own Ski Venture Cross Country Skiing offers Page 2-Friday, January 13, 1978-The Michigan Daily Ed., Law, Business schools seek deans Mont. Sen. Metcalf dies at home at 66 5 GROOMED TRAILS MOONLIGHT TOURS LESSONS, a ____._- .p 4 R s .4 r 1 'J A ~Y "' "* P y m . a 9 M y4 W y41 L r e i GROUP PARTY RATES STUDENT DISCOUNTS WEEKDAYS WITH I.D. GROUPS AND ORGANIZATIONS: CALL AND SCHEDULE YOUR EVENING NOW! By DAN OBERDORFER In a trio of campus races to find new deans, the Law School is coming down the home stretch, the School of Educa- tion's search committee is eyeing its re- maining candidates, and the Business. School's search is barely around the first turn. The Law School search committee recommended four names to President Robben Fleming and Vice President for Academic Affairs Harold Shapiro earl- ier this week, Shapiro said yesterday. Neither Shapiro nor search committee chairman Prof. FrancisAllen would disclose a list of the finalists. AFTER REVIEWING the candi- dates' qualifications themselves, Flem- ing and Shapiro will pass on their recommendations to the Regents within the next month and a half, Shapiro said. "I would be hopeful we could have an appointment in either this month or the next," said Allen. The slot has opened up because Dean Theodore St. Antoine LESLIE GOLF COURSE * .p Traver Rd.. PI mrtth Rd. ANN ARBOR Ope Daily 668-9011 is vacating his post to return to teach- ing. The searches to fill holes being left by School of Education Dean Wilbur Cohen and School of Business Administration Dean Floyd Bond, who are both nearing 65, the mandatory retirement age, are not as far along. Cohen will retire in April, Bond in December. OF 125 CANDIDATES originally con- sidered by the Education School's sear- ch committee, only 10 or 11 remain, ac- cording to Prof. Joseph Payne, commit- tee chairman. One of the candidates, Martin Haber- man, Dean of the Division of Urban Outreach at the University of Wiscon- sin-Milwaukee, will meet with students today between 3 and 4 p.m. in Room 1211 of the Education School. He will meet with faculty also. Hendrik Gideonse, dean of the Col- lege of Education and Home Economics at the University of Cincinnati, will visit the campus Monday. Payne says each of the finalists has been invited to visit with faculty and students over the next few weeks. "THEY ARE COMING here to look at us to see if they want to come to Michigan, and we'want to see if we want to put them on our list," Payne said. He said he expects to make recommendations to Shapiro by early. February. Professor Paul McCracken of the Business School search committee says his group is "beginning now to narrow down ... a gross list" containing two pages of deanship candidates. He said he hopes to make a recommendation some time in the spring. "We are under slightly less pressure because Dean Bond is planning to carry on through the end of this (calen- dar) year," he said. HELENA, Mont. (AP)-Sen. Les Metcalf, a publicity-shunning Democrat who spent.17 quiet years in the Senate, was found dead at his apar- tment in Helena yesterday. He was 66. Metcalf, who had announced that he would retire at the end of his term in 1979, held a key vote on President Car- ter's energy plan and his death could amean a pricing policy more favorable to the oil and gas industry. HELENA POLICE Chief Jack Williams said Metcalf's son Jerry, a state legislator, found the body. "Investigating officers found the senator dead in bed, and it appeared that he died of natural causes," Williams said. A spokesperson in Metcalf's Washington office said the senator had a heart condition and had been in poor health for several years. WILLIAMS SAID Jerry Metcalf told officers he had driven his father to Helena Wednesday night from Wallace, Idaho, hometown of his wife of 40 years, Donna. Mrs. Metcalf was still in. Wallace, according to a staff member in Metcalf's Helena office. Metcalf, who has been described as the senator no one knew, was elected to the Senate in 1960 and re-elected in 1966 and 1972. He was best known nationally for supporting additions to the coun- try's designated wilderness areas. But Metcalf was also a member of a House-Senate conference committee on energy and his death could break the congressional deadlock over Carter's energy program. Metcalf FROM "YOUR LOCAL PHOTOFINISHER" 4 HOUR THE 18 SENATE members of the committee have been equally divided for weeks on the issue of natural gas pricing, which has blocked passage of the rest of the plan. Metcalf voted with the nine senators supporting continued controls in op- position to Republicans and Democrats from oil and gas-producing states. At his news conference Thursday. Carter, who was not aware of Metcalf's death, acknowledged that the 9-9 Senate deadlock was responsible for stalling his energy program. The House approved Carter's pricing formula and it is not certain how House conferees would react to a break in the Senate deadlock. SLI ES! Daily Official Bulletin KODAL E6 PROCESS ONLY (Ektachrome) AT KODAK LIST PRICES 24 HOUR KODACHROME, IN BY 9 a.m. SAME DAY PRINTS From.KODACOLOR II and COMPATIBLE FILMS (C-41 Chem.) I N by 10 a. m. OUT at 5:30 p. m. SUN PHOTO SALELarge - assortment of a , 0 / # ,,,J9 I s N Men's " i 8 Women's o Sizes / " a asr n of - -Z f' v9 p ' G 9 ' J / 7a 3180 PACKARD 973-0770 2 BLOCKS EAST OF PLATT COMMERCIAL USERS: Your Quotation Request Must Order A Guaranteed Volume 207 E. LIBERTY 663-8611 FRIDAY, JANUARY 13 1978 Daily Calendar* WUOM: Technology & Democracy, Marshall McLuhan, Dur. U-Toronto's Center for Culture and Technology, "Take Today: Hardware Goes Soft," discusses phonetic alphabet, and effect of a simultaneous information environment, 10:05 a.m. Guild House: Soup and sandwich luncheon, .50c, Jean Carlberg "Women in China", 802 Monroe, noon. Music School faculty recital, "French Harpsichord Music, 17th, 18th Centuries" SM Recital Hall, 8 p.m. General Notices "New Research