University Daily Kansan, March 26, 1962 Page 7 Trophies to be presented Banquet to honor KU cagers Men's basketball players, coaches, families and friends will recognize the outstanding players who provided the strong points of this year's basketball program at the annual basketball banquet next Tuesday. Several trophies will be presented to players, including the Dr. F.C. Allen Award for the athlete elected by teams and coaches as the outstanding performer, the Bill Bridges Award for outstanding rebounds and the A.C. "Dutch" Lomberg Award for the most inspirational player. The annual men's basketball banquet will be at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Ballroom. Bob Frederick, Williams Fund director, said the Williams Fund was involved in the planning, but not the financing of the dinner. "We have an athletic department policy that has existed about two years, that the athletic department will provide the athletic directors of revenues sports," Frederick said. RENATE MAI-DAI LUN, assistant professor of business, recently started the Women's Athletic Fund to collect money for awards and a banquet for women's athletics, which are classified as non-revenue sports. The $10 ticket price for the men's basketball banquet will cover most of the cost, but the basketball budget provides for the excess cost, according to Susan Wachter, business manager for athletics. Frederick said that the Williams Fund planned the banquet because this was the height of the recruiting season for coaches. He said that many of the 200 people expected to attend the banquet were members of the Williams Fund and that the athletic department had informed Williams Fund members and season officials about the event, also attend the banquet by purchasing a ticket at the Williams Fund office, 106 Allen Field House. Protests explode on Arab West Bank By United Press International Palestinian guerrillas hurling grenades killed an Israeli soldier in the Gaza Strip yesterday, and Israel fired two more Arab West Bank mayors in a bid to stop them. What are already the bloodiest protests in the occupied territories in six years. ISRAEL RADIO said the soldier was killed and three others injured when two masked assailants threw two grenades at an army jeep on patrol in Gaza City. The first grenade hit the jeep but the second bounced off and then hit a truck carrying Palestinians, injuring three of them. The attackers escaped. In the capitals of Syria and Lebanon, schools and shops shut down for an hour in a solidarity strike with the 800,000 inmates of the island, itself shuttered by a week-old strike. In Beirut, the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine claimed responsibility for the grenade attack that also injured six people, saying they were responding to Israeli actions in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Violent demonstrations raged across the occupied territories for the eighth day as youths stoned tires and burned tires in protests sparked by the dismissal of popular Arab mayor last week. At the United Nations, 22 Arab states demanded that the U.N. Security Council direct Israeli to rescind the dismissal of Badrhim Tawil, elected prime minister, to town of El Bireh. Tawil had refused to deal with occupation authorities. Student protesters burned tires, hurled rocks, flew Palestinian flags and scrawled slogans on school walls in Nabius, near Jenin and in Tulkarm, Israel Radio said. Burning tires blocked major thoroughfares. Successful test offsets toilet woes on shuttle But that issue was quickly swamped by succeeding events as the Israeli military command announced the dismissals of two more Palestinian mayors supporting the strike. Bassam Albus and Karim Khalaf of Ramallah. The soldier killed in the grenade attack was the first Israeli casualty of the violence that has so far claimed five people, three of whom last 45 people, both Arabs and Jews. Bv United Press International The space shuttle's $100 million mechanical arm did its first scientific work yesterday, moving a research instrument through an electron beam shooting from the Columbia's cargo bay. Scientists in an operations room near mission control cheered the arm's performance as they received a signal of the nature of an electron beam in space. It was the first time two such instruments have been used together in space to try to better understand the interactions of the particles in the surrounding thin upper fringes of the ionosphere. "It's terrific to see the crew operating the arm and our experiment," said Dr. Peter Banks of Stanford University, the main scientist on the electron beam gun. "It makes our hearts burble." ASTRONAUTS GORDON Fullerton and Jack Louma, back in fine condition after bouts with space sickness and sleeplessness early on, kept having trouble with their toilet and continued conferring with ground specialists