(1) $a_{n+1} = a_n + 2^{n-1}$ (2) $b_{n+1} = b_n + 2^{n-1}$ (3) $c_{n+1} = c_n + 2^{n-1}$ UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6. 1951 PAGE FIVE Tough Aggie Defense Beats Kansas, 46 To 41 By RAY SOLDAN Hank Iba's close-guarding—and at times, bruising—defense limited Kansas to 13 point sin the second half Monday, and, as the sports jargonist says, "that's all she wrote." With its defense clicking, the Oklahoma Aggies quickly smashed the Jayhawkers' three-point halftime lead and moved on to post a 46 to 41 victory. For the Aggies, who are the nation's No. 2 team in the latest poll, it was the 19th victory in 20 games. Kansas now has an 11-5 record. The Oklahomaans trailed 4 to 2 after two minutes of play, then hit nine straight points to grab an 11 to 4 lead, and a route was in sight. Goals by Bob Kenney, Charlie Hoag, and Clyde Lovellette pulled Kansas back in the ball game. However the Aggies continued to hang onto the lead, and it wasn't until the last minute of the first half that the Jayhawkers moved ahead on goals by Kenney and Lovellette. At alttime Kansas led, 28 to 25. CHARLIE HOAG KENNEY Kansas Kansas Monday's College Basketball Results Coffeville J. C. 58, Joplin J. C. 58 Drake 64, U of Detroit 60 DePaul 85, St. Joseph's (Ind.) 48 Iowa 73, Northwestern 55 Oklahoma A. and M. 46, Kansas 41 Wisconsin 56, Ohio State 51 Michigan State 50, Minnesota 44 Illinois 85, Purdue 76 Kansas State 79, Nebraska 50 Arkansas 50, Rice 42 Abbama 75, Miss. State 69 Tennessee 61, Vanderbilt 59 LaSalle 95, Miami (Fla.) 84 Davis & Elkins 92, Rio Grande 70 So. Carolina 74, Davidson 71 Oklahoma 49, Texas 47 Springhill 68, Centenary 64 Wash. State 55, Oregon 45 Woming 47, Utah 36 Lovellette, never looking better, paced Kansas' attack in the first half. He hit seven goal goals for 14 points, six of the goals in the final 10 minutes of the half. The second half was a different story. The tight Aggie defense hemmed Lovellette in, and a fourth foul shortly after the half got underway made him even more ineffective. A field goal and a free toss brought his night's total to 17 points. Game Captain Bob Kenney scored 11 points for Kansas. It was largely his and Charlie Hoag's hustle which kept K.U. in the game as long as it was. Hoag hit seven points, his largest total of the season. Don Johnson and Gerald Stockton scored 14 and 13 points respectively. Stockton's long shots had Kansas in trouble from the start. He connected with four straight to open the game, and added another pair in the second half. Kansas went three minutes without a field goal in the second half as the Aggies moved in front 29 to 28 At this point, Lovellette poked in a hook shot to give the Jayhawkers their last lead of the game. Then Kansas went nine minutes before connecting from the field again. Kenney finally broke the ice with a jump shot, but by that time the Aggies had an eight-point lead—and against the Aggies eight points is tremendous. There have been some rumbles that if Kansas had shot all of its fire throws it would have won the game. However the statistics do not bear out this contention. Twenty times the Jayhawkers waived free throws. On seven occasions the Jayhawkers were fouled again before getting a shot. Thus they actually waived 13 possible points. They hit four field goals by taking the ball out for eight points. Had Kansas taken the 13 free throws, it is doubtful that they would have made more than eight of them. The game was not lost by refusing free throws—at least in my opinion, it wasn't—it was lost by bad passing and poor ball handling. And the rugged Aggie defense had more than a little to do with the out-come. Three consecutive times in the last half, Kansas worked its way up-court through an ineffective Aggie full-court press, only to fumble the ball away before getting a shot. All three times the Aggies converted the bobble into a goal. The shot percentages indicate pretty well the progress of the game. In the first half, Kansas hit 14 of 34 shots for 41 per cent, while Oklahoma A. and M. connected for eight of 26 for 31 per cent. In the second half, K.U. hit only four of 18 attempts (22 per cent), and the methodical shooting Aggies hit 10 of 15 (a mere 67 per cent). Aggies Win 19th OKLAHOMA A. and M. (46) | | FG | FT-A | PF | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Stockton, f | 6 | 1-1 | 3 | 13 | | McAfee, f | 0 | 0-1 | 