University Daily Kansan, December 1, 1980 Page 3 On Campus TODAY R. L. BOUDRIE of the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory will speak on "Ploan Scattering in EPICS" at the Physics and Astronomy Colloquium scheduled for 4 p.m. in Malott Hall, room 138. TONIGHT TONGHAN The INSPIRATIONAL GOSPEL VOICES will rehearse from 6 to 7:30 p.m. in Murphy Hall, room 404. SUA INDOOR RECREATION will games at 7 p.m. in the Rolls-Royce gymnasium. UNIVERSITY THEATRE AUDITIONS for spring semester productions will begin at 7 p.m. in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. Sign-up for auditions will be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the theatre lobby. The KU MODEL UNITED NATIONS will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the International Room of the Kansas Union. THE BLACK CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet at 8 p.m. in Lewis Hall. A MASTER OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION program lecture titled "From Political Sociology to Political Economy" State University of Urban Research State of Urban Research will be presented by Robert Lineberry of Northwestern University Fuentes has written 10 novels, including "Terra Nostra," "A Change of Skin," "The Hydra Head" and "Distant Relations." He graduated from the National University of Mexico with a law degree, and was the Mexican ambassador to France from 1974 to 1977. Mexican novelist Carlos Fuentes will lecture on "Writing in Time" at 8 tonight in the Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Latin novelist to lecture in Woodruff TOMORROW The lecture is the second of the 1980-81 Humanities Lecture Series. The first one was given by R. S. Barker. at 8 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet from 6:30 to 9 p.m. in Haworth Hall, rooms 209, 232 and 233. REBECCA AGHEYISI, chairman of the department of linguistics at the University of Benin, Benin City, Nigeria, will speak at the annual conference in Nigeria" at the Linguistics Colloquy at 7:30 p.m. in Blake Hall, room 207. Fuentes is a fellow of the humanities at Princeton University. The MARANTHA CHRISTIAN MUSEUM, in the Nikolayevsky房 of the Union Admission to the lecture is free. "Kansas has had laws regulating hazardous waste since 1975," he said. "These statutes are essentially the same as the federal regulations." TAU SIGMA DANCE ENSEMBLE all men mormon, in Robinson Gymnastics room 229 The KU SCIENCE FICTION AND TECHNOLOGY GROUP is located at 7:00 p.m. in the Bedroom Room of the University of Chicago. A SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Student Organization Lecture on "The Legal Aspects of Mainstreaming" will be presented by H. R. Turnbull, a medical education department, at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. apper wri ttle said KDHE had made the request to stop duplication and confusion in enforcement of federal hazardous waste laws. State officials and the Environmental Protection Agency have signed a tentative agreement that allows Kansas to take responsibility for enforcing federal hazardous waste statutes. Gerald Stoltenberg, director of the division of environment, said yesterday that his office had made the request in February to have a final approval of the request in January. The agreement, signed Nov. 19, stems from a request by the Kansas Department and Environment and Waste Management in the state. Stoltenberg said the federal hazardous waste statutes provided that states with adequate staffing and funds could assume responsibility. Kansas already controlled the enforcement of federal air and water regulations. Kansas gets OK to enforce waste laws a classic Mark Brothers movie, with Groucho, as head of Davin College, getting a job as a teacher U written by S.J. Perilanm. With it we have Laurel & Hardy's *Daisy* and *The Blues* in boxing. You can imagine they try to plan a game you can imagine (30/70 min) B; W: 7:30. Thursday, Dec. 4 Horsefeathers Unless otherwise noted, all films will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union, Weekday films are $1.00; Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $1.50; Midnight film are $2.00; Tickets available online or by location information 684-3477. No smoking or refreshments allowed. SNA FILMS Red River (1948) Monday, Dec. 1 Montgomery Cliff *cliffed* opposite John Wayne in this film about a rancher who drives cattle across a dusty river. Beautifully filmed and suspensively directed by Howard Hawks. "One of