&8147 Bob Jeangerard, f, Colorado 5 16 30 13 62 1204 Jesse ‘risk, f, Kansas State 5 15 26 15 56 11.2 Van Cleave is likely to suffxr see his average shrin k under stress of more severe competition since the Cyclones have met only Coloraio A & M, Creigjton, amt Grinnell, ani Drakee The other three have bem shooting aginst major targets in almost every start. Segar has coll ected his last 37 p-ints on the road against Oregon State end Sregon. Stea ffer wikl be under closest scrutiny since he is the leading pointsmith of the defnding chanpionm who are given a better than average chance of beceming the first team to rupaat mug bag two titles in suc: essione The softeshoc ting Salinan , who did not even appear in the tournanmt as a sophomore two years ago, was particularly effective in the 7669 demolition of then-unbeatm Wyoming December 12 at Manhatten when he mislpyyx pluggee 26 points. He openi with 12 against Yenver » hit 11 against Indi ma and collected 29 on the vict orious swingy X two-game gw ing to Pg ange 4 One . : Se. Se ta we ot an an ian league scoring leeders who has scant chance to crash the select circle of the tourna at's Top Ten cer eer pointsmiths. 4 That r ster locks like this at present : ' Name Pose Team nn O6UFr6hUCUWhtlCUD® Clyde Lovelle tte, c, Kansas 93 36 33 £222 Jim Bichanan, g, Nebraska SB 6182 OS 134 G 9 9 Dick Knos tman, c, Kensas State 9 46 39 #2 151 9 9 9 S Jim Stange, c, Iowa State oS 26 118 56 45 x8357 115 39 8664 50 112 Ernie “arrett, & g, Kansas State 9 43 15 30 101 Delmar Diercks, c, Iowa Stat Bill Staffer, c, Missouri Jerry Wagh, c, Kansas 12 43 15 20 102 Wayne Tuwker, g, Coloraio 9 ss #87 19 99 Frank Gompert, f, Coloraio 9 Ss a - 97 Stauffer scored 34 points last year to help the Cats to their third crowmne He thus needs 66 , or 33 per game to reach the 100-point mark, a figure he almost certainly will need to write his name on the all-time lis ts. | By matching his pre-tourney average , Segar can reach 103. Ven Cleave can vault to 95 tournament points by equal ling his average; Lane to 91 . This means, of course, they must increase production to crack tle century cellinge Other players within range are Waller, who'll come in with 54 peints in two meets; Prisock, who oms 74 3 Johnson, who has eol ected 63 in tourney play; Bomnyvwhevimsy sesred xsi ani Born, who has scored 51 in Kansas Citye BIG SEVEN TOUR NAMENT SCO REBOA RD Pre-mee t Standings W L Pete Ptse Op/ Pts. Kansas State 4 1 2800-373 342 Iowa Stat e 3 1 e750 282 242 Misso ur 1 2 2 500 270 281 Nebraska 2 4 0333 © 410 439 Kansas 1 2 0333 200 198 Oklah oma 1 3 °250 4869. 2.40 289 Washington 0 fs e000 252 290 Colorado 0 5 000 274 334 Coloraio ( 0-5) Iowa State ( 3-1) Kansas ( 1-2) 44 Colorado A&M 54 76 Grinnell 62 65 Tulane 69 55 Oklahom A&M 58 72 Creighton 64 63 LSU 68 57 Oklahoma A & M 70 57 Coloe A & M 65 72 Tulsa 61 46 Minnesota 74 69 Drake 59 72 Iowa 78 Kansas State ( 4-1) Missouri ( 22) oe ee oe Maes - 75 Drake 43 64 Minnesota 75 in Wiha 00 (63 Wiseonsin 64 2. a ‘ie inked ‘is 84 Wesfmindter 42 70 South Pakota 53 ts Teebenhen. 64 63 Arkansas 64 55 Oregon State 83 68 Oregon 84 87 Washington 76 Oklahoma ( 1-3) 72 Oregon 74 Oklahoma ( 1¢3) 61 Illinois 86 64 Ohio State 7% 69 Wigcorsin 65 46 Oklahoma A&M 65 Washington soxn5}( 0-4) 51 Stanford 66 61 Stanford 63 64 Kansas State 74 76 Kansas State 87 5 oa geet : Dre taneia, RPE APMED the jaynewkers in the furious third quarters ot — hut biesicn drake's guapxkess: | but. this wave gradually abbed away artex ellubing wi ‘thin threo pointe 3 ae aimutes deep into che thing parlod as a eiveun of gix ne nerS were waved to the bench on Fouls» ou Lost conte: bob waller enly 4220 into the third quarter and ‘guav=ebghaleuctweube sins tag avrervEvnis was Fighting dtrletly uphiia Proud that pointe guamicbaicysvaual though olingliug Si mink gv x within five points Ree), ne Tas end of tha third stanza, ica < wal, ler's- loss ‘pobbed Laem. of & chance to explokt tereex Four early foula On Dele born, iis rival center, 20 also . before swinging any ge@ mu bale Oma COs e@uerd xvxycummti com Lary inamil on LOLL dwed waller to the venalty wplt with 3£05 remaining 1 nthe chird period end he pe eoerty in the fourth period by von bludy sterling Jonoay ‘sod ‘Subvavater: icc lanes | : the ragged Bee bens waich prdduced two new foul records, was over before the aR la’ cer casualtioay “however, and the kansans ‘aaintained leads of seven to 12° points &# throch the final quarter. bUKVEBEVS Gore 1595 (R-11-52) ===) WESTERN UNION PRESS MESSAGE W.. P. MARSHALL, PRESIDENT ; PM DEAD LINE HOEME SEVERED tse Sa IT ap ain ie Nt a ce ol “Second add dally oklehowan, oklas cliyy cklas : with porn walved out ax just pefor: ham: Lbon, phog ‘lige. @ reached into the hat for a. surpris« gophe mores posteman, bili b reinard, who coubined with harold patterson to maintain hei last quarter sproade &RBX brainard, a Ge3 irahcores. from newton nailed 15 of bis 22 points in ihe final half, xex eeping all but four of shen from ‘tis charity i’nese ho @ nished with 22 overall. for Sue pune te tO, stcring honors end tied the codint mee t Sing Lowgaae tree vay PSG ore B; cmn'ng lite ald goalesa shroug | che firas 20 minutes 9 _patterson tore losse for eight eritical last -helf poimbs while hauling downs ly veboundse | : e y ldwe was high for the sooners with: 16 points, | & harvest chat nebbed hin the tourney sec ran @ champ Aonshtp et obs two aere ‘than washington conter dean para< Ose 3 ‘feukvrowomisy kupylings new infraction | highs were the tobla of 70 for beth clubs, wiping out the ‘flg | a now infractic n Ae sus wore the clubs! votel o f 70 and ollahoua's mask of abe che Lover two-team figure wag él compiled by kansas adi “uancas state in last yearts rinale “nebraska and colorado lg 1951 quin GeUs shared the old single-team: wark of 34 erected two J@ars BZo | . | the victory % handed the jayhawks their second ; tourney title and wacked: viwlyx loi sucugys aren oex reversed a 3 52-9 sooner victory in the Lao i finalse don plerce 1595 (R-11-52) 222) WESTERN UNION PRESS MESSAGE DEAD LINE W. P. MARSHALL,’ PRESIDENT PM TIME FILED