2 Wednesday, February 3. 1988 / University Daily Kansan On Campus A retirees club coffee is scheduled at 10 a.m. today in the Adam Lounge of the Adams Alumni Center. A University Forum with Bryant Freeman, professor of French and Italian, is scheduled at 11:40 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Freeman's topic is "The Haitian Election and Its Historical and Cultural Background." Thomas Burcham, chief executive officer and owner of Missouri Bank and Trust, will present a lecture titled "What It Takes To Be an Entrepreneur at 2:30 p.m. today in Raleigh Regional Airport Union. The speech is part of the School of Business Executive Lecture Series. - The second session of the seminar "Nuclear Weapons and National Security" is scheduled at 4:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Campus Christians will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Daisy Hill Room of the Burger Union. The meet was previously scheduled for today. A Sierra Clair meeting featuring a Nuclear Awareness Network presentation is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. today at Lawrence Public Library audioplural. A KU Democrats meeting is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. today in the Governor's Room of the Kansas Union. Two representatives from former Sen. Gary Hart's campaign will speak - Society for Fantasy and Science Fiction will meet at 8 p.m. today in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union. The meeting was previously scheduled to meet last Monday. Correction gy 311, Mineralogy, was 115 in the fall of 1982 and 17 last semester. 'Spuds' changes image Spuds MacKenzie is no longer the wild party animal. Spuds is a responsible drinker, and that is the image Anheuser-Busch wants to promote. Kansan staff writer By Stacy Foster The advertisement is a result of Operation Alert, which Anheuser-Busch started in 1985. Niewoehner said. The program is representative of the alcohol industry's recent trend to promote more responsible drinking. Robyn Niewoehner, executive secretary for industry and consumer affairs at Anheuser-Busch, said that the brewery used Spuds, the canine companion company's television commercials for its moderation advertisement. "It's too bad that it's such a novel idea," said John Brax, president of BACCHUS (Boost Alcohol Consciousness Concerning the Health of University Students). "They are making money off a potentially dangerous product, and it is good they are realizing their responsibilities." Because of a copy editor's error, a class was misidentified in yesterday's Kansan. Enrollment in Geolo- Banning advertisements won't solve the problems because people will drink alcohol whether it's advertised or not, Todd said. Coors was one of the first breweries to become involved in the National Collegiate Alcohol Awareness week. Coors has campus representatives that provide brochures and pamphlets on responsible drinking. Todd said. "Students must become part of the He said that Coors provided more than 6,000 different brochures to universities across the country. The 'how to' brochures are designed to involve students and organizations in alcohol education Busch also has programs focused on college students. Busch produced two films illustrating its position on responsible drinking, said Niewoeh The films are available on campus through the Student Assistance Center at the University of Kansas. They are 'Happy Birthday Ray' and 'Know When to Say When.' Adolph Coors Co., based in Golden, Colo., also wants to promote responsible drinking. 'Happy Birthday Ray' is a film intended for college students. In the film, guests at a party are kept in a room with a door that is detained because of a PWI arrest. Sonya Clark, resident director at Ellsworth Hall, said that she had offered the film to residents at Lewis Hall last year, when she was hall director at Lewis. solution." Todd said. "So many people believe it's the product that is the problem," Todd said. "That is not the problem; it is the misuse of the product." Don Todd, manager for alcohol issues at Coors, said that the Coors company approached alcohol prevention through education on the abuses and misuses of alcohol at the secondary and post-secondary levels. "The film was effective. It was entertaining. It wasn't preachy and it was fairly realistic," Clark said. Onlv 12 $ ^{50} $ Free Delivery with Ad if ordered before Feb. 6. Also available for '15, '17, and '20 Advertise in the Kansan War on Old Dixie jails black leaders Sweetheart Bouquet The Associated Press MONTGOMERY, Ala. — The Alabama NAACP president and 11 other black leaders bent on ripping down the Confederate flag atop the state Capitol were arrested yesterday as they tried to scale an 8-foot fence around the building. State troopers and Capitol police met State Rep. Thomas Reed, the state president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and other black lawmakers at a padlocked gate leading to the building, which is closed for renovation. "You have no right to block my admission," Reed told the officers who blocked his way. "You will let us in now or you will let me in later." Lawrence FLORAL & GIFTS 939 Massachusetts * 843-3255 Reed, surrounded by a crowd of supporters, reporters and photographers, then grabbed a high spot on the fence and was pulled down by the arm and collar. The black leaders contend that the rebel battle flag, flying from a cupola on the Capitol dome, is a racist symbol of slavery and black oppression. Confederate battle flags like the one over the Capitol and at least one Ku Klux Klan banner were sprinkled throughout the crowd. ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE ESQUINE BARBER SERVICE TRACEY GARCIA Haircuts ... $6.50 For appointments call 842-3699 2323 Ridge Court Diamond is wrapped in mystery State police were acting on orders from Gov. Guy Hunt, who wants legislators to decide the flag issue and who promised that no one would be allowed to rip down a Capitol flag. The NAACP also is campaigning to bring down a Confederate battle flag over the South Carolina Statehouse, as well as to remove rebel flags from the designs of the Georgia and Mississippi state flags. jail following his arrest. Across the street from the Alabama Capitol, some people in a mostly white crowd of several hundred sang "Dixie" and carried signs reading "Save Our Flag," and "Heritage, Honor, Pride, Not Racist." A smaller crowd of blacks sang "We Shall Overcome," the hymn of the civil rights movement. John Sampson White, the museum's curator of gems, said, "It is possible that we have here a five-million-dollar diamond shipped in a fifty-cent box." The Associated Press Only five red diamonds are known to exist, and the Smithsonian's is the only one on public display anywhere in the world. The other four are in private hands, and their whereabouts are unknown. "This is just the beginning of my effort to remove the Confederate battle flag from the Alabama Capitol." Reed said as he left the county WASHINGTON — An extremely rare red diamond, probably worth millions of dollars but mailed uninsured to the Smithsonian Institution in a plain cardboard box, went on display yesterday at the National Museum of Natural History. The origins of the unmounted, round-cut, 5.03-carat diamond are shrouded in mystery. Its last owner was Boston gem dealer S. Sydney DeYoung, who bequeathed it to the Smithsonian. Permanent Hair Removal The Electrolysis Studio Free Consultations 15 East 7th 841-5796 Friday & Saturday February 5 & 6— MACKENDER-HUNT Don't miss the fun! 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