5. كم ينتج المجموع من القيم المتاحة في الحالة التالية؟ TUESDAY, JANUARY 7, 1941 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Jayhawks Win One, Lose Two On Eastern Trip By CHUCK ELLIOTT Basketball fortunes of Coach F. C. "Phog" Allen's cage squad did not fare so well over the Christmas holidays as the Jayhawkers salvaged only the final game of their three-set match with eastern colleges. In their first foreign start of the season the Jayhawkers ran up against a hot Fordham Ram crew in New York and were thumped 53 to 42 as the Rams registered their first win in five years on the floor of Madison Square Garden. Howard Engleman led the night's scoring with 21 points but the Rams, tepped by Max Loeffler with 16 points, were more consistent and led the entire game before an overflow crowd of 18,000 fans. Nosed Out By Owls With Bobby Allen, Vance Hall, and Marvin Sollenberger still affected by touches of the flu, the Jayhawkers found a clever-playing Temple Owl quintet too much to handle and lost, 40 to 35, before the Philadelphia crowd. Engleman continued his scoring streak by plunking 16 points thru the hoop and in the last half engineered a rally which brought the score to 36 to 33. Temple, with five minutes to play. The Owls then froze the ball as their leading scorers, Snyder and Musi, each sank a bucket to cinch the game. Engleman, Allen Pace Win The third contest saw the Jayhawkers finally come out on top as they nudged past the Loyola Ramblers, 41 to 40, in the Chicago Coliseum. "Rope" Engleman again paced the Kansans with 12 points and Allen came to his aid with 11 points to topple the vaunted Loyolans. Midget guard Mickey Rottner led the Ramblers to a 22-21 halftime advantage and finished the evening as high scorer with 22 points. Women's Intramurals After the lull of the past two weeks, at least 24 women will have a chance to get sore all over again when two basketball games are played tonight. By JEAN MILAM The INDs and IWWS will battle it out at 9 o'clock and at the same time Miller hall and the ETCs will meet for what should be an ETC victory. Katherine Schaacke and Mary Lee Chapple will lead the INDs while the IWW main defenders will be Evelyn Herriman and Virginia Bell. R.O.T.C. Sets Jan. 15 As Barbecue Date The R.O.T.C. barbecue will be held Jan. 15 in the Lawrence community building. Representatives of the faculty, the community, patriotic organizations, and reserve officers have been invited. The chow-line will be formed at 7 p.m. according to Col. Karl F. Baldwin. There will be a meeting of all football men Tuesday evening at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Memorial Union building. NOTICE Coach Vic Hurt. K-State to Ask Legislature For Seven Buildings The University of Kansas isn't the only school requesting new buildings. When the state legislature goes into session next week Kansas State will ask for not four but seven new buildings. In the thirty-eighth biennual report of Kansas State College submitted to the state board of regents, President F. D. Farrell said the need for buildings "is even more urgent now than it was two years ago." At the meeting of the dean's council last June, seven buildings were listed as urgently needed. Five of the seven were listed as structures requiring state appropriations, while two required only statutory authorizations. Projects for which state appropriations would be needed included completion of Waters hall with livestock pavilion, three home management houses, completion of the veterinary hospital, a fieldhouse, and completior. of the engineering building. One million five hundred twenty-five thousand dollars was the total estimated cost of the buildings. Buildings for which statutory authorization would be required were a new residence hall for women and a student union building, costing altogether approximately $800,000. Other projects which were recommended as necessary for the college's best development were a student infirmary, a home economics building, a general classroom building, extension service building, small animal laboratory building, completion of the heat, power and service building, a women's gymnasium, completion of the library building, a biological science building, new auditorium, and remodeling of the old auditorium. Phi Psi's Hold Party In Kansas City Kansas City's Uptown theater became a mecca for more than 60 Phi Psi's and their dates last Friday night as members and alumni of the Kansas Alpha chapter gathered to watch Brother Ted North, former University student, play his featured role in "Chad Hannah." The Phi Psi cheering section filled three rows of reserved seats. Following the picture, the group went in a body to the College Inn. Louis R. Fockele, a graduate of the University department of journalism in 1939, and who has been assistant advertising manager of the DeLand, Florida Sun-News, has been promoted to advertising manager of that paper, according to word received today. Journalism Grad Receives Promotion On Florida Paper Fockele, a son of Glick Fockele, publisher of the Le Roy (Kansas) Reporter, pursued a year's graduate work at Northwestern before going to De Land last July. The last in a series of 10 bridge lessons sponsored by the Union Activities committee will be presented tonight at 7:15 in the main lounge of the Union building, under the direction of Mrs. Ivan Rowe, Culbertson bridge instructor. Last Bridge Lesson Tonight at Union Dean Lawson To Speak Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College, and Gov. Payne Ratner will be the principal speakers tomorrow Dean Lawson To Speak night for the "get together dinner" held annually by the state board of agriculture. The dinner, to be held in Topeka, is the opening event of a three-day business session. Members of the School of Fine Arts faculty will hold a dinner meeting in the Old English room of the Memorial Union at 6 o'clock tomorrow evening. Dinner will be followed by a short business meeting. Markham To Speak Here Thursday W. T. Markham, supervisor of the occupational information guidance organization, and a member of the Board of Regents, will speak at a convocation of all education students at 3:30 o'clock Thursday afternoon in room 206 of Fraser hall. Markham will speak on the problems of vocational guidance as applied to Kansas teachers. CARL'S JANUARY CLEARANCE Of Hart Schaffner & Marx, Varsity Town, Carlbrooke SUITS-TOPCOATS-OVERCOATS WEDNESDAY MORNING, JAN. 8 300 Wool Suits Selling at 1/3 off Regular Prices $22.50 Suits... $15.00 $25.00 Suits... $16.65 $27.50 Suits... $18.35 $30.00 Suits... $20.00 $31.00 Suits... $20.70 $35.00 Suits... $23.35 $37.50 Suits... $25.00 $40.00 Suits... $26.65 Real Suit Values — Real Savings It will pay you to buy a good suit of clothes right now. "Tuxedo and Tail Suits not included" 375 Wool Suits Selling at 1/4 off Regular Prices $22.50 Suits ... $16.90 $25.00 Suits ... $18.75 $27.50 Suits ... $20.65 $30.00 Suits ... $22.50 $31.00 Suits ... $23.25 $35.00 Suits ... $26.25 $37.50 Suits ... $28.15 $40.00 Suits ... $30.00 Buy you a good suit of clothes, it will pay you big dividends. "Tuxedo and Tail Suits not included" TOPCOATS--OVERCOATS Your Choice of Any Coat in Our Store at a Discount of 25% Fleeces $22.50 Coats now $16.90 Coverts $25.00 Coats now $18.75 Cavalry Twills $27.50 Coats now $20.65 Barpacca's $30.00 Coats now $22.50 Luxoro's $35.00 Coats now $26.25 Rarepacks $37.50 Coats now $28.15 Ramblers $37.50 Coats now $28.15 Camels Hairs $47.50 Coats now $35.65 Sizes 34 to 46 You'll be "Kicking Yourself" if you don't buy a Good Coat Now! — SPECIAL — 1 Lot Felt Hats ONE HALF PRICE Sizes 6¾ to 7½ SPECIAL Lounging Robes 25% DISCOUNT Gaberdines, Flannels — SPECIAL — FIRST COME Sport Coats 25% DISCOUNT Tweed, Velours, Polo's FIRST CHOICE Not a Suit or STARTING WEDNESDAY MORNING Topcoat Reserved. Better Come