The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 15, 1985 - Page 3 HAPPENINGS- Pirgim plans concert for Africa By BETH FERTIG National Student Campaign Against guitar-based sounds of Dreaming In hours of the morning. We have so Friday Highlight The Center for Russian and East European Studies is sponsoring a day- long symposium on the European Left in the years of the Great Depression, the rise of Fascism and the crisis of liberal democratic politics. Faculty members Ronald G. Suny and Geoff Eley are among the scheduled speakers. The symposium begins at 9:30 a.m. in Rackham's East Conference room. See WEEKEND Magazine for Films and Performances Speakers Anthropology Colloquium - Ross Chambers, "Redoing Oppositional Narrative," 4 p.m., 4051 LS&A Bldg. Biology - Andre Steinmetz, "Organization and Structure of Chloroplast tRNA Genes in Higher Plants," noon, 1139 Natural Science Bldg. Engineering - Michael Lightner, 3 p.m., 2076 E. Engineering Bldg.; Giogio Rizzoni, "A Dynamic Model for the Internal Combustion Engine," 4 p.m., 1018 Dow Bldg. Guild House Campus ministry - Rafe Ezekiel, "Voices from the Cor- ner," noon, 802 Monroe St. Philosophy - Terry Horgan, "Attitudinatives," 4 p.m., W. Conf. room, Rackham. Residential College - Marilyn Young, "The Revolution Revisited: China, 1984," 4 p.m., room 126, East Quad. Meetings Chinese Students Christian Fellowship - 7:30 p.m., Packard Rd. Bap- tist Church. Cornerstone Christian Fellowship -7 p.m., room C, League. International Students Fellowship - 7 p.m. Juggling Club - 3 p.m., Union. Korean Christian Fellowship - 9 p.m., Campus Chapel. Medical Center - Breast Cancer Education/Support Group, noon, Simpson Mem. Inst. Lib. Regents - 9 a.m., Regents' room, Fleming. University Aikido Club - 5 p.m., University room, IMSB. Video Yearbook - 5 p.m., 1412 Mason Hall. Miscellaneous Center for Afro-American and African Studies - American Pictures, Jacob Holdt, 6:30 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Center for South Asian Studies - Demonstration and talk, "Yoga: Exotic Gymnastics or a Stilling of the Mind?" 7 p.m., Lane Hall Auditorium. Cont. Medical Education - Course, Basic Cardiac Life Support for Physicians, Towsley Center. Department of Romance Languages - Workshop, History of Rhetoric, 9 a.m., W. Lecture room, Rackham. HRD - Workshops, Travel Office Policies and Procedures, 8:30 a.m.; Managing Your Office Records, 1 p.m. History/Russian and Eastern European Studies - Symposium, 50 years of the Popular Front, 9:30 a.m., E. Conf. ROOM, Rackham. International Folk Dance Club - Lessons, 8:30 p.m., Angell Sch., 1208 S. U. Kresge Business Admin. Library/Michigan Media - Film/video festival9 a.m., Business Admin. Library. Red Cross - U. of M.-OSU blood drive competition 1-7 p.m., Mary- Markley. Theosophical Society - Videotape, "The Vegetarian World," 7:30 p.m., yPelletie Gallery. Union Arts & Programming - Art Print Sale, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Ground floor, Union. Saturday Highlight Superdance '85, a benefit for Muscular Dystrophy will be held this af- ternoon and evening in the Union Ballroom. The dance marathon is spon- sored by Alpha Epsilon Pi, the Michigan Student Assembly, and WCBN. Participants must have $25 in pledges promised, and prizes will be given to those tho raise the most money. The ten-hour dance begins at 3 p.m. Meetings Ann Arbor Go Club - 2p.m., 1433 Mason Hall. MacTechnics - Computer User Group, 9 a.m., Schorling Aud., SEB. Women's Aglow Fellowship of Ann Arbor - 9:30 a.m., Cornerstone Church. Ypsilanti War Tax Dissidents - 3 p.m., Wesley Foundation. Miscellaneous Alpha Epsilon Pi/MSA/CBN - Superdance '85 for Muscular Dystrophy, 3 p.m., Union Ballroom. Cont. Medical Education - Course, Advanced Cardiac Life Support Recertification, Towsley Center. Mus. Art - Open house, 8 p.m. National Committee on Space - Public forum, 9 a.m., Chrysler Ctr. Aud. Recreational Sports - Ropes course, lunch and instruction. Romance Languages - Workshop, History of Rhetoric, 9 a.m., W. Lec- ture room, Rackham. Speakers International Affairs Educational Project - Sonya Deitros, "Ignorance of the Soviet Union: The Biggest Barrier to Peace," 7 p.m., Pond room, Union. Sunday Highlight The School of Music will present the first program of this year in its Basically Beethoven Series. Featured in the program are Beethoven's Sonata for Piano and Cello in G-minor, op. 5, no. 2; and his Sonata in C- minor for Piano and Violin, op. 30, no. 2. The concert will take place at noon in the School of Music Recital Hall. Admission is free, and the public is welcome. Meetings Alpha Phi Omega - 7 p.m., Union. Miscellaneous Dignity, Ann Arbor - Slide show, Gay/Lesbian history, 8 p.m., St. Mary's Church. Hillel - Israeli fok dancing, 7:30 p.m., 1429 Hill St. Hillel - Israeli folk dancing, 7:30 p.m., 1429 Hill St. Lecture, Yehuda Amichai, "The Contemporary Mood in Israel as Seen by Its Writers," 8 p.m.; A "New York Times" Grad Brunch, 11 a.m.; Worship for Adult Children of Survivors and interested community, Hillel. His House Christian Fellowship - Dinner, 6 p.m.; Bible study, 7 p.m., 925 E. Ann St. KTelsu Mueum - Tnr/lecture. current exhibits Snmmers Draner. 