on Women III: Work, Family Roles and Support Systems," the subject of a con- ference on Tuesday, January 17th, 1978 from 9-5 p.m. The all day meeting is sponsored by CEW. During the morning session, panelists will present papers looking at working women from five diverse perspectives: internal influences on women's career goals, racial differences in why women work, and how work and familiy roles are integrated,' vge and class differences as related to the kinds of jobs women obtain, differences in values and social com- petence across three generations of women. Speakers are: Jacqueline Parsons, Ph. D. (developmental psychologict), Karen Paige, Ph.D. (social psychologist), Joyce Beckett, Ph.D. (School of Social Work), Mary Corcoran, Ph.D. (political scientist), Greg Duncan, Ph.D. (economist) Toni An- tonucci, Ph.D. (developmental psychologist). Research in progress will be presented during the following sessions: 1:30-3:30-Women and Careers Across the Life Cycle, Susan Cameron, oderator; 3:15-4:45-Women and Support Systems Across the Life Cycle, Toni Antonucci, moderator; and Working- Women and Their Families, Jane Hood moderator; 4:45-5:00-closing session. The conference is free and open to the public. This conference has been supported by a Ford Foundation Grant. For further information, contact Susan Golden at CEW, (313) 764-6555. CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT 3200SAB 764-7456 Interviewing at Career Planning and Placement; Jan. 17: Manufacturers,, Nat'l Bank, Battelle Columbus Lab., Nat'l CSS. Jan. 17:.Leo Burnett, Abraham & Straus. Jan. 19: Indiana U. Hosp., Libby Owens Ford Jan. 20: Allstate Insurance Jan. 23:,Jones & Laughlin Steel Co, Action-Peace Corps-Vista. Jan. 24: Action-Peace Corps-Vista, Chem. Ab- stracts Service. Jan. 25: The Proctor & Gamble Distributing Co. Indland Steel Co., Control Data Corp., Action-Peace Corps-Vista. Jan. 26: K-Mart Apparel, BASF Wayandotte Corp. Jan. 27: Rike's, Data Resources Corp. Students interested in the fields of modern sur- veying and cargography: American Congress in. Surveying and Mapping is offering the Keuffeld& Esser Fellowship in Surveying and Car. tography-2,000 & Wild Heerbrugg Geodetic' Fellowship-$3,000. Regulations and applications: forms are available at CP&P. The Int'l Development Research Centre is offering. awards for Canadian graduate students working in' fields related to international development. SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB 7634117 International BusinessdInternship, Zurich, Swi zerland. Liberal Arts and Business majors, grads; and undergrads. Details available. Up to 12 academiccredits given. INTERVIEWS: Camp Maplehurst, Mi. /Coed: Will interview Mon., Jan. 16, 1 to 5. General camp positions open-water- front, arts, crats, athletics, etc. Register by phone or in person. Age 20 and up. Wrights Lake Scout Reservation, Boy Scouts: Will interview Weds. Jan. 18, 1 to 5. Openings include waterfront (WSI). and Rifle instr. Details available Age. (20-21). Merriott Inns of Gr. Am.:Will interview Thurs., Jan.19 and Fri., Jan. 20, 9 to 5. Looking for magmnt. supervisory personnel. Details available. Register by phone or in person. Commonwealth of Virginia, Personnel & Training: Grad. and undergrads. Select your own agen- cy-planning/budget, mental health, retardation higher ed., personnel training. Further details available and appts Environmental Protection Agency, AA, Mi. Must have completed sophomore year in mech. engr. related fields. Details and apps. available. Now U -w ENGINEERS CHEMICAL ELECTRICAL AND MECHANICAL * INDUSTRIAL January 19,1978 a representative of CHAMPION INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION will be interviewing graduating students for positions which can develop into exciting careers in one of America's most far sighted and rewarding industries. Forest Products. Champion International Corporation is a major forest products company, a pioneer in the building materials, paper and paper packaging businesses. With nearly 50.000 employees the company's 1977sales were approximately $3.6 billion. There are more than 400 Champion International facilities in the United States and Canada and it is reasonably certain you have had an association with one or more of our products in the paper, paper packaging or building materials areas. Our building materials business, domestically represented by Champion Building Products. is in itself a large business: 1977 sales of $1.1 billion. This unit of our company is an important producerand marketerof plywood, lumber, hardboard and particle- board. These products are used in both industrial and construction markets and for furniture and home improvement projects. Our building materials might well be used as sheathing, studs or siding in your home. as underlayment for your floors, shelving or panel- ing in your family room. And it's hard to get too far from our Champion Papers products, too. This division of Champion International had sales of over $1 billion in 1977 Champion Papers is a major producer of writ- ing. printing and business papers, the second largest manufac- turer of milk cartons. a producer last year of more than 5'/2 billion envelopes and the country's largest wholesaler of office products.a Our paper packaging business is represented by Hoerner Waldorf, a large (over $500 million last year) producer of cor- rugated containers, consumer packages, grocery, multi-wall and shopping bags. We package boats, refrigerators, toys, taco shells, detergents, cereals, groceries, dishes, pet food and thousands of other items. Behind all the products we make is the tree. We have 3.4 million acres of forestlands in the United States. Champion Timberlands is a separate division responsible for intensively managing these lands to assure a continuing supply of timber, and for supplying our current needs for paper, paper packaging and build- ing materials.