1 | 0 | | Johnson, f | 5 | 4-4 | 2 | 11 | | Pilgrim, f | 1 | 3-3 | 3 | 5 | | Darcey, c | 1 | 0-0 | 3 | 2 | | Pager, c | 2 | 0-1 | 3 | 4 | | McArthur, g | 3 | 2-2 | 2 | 8 | | Rogers, g | 0 | 0-1 | 1 | 0 | | Sheets, g | 0 | 0-1 | 4 | 1 | | Pitts, g | 0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | | Smith, g | 0 | 0-1 | 2 | 0 | | Ward, g | 0 | 0-0 | 1 | 0 | Totals 18 10-13 25 46 KANNSAS (AJ) 18 10-13 KANSAS (41) FG FT-A PF TF Kenney, f 4 3-3 3 11 Buller, f 0 0-0 1 0 Bull, f 0 0-0 1 0 Lienhard, f 1 0-0 4 2 Engel, f 0 0-0 4 0 Kelley, f 0 0-0 0 0 Lovellette, c 8 1-1 5 17 Keller, c 0 0-0 0 0 Hougland, g 2 0-0 1 4 Enns, g 0 0-0 5 0 Hoag, g 3 1-1 1 7 Svlvester Goes Sentimental Dead Dog Valued at $2,525 Totals ... 18 5- 5 24 41 Salt Lake City—U.P.) — A Mrs. Daisy Jean Larson values her deceased dog at $2,525. That's the amount she asked in damages in a suit filed in district court after her 11-year old cocker-terrier was shot and killed. Kentucky Holds Top Cage Spot New York, Feb. 6—(U,P)—Defeated only once and determined not to be licked again, rough-riding Kentucky retained its no. 1 position in the United Press basketball ratings today. Halftime score: Kansas 28, Oklahoma A and M 25 That was hardly news. But the terrific tumble of Long Island university was. Long Island was rated third in the nation last week, a mighty power which even threatened the top two. Then came four humiliating defeats in a row, and today LIU rates 14th. Salt Lake City—U(P, P)—Mrs. Alice Beverly is worried about her pet cat. The animal seems to have developed a "sympathetic strain." Instead of keeping the Beverly home free of mice, the cat goes hunting for field mice and carts them into the house to set them free. "My house is teeming with them," Mrs. Beverly said. Of the 35 outstanding coaches who rate the teams weekly, only two voted for LIU as high as seventh. The rest thought even less of the vanquished Blackbirds. Only 18 coaches put LIU on their ballots. The coaches pick their 10 top teams each week. These are graded on a point system, with 10 points for first place, nine for second, and so on down to one point for 10th place. Kansas State rates fourth, Bradley fifth, undefeated Columbia sixth. St. John's seventh, St. Louis eighth. Brigham Young ninth and North Carolina State 10th. On that basis, Kentucky polled 338 out of a possible 550 points, including 26 first places. Oklahoma A & M retained its no. 2 national ranking with 283 points and five first places. Indiana, rated fourth last week, jumped to third to replace Long Island with 254 points, including two first place votes. Brigham Young, which leads the skyline six conference with an 18-4 record, is the newcomer to the top 10, replacing Long Island. Brigham Young rated 11th last week. The four teams which beat Long Island were California, Arizona, Kansas State and St. Louis. Two of them are in the first 10, but Arizona is only 18th and California isn't ranked at all. The United Press basketball ratings: (First place votes in parenthesis) 1. Kentucky (26) 2. Oklahoma A&M (5) 3. Indiana (2) 4. Kansas State (1) 5. Bradley 6. Columbia 7. St. John's 8. St. Louis (1) 9. Brigham Young 9. Brigham Young 10. North Carolina State Second 10—Southern California 44, Villanova 29, Illinois 21, Long Island 18, Cincinnati 17, Washington 10, KANSAS 9, Arizona 8, NYU 6, Holy Cross, Washington State and Texas A & M 2 each. Specially Selected Others—Canisius, Wyoming, Wisconsin, Louisville 1 each. Patronize Kansan Advertisers! Meals For Lent including - Crabs - Oysters - Fish - Shrimp - Scallops - Lobsters During the Lenten Season Do Your Eating At DUCK'S TAVERN 824 Vermont Looking For A Valentine Gift? Come to Balfour's and see our large selection of jewelry. You are sure to find a suitable gift. 411 W. 14th. BALFOUR'S TONIGHT The "Pink Lady" presented by The Light Opera Guild FRASER THEATRE Curtain 8:00 All Seats Reserved 75c WED. FRI. Tickets at Green Hall Read the Daily Kansan Daily. There'll Be No Broken Heart if you remember Her with a Book on Valentine's Day We suggest a book of Verse which she will always treasure The Rubaiyat India's Love Lyrics Love Poems (Peter Paupe Love Poems (Peter Pouper Press) Press) Apples of Gold Milloy's Poems for Young People You will be most welcome to come in and see these and the many other books she would like. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel. 666