from more division of labor. In addition, a. point of diminishing returns for an ex- panding labor force may exist where the problems of coordination, communication, transportation and management in a sprawling, highly specialized enterprise outweigh its benefits. It seems fairly safe to say that today's American economy is not suffering to any great degree from overpopulation. Indeed, we might even assert that a faster-grow- ing population would be a stimulant (re- member, we're ignoring the more distant future) to economic growth. But perhaps it's time to begin question- ing the idea that a higher Gross Nationai Product is a cause for unqualified rejoic- ing. Perhaps it is time to ask, not only, how much are we producing, but what are we producing? The GNP is a measure of goods and services produced, but there is no guarantee that all of these goods and services really are doing anyone any good. It is fairly evident that America pro- duces many goods and performs many services which would just as well remain unproduced and unperformed. And we have had to delve into motivational re- search and spend millions of dollars on advertising to sell ourselves all the things we could painlessly do without. In one writer's words, we have gone "from an economy of need to an economy of acqui- sition." All this points up what William Vogt calls "the fallacy that the GNP is a meas- ure of value." In terms of the direct benefit people derive from goods and services, then, we could slash our GNP considerably, and be better off because we would not be wast- ing our time producing these assorted un- necessary things. THIS IS RELATED to population be- cause as long as oar population is growing, the GNP, with all its billboards Brazilian swamp to kill malaria-carrying mosquitoes, or when Dr. Tom Dooley in- oculates Asians with penicillin. -Many other problems of American so- ciety could be related to population growth, but perhaps the question of the state of the individual in a mass society is, after all, the ultimate concern. A widespread feeling exists that our fate is being determined by the imperson- al processes of the machine and the "power elite." And, even worse, that we ourselves are becoming machines-con- formists, "organization men," cogs in the wheels of an industry that exists for it- self rather than for us, faceless noneti- ties in "the lonely crowd." People will be jammed closer and closer together, and any wide-open spaces which remain today will be distant memories. People will have to learn to seek happi- ness within a rigidly proscribed sphere, for space will be at a premium. More - limits on personal actions will be neces- sitated by the specialized, interdependent industrial structure which will tolerate little disorder--a minor breakdown in one part having possibly disastrous reper- cussions in the whole system. (Witness the panic of a power failure today!) The individual will have to do his job, efficiently and without complaint, if the life-giving wheels are to keep turning. Moreover, the very scarcity of consumer goods will require careful control over their allocation and use; there will be. nothing to waste. In short, if we are to accept a popula- tion of this size as part of our future, we had better start to revise our values concerning the uniqueness of the indi- vidual and personal freedom. IT IS evident that the more people there are, the less significant any one of us is. As the population grows larger and larger, the society becomes more complex; as we specialize further and further in Technology is the dynamic factor. Just. as the idea of a world of three billion people would have seemed absurd to the ancient Greek, so a world of 300. billion seems impossible to us; for the same rea- son: we are unable today to conceive -of the technology that will support such numbers tomorrow. As long as science continues to develop--and it moves faster daily-there is no reason to posit any limit to population growth. T HERE ARE truth and fallacy in both arguments. Each points. out one es- sential condition for man's survival, but each makes the mistake of ignoring the other. Indeed, both natural resources and the enlightened use of them by man are essential to the survival of the race. If either factor is taken away, catastrophe is the inevitable result. In 1953, Prof. Harrison Brown, then of the University of Chicago's Institute for Nuclear Studies, took a look at some of our most vital resources, estimated how long they can be expected to last, and considered how far man's ingenuity might go in replacing them. Concerning food, Prof. Brown predicts that by cultivating 1.3 billion acres of tropical and northern soils, completely ir- rigating 200 million acres of desert land, and improving plant-breeding and selec- tion techniques, and (most important) establishing 1 billion acres of ponds where algae are grown for human con- sumption, the world's food production could be 25 times what it is today. A more difficult problem is our energy resources. Our conventional fuels cannot be re-planted and re-harvested year after year as food can: they can be used only once. Noting that our coal and oil re- serves, which presently provide 80 per cent of America's power, have barely been dented so far, Prof. Brown demonstrates that, despite this, the next century will see us consume what is left in one vora- could be sup the present w THE GAP feasible a sible is, as h ways a large bigger than cause these available is n will be used. sons is to bee require a rap of human at ture itself. Indian and C forget their problem toge billion people munication, and social o government high degree grow to such cooperation i the level of will be the o: THERE are this disas first, which here, is nucle ity is that ci Eliot's words whimper." I "whimper" p: could continu today, with a of the agrart leading event posits, followe tual decay of thing, this rer for all it reqi doing what w No decisions launched. And it is FROM ITS early days when its office was located in the School of Music Building on Maynard St., the Society has developed into one of the finest and most thorough concert presenters of any American college or university. In its present office in the Burton Memorial Tower are planned varied programs of the highest standards. "A student who regularly attends the series will get a background of music culture of high quality, con- veniently, and at low prices. By attending all concerts of a series and not just the ones that suit his fancy, a student gains a level of aesthetic appreciation that will last him throughout his life, It is when students leave the University that they realize that concert series of equal repute are not available to them every- where," Rector commented. Economy-minded students, or those who just can't afford tickets, may apply to be ushers. In this way they can see the concerts for free. "The combined series are planned, not primarily for amuse- ment