Page 8-Sunday, January 15, 1978-The Michigan Daily STUDENTS PROFS S TUDY ORGANIZA TIONS: What makes group now in its second year., The SFRC was born in the fall of 1975 when a divisionof the U.S. Department of Health, 'Education and Welfare decided to fund an RC Social Sciences proposal. The group asked for money to link faculty research, classroom teach- ing and student research in a unified program. One group, headed by RC Professor Zee Gamson, plans to investigate alter- 5native businesses. "This includes look- ing at communal forms of ownership and examples of worker control," Gam- son said. Her students will be studying the Del Rio bar and Ann Arbor's food co-ops. ECONOMICS PROFESSOR Tom Weisskopf's group will study the politi- cal economy of the University. Al- though plans aren't definite yet, the group plans to investigate the cost of administration, unionization struggles and the economics of increasing stu- dent participation in University deci- sion-making. FLUTE COMPETITION NEW YORK (AP) - The Walter W. Naumburg Foundation says it will. hold its first competition for flute in the United States in May 1978. The foundation says "flutists of every nationality who reside in the United States and who are not under 17 years of age or over 30 years as of March 1, 1978, will be eligible." First prize will be $2,500, a fully subsidized recital, and a 'commis- sioned work. tick? The dynamics of neighborhood politi- cal and community organizing will be researched by a group led by RC Lec- turer Susan Berkowitz. Her group wan- ts to find out what makes some organi- zations work and others fail. Coordinator Simmons, an RC lectur- er and assistant research assistant in the School of Public Health, explained that the program is open to any Univer- sity undergraduate interested in a demanding 12 credit learning experi- ence. SIMMONS' STUDENT counterpart, Beth Doyle,; said, "Although the plan- ning is done in the fall, the actual re- search begins in the winter term." RC graduate Jane Rosenthal called participation in one of last year's groups "the most important experience I've had at the University. "It was the culmination of everything I had learned within the RC - discov- ering a problem and then finding the route to its exploration," she said. After spending a term researching nurse- practitioners, Rosenthal decided to be- come one herself. JEAN LEMANSKI, a student coordi- nator and research assistant who also participated last year, said of her time studying day care: "I was able to learn about social science research methods in an experimental way so that through learning I gained a certain skill." "Both students and staff learn group dynamics that then get carried into other classes," said RC faculty mem- ber Charlie Bright. Caroline meets the mass During her current visit to Japan, Caroline Kennedy visited a Sumo wrestling studio, where she posed with the well-known grappler Takamiyama. When she returnshome, however, legal authorities may put the squeeze on young Kennedy, who faces an arrest warrant for speeding. Fly With - h , T TeMichiganFlyersj Schoo Meeting 9~ , t308Q E. Eng in + s4+ U.S. POPULATION CENTER RESPONDS: Carter gets irse (Continued from Page 1) had something about Jimmy Carter d- }. President. That wasn't. Jumbo Maue and Jimmy Carter were outnum- bered. "I CAN'T STAND his smile," said Marlene Groennert, and she poured some coffee into Jumbo's cup. "It's deceiving. Besides, one of the things I don't like about Carter the most is he tries to make such an issue out of being so common. And he talks in circles. He talks around everything. He avoids what he's talking about." Before Marlene.Groennert's chili was hot and ready for lunch, one thing was clear: in Hund's Tavern, an all-day meeting place that renders telephones redundant and the Postal Service superflubus in Mascoutah, the population center of the United States, most of the people were less than ecstatic about Jimmy Carter's first year in office. Bob Heberer, Dwight Van Winkle, Jim Stokes, Leroy Perrottet, the mayor. Even Woots Linck. They all they didn't like. TO THIS MAN, who has never visited personally but comes to them ' mostly as an image on the evening news, they awarded tall praise for honesty and effort. But they' offered even heavier criticism of that image. He moves too slowly. He doesn't seem experienced enough to be' competent.. He grins even when he talks about the moral equivalent of war. . And when they were asked about his policies, nitty-gritty complaints came tumbling out: too much Social Security tax, not enough farm ex- ports, overpriced gasoline, and his insensitivity to their needs for a regional airport and a local lock and dam. "Bunch of Republicans," muttered Jumbo Maus. Not really. Leroy Perrottet says he's an independent. And Woots Linck is a Democratic precinct Borders Book Shop and Thomson-Shore Publishers, Inc. in Association with Bill Haney Enterprises Cordially Invite You to Attend a Party in Celebration of the Publication of Jeff Mortimer's. Pi leonsP BloodNoses andLittle A Story of Wolverine Basketball Meet the author and some of the players and coaches Who Became UM Sports Legends and National Sports Figures Thursday, January 19 at Borders Book Shop 4:30 to 6 p.m. 303 South State Street year ye committeeman. MASCOUTAH, population 5,000, in down-state Illinois, is