the all-time great," 125 min. BW: 7-30. Foom Room. Tuesday, Dec. 2 Beauty and the Beast (La Belle et la Bete) Jean Cocoeau's lytic version of the famous fairytale is remarkably imaginative and enthralling, a unique film. "The taste and charm of the film is immensely well-hallowed, with Jesse Gaby Jean Maries (81), B.W.B. French subtilities, 7:30. Roberto Rossellini's return to the neorealist tradition is the story of a black marketer, played by fellow neorealist director Vittorio Beccari on Black Screen. The character gradually grows into the role. "If anything, the years improved both neorealism and realism," Dobbs, Tibetan, years of Italian Cinema. (139 min.) &W.Italian/stablishes: 7-30. Wednesday, Dec. 3 General Della Rovere counties in early October. EPA officials criticized state officials for not taking immediate steps to remove toxic waste from sites. State officials argued that the waste posed no immediate threat The department's request includes a proposal that would increase the size of the waste management staff from four to 16 members, he said. EPA approval is also required for the staff increase because the federal agency provides 75 percent of the waste management staff's funding. America's feet are in Dexter's hands. NOW THRU CHRISTMAS OPEN SUNDAYS: 1-5 M-F 9-8:30 SAT. 9-5:30 629 Massachusetts "Industry views state control as an advantage because local officials have a better understanding of the conditions they operate under." he said. "Kansas will benefit because there will be a better application of the law." STOLTENBERG SAID KDHE's control of the program would have advantages for Kansas. adopt a new regulation similar to the federal regulation that went into effect Nov. 19, before the transfer of control could take place. Stoltenberg said the agreement requires Kansas to manage its hazardous waste program in the same manner as the federal program. could take place: The statute requires that records of waste creation and disposal be kept, Stoltenberg said. He said this would force Kansas to A recent disagreement about hazardous waste disposal in Kansas City, Kan., was not a factor, he said. EPA and state environment and health officials argued about the seriousness of toxic waste buried in dumps in Wiyandotte and Johnson WANTED— SENIORS— Description— A senior who still needs to buy a senior class card. Qualifications— $13.00, payable in cash or check Benefits— Benefits— • Senior class shirt - Nightly specials at local bars for rest of year - Senior class parties— - Senior class parties — 1st one Dec. 8 at Gammons - 1 party every week last 6 weeks of year - Supports senior class gift to KU - Supports HOPE award - Supports Commencement Where to apply— info. booth Jayhawk Blvd. in front of Wescoe When to apply— 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. Dec. 1, 2, 3 We are an equal opport. senior class Like a Good Deli Sandwich? Try the new Stuffed Pig! FREE salad & small drink with any sandwich when accompanied by this coupon. (Six salads to choose from!) Mon Th. 11:30-8 Fri Sat. 11:30-10 Sun 12-8 Closed Mon. Good thru 12-19-8. Behind Safety 2110 Iowa Behind Safety Your hair reflects on you. Come to Reflections for all of your hair care needs. $5.00 off on hair design, perms, and highlighting. PLUS 20% off of Nucleic A Products. Good until Dec. 19 with this coupon. 2323 Ridge Court 841-5999 A RESPONSE TO MR. HAMMOUDEH The November 18 issue of the Journal-World contained a letter by one Shawkat Hammouche accusing the Journal-World of some seven years of "inaccurate presentation of facts, bias reporting and emotion-ridden analysis." While reading a Journal-World editorial entitled "Intimidation at KIPMr. Hammouche found that he could endure no more and thereupon formulated a rejoinder. The editorial in question described how some 75 to 100 self-styled demonstrators had forced the cancellation of a public inquiry by Ehud Col, Israeli's consul for information last November 12. Mr. Hammouche was solely vexed by the editorial thought that "the free exchange of ideas appears to have been violated against a group of demonstrators." Actually, says Mr. Hammouche "The fact is that the anti-israel persons went . . . to listen . . . out of curiosity and the desire to learn and to ask questions. Not one student mentioned disruption or intimidation." Two paragraphs later Mr. Hammouche complains of "my very well performed teaching assistantship (being) terminated after I participated in a University-approved demonstration