THE MICHIGAN DAILY )OM SEEN IN 1960's: Wernette Says Inflation Not 'DestroyingMonster' Prof. McNeil Appraises Subliminal Perception The effects of inflation "are never proportionately as serious as those of deflation," Prof. J. Philip Wernette of the School of Business Administration, speak- ing at the Pacific Coast Banking School, said recently. "The principal criticism I have of inflation is its unfairness to those who have to live on a fixed income," W e r n e t tle explained. "But inflation is not the destroy- ing monster sometimes shown in cartoons. "The loss which some people, suffer during inflation is partially offset by the windfall gains of others. Its effects are never pro- portionately as serious as those of deflation. "In the future, we are likely to experience continuing inflation unless government, business, labor, and agriculture restrain extrava- gant demands on the economy. Inflation, after all, is man made." If present trends continue, Prof. Wernette said, the present eco- nomic conditions which are im- proving fairly rapidly indicate that the recession will be the shortest of the three major post- war inflatlrns. After the recovery from the re- cession, Prof. Wernette predicted that there will be a "super-boom" in the 1960's. Increased popula- tion, productivity, and purchasing power all point to major gains ov- er the next five years, but the economy will be marked by minor fluctuations. People are beginning to become aware of this .impending super- boom, and this will add to the fa- vorable long-term outlook," he declared.' In the foreseeable future, Prof. Wernette sees little chance of tax cuts at any level of local, state or national level. "Federal tax rates will not be reduced .substantially until the. international situation becomes enormously better. Any major tax cut would reuire re- duced' spending for national de- fense and this seems unlikely in view of the cold war," he said. "It is a tribute to the strength of our economy that we have been able to carry a growing burden of taxation and still expand at a rate of betweeen three and four per- cent annually. Prof. Wernette said he felt the. United States was coming out of the present recession "fairly rap- idly." If the present pattern of ir- regular improvements continues, the decline will be the shortes of the three major post-war re- cessions, le added. Subliminal perception "is a'very dramatic cat that has gotten out' of the bag but any appraisal of recent research developments makes it clear that this cat is only one of many yet to come," accord- ing to Prof. Elton B. McNeil. Prof. McNeil, speaking at a recent American Psychological Association meeting held in Ann Arbor, explained that recent popu- lar interest in subliminal percep- tion reached an apex when the National Association of Broad- casters recently forbade its use on television. The future, Prof. McNeil pre- dicted, will see subliminal stimu- lation elevated to such heights of commercial usefulness that it may even rank with, the so-called 'sci- entific' reports by 'independent' labpratories, of the superiority of one product to another. Far from replacing current methods, the most likely possibility is that sub- liminal stimulation will be 'piled atop' the current methods. Prof. McNeil described three areas which indicate great poten- tial for external controling of human behavior. 1) Sensory depri- vation: the subject loses contact with reality and is highly respon- sive to outside instruction. 2) Sen- sory monotony: the subject be-- comes susceptible to indoctrina- tion. 3) Direct electrical brain stimulation: the sensation is suf- ficiently rewarding to make the subject follow directions in order to have the electric current turned on again. Prof. McNeil concluded, "Our ability to control human moods chemically and the enthusiasm with which the public has rushed to accept such control has a dis- quieting effect on a person trying to predict the future, because tranquilizers might well grease the skids for the more speedy arrival of the era of human control. PROF. WERNETTE ... inflation's effects exaggerated Undergraduate Library Use Strains Budget (continued from Page 13) Prof. Wagman believes that it "has stimulated more course-re- lated and free, reading among undergraduates and resulted in improved use of the general library by graduate students." Graduates Double Use In 1956-57, two-thirds of all the persons using the General Library were undergraduates. Since the opening of the Undergraduate Li- brary in January, graduate stu- dents have nearly doubled their use of the General Library. The University's spending for library services totaled about $82 per student in 1956-57. This com- pares with $131 for the University of California at Berkeley and $213 per student at Harvard University for that year, according tostatis- tics compiled by the Association of College and Research Libraries. Sees Great Potential While the great demand for services at the Undergraduate Li- brary was not anticipated, Prof. Wagman believes the . niversity has only begun to exploit the potential of library services to the undergraduate student. ' While the" new, Undergraduate Library has seating accommoda- tions for 2,000 students, Prof. Wagman believes 500 more seats could easily be used during busy periods. Your Bicycle Headquarters DayS.hool Opens. September 22 Night Sehool September 23 Professional training for business positions, at a saving of time and money. Choose one of these practical courses. Secretarial Speedwriting Accounting Stenograph Stenographic Business Machines Bookkeeping Typewriting FREE PLACEMENT SERVICE. We are receiving many position offers for each graduate. AN OFFICE POSITION offers a good salary, opportunities for advance- ment, regular hours, paid vacations, and pleasant surroundings. 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