on what to do about it. "It could be from anywhere," Ed Fendell, the communications chief, said. "It's just a buzz noise. The pilots slept without their earphones, which have been picking up strange electronic noise at night and disturbing them. Fendell rejected suggestions that the static was caused by ground tracking radar from a communist country or an effort to test jamming capabilities for future military shuttle flights. Columbia will end its weeklong, 3.4 million-mile flight with a searing re-entry into the atmosphere Monday and touchdown on a desert strip 4,000 feet above sea level in the New Mexico mountains. The communications chief for the shuttle said that experts didn't know the source of the radio noise. The Army, meanwhile, began making preparations for the anticipated 50,000 people who will jiam Sands Missile Range Center jiam Sands Shuttle's scheduled 1:24 p.m. EST landing on the seven-mile-long NORnip Strup. Two nearby communities have declared Columbia's landing day a holiday and space enthusiasts decided yesterday to flash a welcome home signal to Lousma and Fullerton with mirrors. Trailridge Studios, Apts.. Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 CARDS & GIETS Russell Stover CANDIES Southwest Plaza 23TH & IOWA 841-2160 10-Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. for all occasions ARBUTHNOT'S ... "Looks good, Feels good" 81O W. 23rd Lawrence, Kansas (913) 843-2696 Join Jayhawk West Project S.A.D. (SIGMAS AGAINST DEFECTS) Asks You To Give Generously To: Be part of the "1st Annual Happening" coming in May. "You'll like the chance!" THE MARCH OF DIMES Now accepting $100 retainer Paid For By The Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc. Now accepting $100 items! Amtrak to BER. Ats for Indoor Rooftop * Two train bus * Two laundries * Two toiletries Call today and compare our rates 842-4444 7 days a week. 524 Frontier Road Students plan for celebration of city's 200th TAKE A RAINBOW HOME WITH YOU. Tickets are $5. The public is invited. Volponchik said celebrations would be staged all over Thailand during April. Bangkok is the third capital of Thailand and a destination of the rejoinning Chakri dynasty. Volapanchik said the activities would begin at 2 p.m. in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union with an exhibition of arts, crafts and traditional costumes and a slide show depicting the history of Thailand. You've worked hard at each week. So treat your to our Friday Flower Party with a big bright weekend. Our feature will make it even brighter. It's specially priced and ready to take home with you right now Clark Coan, director of foreign student services, will officially open the celebration at 4 p.m. The Thai Student Organization will sponsor a celebration for the bicentennial of Bangkok, the capital of Thailand. The Thai School of Thailand student, announced yesterday. At 7:30 p.m., there will be a program of Thai dances, boxing, a fashion show and costumes from different dynasties at the annual wedding ceremony in the Ballroom. A banquet featuring Thai cuisine will begin at 5 p.m. in the cafeteria of the Union. Designer Bouquet (cash and carry) Flower Shoppe 1101 Mass 8:30-5:30 641-0800 Mon.Sat MONDAY MARCH 29 8:00 ROCK AGAINST RACISM THUMBS WITH EUPHEMISTICS OFF THE WALL H'ALL KUSA BENEFIT From Jacques Cohent of You'll find fun and fashion in the original canvas espadrile complete with a rapo covered wedge, naturality in choice of 'au courant' fashion FUNDED IN PART FROM THE STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE. If it is not lactic Jacques Cohen? it is not the __original 819 Mass. 843-3470 Hrs. M.-Sat. 9:00-5:30 Thurs. til 8:30 SAT. MARCH 27, 1982 CELEBRATE WITH THAILAND'S CAPITAL CITY, BANGKOK, AND ITS 200th ANNIVERSARY An evening of entertainment... Exotic Thai culinations, Classical dances, Exhibitions and many more... KANSAS UNION: Ballroom EXHIBITION: 2:00 P.M. Dean Clark Coan Will Open Officially At 4:00 P.M. DINNER: 5:00 P.M. Catheter SHOW: 7:30 P.M. Ballroom TICKET INFORMATION: $5.00 LAWRENCE: SUA Box Office International Club A CHANCE OF A LIFETIME Pat: B41-8230 (Dorm) Papaia: 844-6531 TOPEKA: Wim 267-1613 KANSAS CITY: Virol (816) 212-5727 BANGKOK BICENTENNIAL Funded from The Student Activity Fee POPPIN' FRESH $1.25 Bar Drinks 75c Dr Don't Forget Happy Hour. 2 for 1s, 5-7 p.m. ken's. PIZZA FREE COUPON FREE Clip this coupon, redeem at any Ken's Plaza location. When you buy one Ken's Plaza you will receive the next size smaller of equal value FREE No Charge On Carry Out Orders Void With Other Promotions Offer expires April 1, 1982 843-7405 27th & Iowa Lawrence FREE PIZZA --drink offer good on dine-in only. 30ยข Refills on any size soft drink Ken's Offers You More For Less $1.20 Refills on pitchers of soft drinks THE ALTERNATIVE 1618 WEST 23RD OPEN DAILY 11 a.m.-2 a.m. DINE IN/CARRYOUT/DRIVE THRU 841-6104