against the appearance of Rabin." a University-approved demonstration against the appearance of Rabbi Isn't it strange that this "curiosity and the desire to learn and to ask questions" that Mr. Hammoudhe attributes to the Moslem contingent and their sympathize with the night of November 12 didn't surface amongst this very same group that April evening in 1974 when former Israeli General and Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin spoke in Hoch Auditorium, instead of seizing this opportunity to question the architect of Israel's victory in the Six Day War, "antiselamite persons" contented themselves with disruptive parading and chanting which succeeded in silencing theMR. Rabin at least twenty-six times with some of these interruptions lasting three months. Surely it's needless to add that "a university-approved demonstration" has never been and is not today defined as a group of ill-mannered women attempting to drown out a distinguished guest speaker! Isn't it just as obvious that the participation of any university employee in such a display of hoodlumism is ipso facto grounds for dismissal. more grounds for dismissal. When Mr. Hammoudheh accuses the Israeli police of rank oppression and the "extermination" of the Arab population he once again fails to accompany his indictment with any details; indeed, the circumstantial evidence available indicates quite the contrary to be the case. Consider the following: 1. The marked improvement in the Arab minority's standard of living since 1948. 1. We marked improvement in the Arab minority's standard of living since 2003. 2. That both they and the Jewish majority have the same political rights, including the right to vote and run. for political office. 3. The existence, in Israel's system of free and compulsory education, of schools for the Arab populace in which language of instruction is Arabic. 4. The riot that occurred near Tel Aviv, Israel on Saturday November 22, when an estimated 100 Arab soccer fans felt sufficiently free of the Israeli aid of oppression to storm the field and cause the hospitalization of seven Jewish players, one with knife wounds in his back, after the defeat of their favorites by a visiting Jewish team. (Will the police, by firing warning shots to restore order, be seen by Mr. Hammoudh as practicing oblique genocide?) Don't the aforementioned facts make it quite difficult to view this charge of Mr. Hammoudheh's as anything theft that is not unreasonable creative capacity? another expression of his not inconsiderable creative capacity. Mr. Hammoudhhee also discerns, through the autogenous base in which he labors, powerful individuals i.e. the "planners of the event" (the public lecture by Mr. Col) who "feel the Palestinians and persons opposed to Zionism at KU should have no rights or express opinions." Obviously these powerful individuals ("the planners of the event with no rights or express opinions of a short-lived coup d'etat on April 24, 1978 when Mr. Fawaz Turki, an author and defender of the Palestine Liberation Organization, spoke in the Student Union Ballroom. My question was asked of Mr. Turki was described by the Daily Kansan as "the only (expression of) antagonism ... from ... the audience." The brief revolution against the faceless autocrats which made possible Mr. Turki's trade was so thorough that there wasn't a "Zionist hoodam" in the house. History has so through that there wasn't a "Zolahim" Mr. Hammoudh how can one avoid concluding that he is at least guilty of "inaccurate presentation of facts, biased reporting, and emotion-ridden analysis," the very practices which for seven and nine had so offended him when he allegedly encountered them in the Journal World. Both Mr. Turki and Mr. Hammoudh share a willingness to selectively omit and or shamelessly fabricate the mind which is part and parcel of the "anti-Irael" movement. This commitment to distortion or bright falsification becomes more understandable upon recalling that said movement has the cowardly Palestinian Liberation Organization (which regards the planting of bombs in crowded market places heroism) for its political representative. Every pronouncement by that body's chairman, Yasir Areafat, or some lesser light in the organization affords us yet further evidence that Msrs. Turki and Hammoudh aren't the only inveterate liars presenting the case against Israel. William Dann 2702 W. 24th St. Terr. Bike to sell? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.