American Gothic. Green and white church steeples reach from corn-stubble fields to the prairie sky. A galvanized water tank on a steel tower presides over the town like a tin judge.. Main Street is less than a mile long. It has one stoplight. But the light doesn't turn red and green. It just blinks. Trees arch overhead. There's a Pizza Hut. And Moore's Family Restaurant. No movie house. But a 5-and-10 and an American Legion post with a sign still advertising a turkey shoot last Nov. 6.. The Census Bureau designated Mascoutah the population center in 1970. That means if all Americans weighed the same, this is where the country would balance. "MASCOUTAH" is an Indian. name. It means "prairie people." But the people of Mascoutah are mostly German. They are hospitable, thrifty, orderly, independent, some might even say stubborn. They are as honest and decent and open and fair as Carter said the government should be. But on Nov. 2, 1976, Jimmy Carter, in his bid to become President, lost Mascoutah. And Woots Linck, the Democratic precinct committeeman, says if things don't improve Carter will lose Mascoutah in 1980. "IN MY TRAVELS, talking to people, hell, they don't, even know what he's doing," worries Linck. "To me, he's moving very slow. I think he's not getting down to the voters. "He's trying hard. He's just going the wrong way about it. He's got to do more work with the congressmen and senators, and they've got to get off their cans and start working for the people. It takes a hell of a lot to be the President." To Don Schaack, vice president at the First National Bank, and John Kolar, who runs the senior citizens' center, and Bob Dauber, whose phar- macy has been in the family for four generations, the bedrock question was: Does the President have the experience it takes to meet the expectations his promises have raised? "I THINK Carter's honest," said Perrottet. "I just think he's incap- able of doing it all." Even Vic Van Dyne, the school superintendent, a Democrat and Carter supporter who ticked off several Carter pluses, including his work for peace in the Middle East, rated Carter's first-year perform- ance no better than fair. The President can take some com- fort, though, from the fact that the middlest American of them all, Lawrence Friederich, is a Carter man. WHEN THE Census Bureau sur- veyed to find the exact demographic center of the country, its vectors crossed smack dab in Friederich's edback soybean patch. There, 5.3 miles southeast of town, bureaucrats from Washington buried a concrete stone 18 inches below the depth of Frieder- ich's plow. It bears a bronze plate saying his soybeans are the official middle of the American people until 1980, when a new census will measure new popu- lation shifts. "I think Carter's doing a good job;" said Friederich, a farmer for 34 of his 60 years. He paused, then added: "Don't you , know that one good Democrat always sticks up for- another?" LEROY KRUSE is a farmer, too, has been for more of his 64 years than he'd like to remember. He's a Republican. His family has been Republican for generations. And, like most farmers hereabouts, he thinks less of Carter than his soybean-grow- ing colleague. "I'm disgruntled with him," Kruse said flatly. "He was a farmer him- self, but that was in Geogria, and we don't think he's got a.true conception of agriculture." Three miles from Kruse's farm, in the middle of downtown, is Mascou- tah's conception of itself - a mural. IT'S A REMARKABLE painting, 46 feet tall and 39 feet wide, a tour de force. It covers an entire wall of an old mill across Main Street from Hund's Tavern and shows Mascou- tah's history and heritage. The whole town painted it. - The man who designed the self-por- trait of this town and its people is Red Lemke, a retired helicopter pilot from nearby Scott Air Force Base, which contributes mightily to Mas- coutah's population and economy. He voted against Jimmy Carter. He thinks Carter's smile is false. It reminds him of Richard Nixon. Carter's concept of leadership is too lacking in delegated authority for Lemke's taste. But he holds out a lot of hope for the President. "HE'S A SMART man," said Lemke, rubbing the rusty stubble on his chin. "He hasn't trusted enough to his native intelligence - his in- tuitive intelligence." Lemke thinks that will change, and when it does Jimmy Carter's successes will mount. At Hund's, some of the early horn- ing coffee drinkers had returned for a late afternoon beer. They were playing a kind of German pinochle called Euchre. Down the street, Rube Yelvington had put his weekly "Mas- coutah Herald" to bed. He eyed his visitor wisely and said, but for the visitor's efforts to stir up Carter talk, the town probably wouldn't have paid much attention at all to the anniversary of Jimmy Carter's inauguration. After all, hobody pays that much attention to the President in Mas- coutah, Yelvington said. Maybe that ought to worry Jimmy Carter most. Maybez we'll cure acer, with out your.hlp but don1 t bet your i fe on' it. The way it stands today, one American out of four will someday have cancer. That means it will strike some member in two out of three American families. Ski Venture Cross Country Skiing offers 5 GROOMED TRAILS MOONLIGHT TOURS LESSONS e . p" Y -- GROUP PARTY RATES STUDENT DISCOUNTS WEEKDAYS WITH I.D. " 7191 _ _\vv° I II 11