2 Ann Arbor wil get to sing its own version of "Feed the World" Saturday when the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan launches its Ann Arbor Aid for Africa benefit concert at the Michigan Theater. From noon tomidnight all are in- vited to come see some of Ann Arbor's hottest bands, as well as an assor- tment of other musical and comedic performers from the area. THE BENEFIT, or "Rock Aid" as it has been dubbed, is part of the Hunger. Groups similar to PIRGIM across the country have united to join in on the project, and PIRGIM's par- ticipation has placed the University in a national competition with other campuses to raise funds for the master USA for Africa drive. The campus which raises the most money will receive special recognition from the United Nations. Featured as part of Saturday's event is local powerhouse/recording artists Map of the World, the unique Color, and partying faves the Ur- bations and the Whatusies. Also slated to appear will be the local legend Peter "Madcat" Ruth, the reggae band Modesa (Kingbe), newcomers Entropy, and The Bandits. Grand Rapids' Invisible Ink will also be joining the festivities. Most of the big musical acts will be performing sometime during the evening hours, but according to Steve Johnson, PIRGIM's student organizer of the event, "it could run into the wee many great bands that it's probably going to go on a little longer." There will also be a "surprise" musical guest. CHICAGO'S Lou Schneider and Detroit native Dave Soarn will be ad- ding a touch of humor between the music, and the show will be hosted by. Craig Bordeaux of WIQB. Campus station WCBN will be taping the per formances, and Access Productions will be video taping so that the event may be shown at a later date. Engineerin (Continued from Page 1) tee, which is made up of deans and department heads, will have to decide whether or not the course's credit could be used to fulfill the college's junior/senior seminar requirement. "This is the first time a course like this has been proposed (in engineering), said Castle. "Dentistry, medicine and law all have ethics requirements . . ." he continued. So far, the proposed class is meeting little engineering school faculty opposition. The engineering curriculum com- mittee last week unanimously ap- proved a proposal presented by the engineering ethics committee - a subcommittee of the school's student government. THE COURSE proposal will be reviewed by the engineering school's standing committee, a panel com- posed of school deans and department heads, on Nov. 25. The engineering faculty will have the final word on Dec.3. Engineering prof. Henryk Skolimowski, whose book Technology and Human Destiny would be used in the course, said the course should give engineers a "minimal awareness of what they are doing." "(Engineers) are socially and morally illiterate. They are the primary agents of social change and need to be more socially literate," he said. "POLITICIANS, priests, and engineers: we all share the same world and the same responsibility," Skolimowski said. "Since engineers are remodeling the world, they need college considers ethics course to be more responsible than others." Skolimowski is expected to appear before the college's curriculum com- mittee Nov. 21 to discuss whether or not the course should be a required course. According to Castle, if the course is indeed a requirement, it probably won't become mandatory for at least three years. CHARLES VEST, associate dean of engineeringhsaid that "engineers need to think more about the ramifications of their work," but heis "not sure what the best mechanism for that is. I think it's encouraging Correction Doubling the number of freshmen applications from black students is one strategy Niara Sudarkasa, associate vice president for academic affairs, has for doubling black enrollment. In 1985, she promised to double black enrollment in three to five years. Her strategy was incorrectly reported in yester- day's Daily. ANN ARBOR JEWELRY EXCHANGE Your best buy! 322 S. State St. 996-9759 that the initiative came from the students themselves." But not allsstudents support the proposal. One student questioned the idea of an engineering ethics course. "Our ethics are fine. What failing do you see?" said engineering senior James Covert. He added that engineers don't have the time to take such a course. Another student felt the course was needed. "All I know," said one engineering sophomore who asked not to be iden-' tified, "is that engineers couldn't be! all that moral since sometimes they' don't even follow the honor code." Hex asked not to be identitfied because not' reporting violations of the code is it- self a violation. OPEN 24 HOURS Happy Hour 3C Self-serve Copies 9:00 p.m. - 6:00 a.m. 540 E. Liberty * 761-4559 Across from Michigan Theater kinko'se En, Special Student / Youth Fares to SCANDINAVIA On Scheduled Airlines! The inexpensive way to get to Scandinavia. 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