HAPPENINGS- Friday Highlight Cultural anthropologist Clifford Geertz will deliver the 1985 Tanner Lecture on Human Values on "The Uses of Diversity" at 4 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheater. Geertz, the Harold F. Linder Professor of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J., will discuss the justification of political and ethical claims across cultural boundaries. The event is free and open to the public. Films See WEEKEND magazine Performances See WEEKEND magazine Speakers South & Southeastern Asia Studies - Karl Hutterer, "Travels Through Sip Song Banna: A Southeast Asianist in China," noon, Lane Hall Com- mons room. Meetings Student Legal Services - 3:30 p.m., Union. Breast Cancer Education/Support group - noon, Simpson Memorial Institute Library. Chinese Students Christian Fellowship - 7:30 p.m., Packard Road Baptist Church. r Korean Christian Fellowship -9 p.m., Campus Chapel. Cornerstone Christian Fellowship - 7 p.m., Third floor, Rm. C, League. Juggling Club -3 p.m., Union. Miscellaneous « MHRI - Seminar, Neal Birnberg, "CIS & Trans Activism of Opioid Peptide Gene Expression," 3:45 p.m., 1057 MHRI. Guild House Campus Ministry - Forum, Lemuel Johnson, "Blacks, Nuclear War & the U-M," noon, 802 Monroe St. Microcomputer Education Center - Workshops: Intro to Microcom- puters, 1 t0 3 p.m., Rm. 3113; Basic Concepts of Microcomputer Telecommunications - Using Window with Your IBM-Compatible Microcomputer, Pt. I, 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.; Microsoft Multiplan for IBM-Compatible Microcomputers; Microsoft Word for the MacIntosh, Pt. Ia, 1-5 p.m.; Microsoft Word for the Macintosh, Pt. Ib, 3-5 p.m., Rm. 3001, School of Education building. Economics - Seminar, Paul Sweeny, "The Growth of the Financial Sector & Its Implications for the World Economy," noon to 2 p.m., Angell Aud. D. Gay Liberation - Coffee house, 8 to 11p.m., 802 Monroe St. Minority Women's Task Force - Workshop, Personal Financial Plan- ning, 4 p.m., Rm. S6330, University Hospital. ' Academic Women's Caucus - Discussion, "What is the Climate for Academic Women at the University?" noon, 350 S. Thayer St. International Folk Dance Club - Lessons, 8:30 p.m., Angell School, 1208 S. University St. Aerospace Engineering - Seminar, Thomas Ver Schure, "The F-15, Past, Present, and Future," 3:30 to 5 p.m., 107 Aerospace Engineering building. Nuclear Engineering - Colloquium, John Kelly, "Research on Severe Accidents on Light Water Reactors," 3:45 p.m., White Aud., Cooley Building. Engineering - Seminar, C.W. Lee, "Weighted Minimum Variance Control of Servo-Damper System with Input Energy Constraint," 4 p.m., 1018 Dow Building. Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations - Conference, "Par- ticipation and the Changing Role of Unions," 9 a.m. to 8:30 p.m., North Campus Commons. Canterbury House - Open house for Episcopal students, 4 to 6 p.m., 218 N. Division St. Saturday Highlight A symposium on the Tanner Lecture, "The Uses of Diversity," will take place at 9:30 a.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The symposium will feature Clifford Geertz, The Institute of Advanced Study; Steven Lukes, Balliol College, Oxford University; Richard Rorty, University of Virginia; Dan Sperber, University of Paris. Films See WEEKEND magazine Performances See WEEKEND magazine Meetings Ann Arbor Go Club - 2 to 7 p.m., 1433 Mason Hall. Miscellaneous Armenian Students' Cultural Association - Dance, 8 p.m., St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church, 414 N. Main St. Friends Meetinghouse-Salvadoran Dinner and Program, 6:30p.m. 1420 Hill St. Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations - Conference, "Par- ticipation and the Changing Role of Unions," 9 a.m. to 8:30 p.m., North Campus Commons. Sunday Highlight The School of Art is presenting a symposium on European Expressionism at 3 p.m. in Auditorium A of Angell Hall. Films See WEEKEND magazine. Performances See WEEKEND magazine Meetings Alnha Phi Omega -7 n.m.. Union. The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 8, 1985 - Page 3 Student resigns from 1 University By KERY MURAKAMI Eric Schnaufer, an outspoken op- ponent of a code of non-academic con- duct and one of three students on the University Council, resigned from the council yesterday, saying he didn't want to jeopardize the credibility of the body. Ben Cooper, an LSA senior, was named by the Michigan Student Assembly to take Schnaufer's place. "I RESIGNED in part to take away one of the administration's excuses for ignoring the University Council and student views represented by the council," he said. Schnaufer, a law student, said members of the University's admin- istration had expressed concern of having a "biased" student on the council. He said he didn't want to give University President Harold Shapiro ammunition which could be used to supersede the council in January. Shapiro last month told students in- volved in the code issue that he would bypass the council and submit last year's code proposal to the regents for Ships inch their zway through canal (Continued from Page 1) The Furia, which was in the lock when the wall collapsed, was the first into the 80-foot-by-730-foot lock, and with a blast of its horn and an engine surge it headed toward Lake Ontario bound for Egypt. OTHERS, including the Prairie Harvest, Quebecois, and Rebecca Oma, were expected to make it through the canal yesterday, Darcy said. Ship owners expressed relief about the reopening, but continued to worry about how long the weather would allow the seaway to remain open past its normal mid-December closing date. Pat Doherty, vice president and manager of N.M. Patterson and Sons in Thunder Bay, Ontario, said that even with favorable weather, his shipping company would not be able to recoup all its losses. Last year, after a lift bridge at Valleyfield, Quebec, failed and clogged traffic for 18 days, the seaway was able to extend its season into the first week of January, but ship owners still incurred an estimated $8 million in losses, according to industry figures. Correction A caption in yesterday's Daily iden- tified see-sawers trying to raise funds for children's cancer research as members of the Chi Phi fraternity. They're from the Chi Psi fraternity. Council approval unless the council recon- sidered the administration's proposal or finished its own draft by the end of the year. THE COUNCIL has not recon- sidered last year's code proposal and is not expected to complete its work this year. Schnaufer, who was actively in- volved in "No Code" protests last year, said he feared regents may ap- prove-the administration's proposal, thinking the council did not finish its work because of stalling by Schnaufer. Suzanne Cohen, a law student and co-chair of the council, said she didn't expect any changes in the students' stance after Schnaufer's departure. Cooper's views on the code are similar to those of the two other students on the council and the one advocated by Schnaufer this year. They say the University should have jurisdiction over non-academic offen- ses only when civil laws do not adequately deal with problems. RAYMOND E. 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