and entertainment, but rather for a sound educational experience. They are intended to appropriately supplement, on a worthy and dignified basis, the academic and professional re- sources of the University in its numerous other fields, and to 'bridge the musical resources of the University with those of the community'," Sink added. During the course of its history over 25,000 singers have been members of the Choral Union Chorus. Many of these have later developed into fine performers. Evelyn Beal, who recently was featured as a soloist in a "Messiah" presentation, is just one example. At the conclusion of the 1962-63 season the Society will have presented a total of 3,391 concerts since its inception in 1879. One can review the pictoral history of performing musicians from that time by viewing the Charles A. Sink Collection of auto- graphed photographs of performers who have performed under the auspices of the Society. This extensive collection hangs in the Society's office in the Burton Tower. Substantial members of the University, several regents, three University secretaries, numerous deans and other administrative officers, as well as professional men and industrialists of the city have served on the board of directors. These have given freely and generously of their time and energy in developing the cultural resources of the University and its environs. Rpetor noted.' and tailfins, must grow with it if we are to prevent the spread of unemployment and poverty. If, on the other hand, we could stabilize, or even reduce, our num- bers, we then could turn some creative thought to the possibilities of converting. some of the wasteful components of to- day's GNP into components of tomorrow's GNP which will contribute to the happi- ness and advancement of Americans. Though materialistic America may ig- nore them while cheering or bemoaning the latest GNP statistics, there are many requisites to human well-being which economics cannot provide. These are the things which, as Prof. Harrison Brown points out, "are necessary for the fulfill- ment of man's psychological and spiri- tual needs," though "to be sure, they are of no 'practical' value." It is ironic that the society which has achieved the leisure to enjoy these more fulfilling aspects of life is beginning to find that they are no longer available. For population growth and its concomit- ant, economic growth, have devoured most of our natural recreational areas and are expected to make short work of what is left. Three processes take place. First, as natural areas do not grow with the pop- ulation, increasing numbers mean then that there are more people competing for a fixed amount of forest or beach-in eco- nomic terms, less natural area per capita. Second, as the GNP grows, the need for new industrial sites brings bulldozers to many a forest and meadow, and turns many a nearby lake into a polluted sewer. Thus we not only have more people, but they must share less and less natural space. Third, into the few surviving natural areas, Americans seem to feel obliged to bring not only themselves but as much of their share of the GNP as can be car- ried in, atop or behind their cars. So our forests and coastlines not only become glutted with people, but with most of the internal-combustion engines, portable ra- dios and electric appliances from which these areas are supposed to be a retreat. Moreover, they do not bring with them the social change which Europe experi- enced. It requires not social reorganiza- tion when a United Nations plane sprays a SUNDAY, MARCH 10, 196? our pursuit of bigger and bigger GNP's to support more and more people, one man's part in all of it becomes smaller and smaller. Each of us-factory worker to President-becomes part of a nation- wide assembly line over which no in- dividual really has control. Not only is the individual then powerless to change his society, but even to change himself- for he is hopelessly dependent upon the machine. These are some of the questions today's population situation poses for the Ameri- can present and near future. Now, with such trends in mind, let's broaden our perspective again, and take a look at what population growth has in store for us within the next 200 years. When one looks at today's phenomenal growth rates, the first question that comes to mind is, "How long can this go on?" How many unruly children will Mother Earth be able to support-at what point will she give up the struggle? The estimates vary considerably be- tween two extremes. On one extreme, the darkest pessimists emphasize that the. earth's capacity is finite, and point out that we are close to the limit. Taking their cue from the fam- ous nineteenth - century writings of Thomas Malthus, the "malthusians" stress man's continuing dependence on nature-no matter how much civilization camouflages the fact. They explain that when a species outgrows its sustenance, the species either becomes extict or dies off until its members are reduced to a tolerable level. As soon as we devour what little remains of our sustenance, warn the malthusians, we shall be in dire trouble. Their estimates of the earth's maximum population run as low as five billion, a mark we will reach in less than 35 years. At the other extreme are those who insist that the malthusians are being naive, that with an expanding technology there really is no problem at all. Through- out human history, they state, except for periods after new lands had been dis- covered, the world has been overpopu- lated. That is, there have been as many people alive as the existing methods of production and social organization could support. cious gulp. As these conventional sources decline, the lack could be made up by atomic-energy sources. As supplies of high-grade uranium decline, atomic ener- gy might be replaced by solar engines which, properly set up, could tap the con- tinual and virtually infinite streams of energy sent to us by the sun. An even more vexing problem is the drain upon raw materials-which we can neither grow, as we do food, nor receive from the sun, as we might energy. "Long before the world as a whole becomes highly industrialized, those iron-ore re- sources which can be easily mined and easily processed will have disappeared ... vanishing copper reserves will constitute a formidable barrier to world develop- ment," Prof. Brown notes. Gradually, we will be forced to develop sophisticated, expensive processing procedures to ex- tract increasingly precious but increas- ingly essential substances from increas- ingly-low-grade ores or other potential sources. A RELATED problem is that of water. The streams which our cities and fac- tories- so joyously fill with sewage and lethal chemicals may only frustrate a few would-be swimmers today, but by the year 2000 they will be a major national problem. On top of that, our water de- mands, already at 400,000 gallons a year for every American, will increase so rap- idly that even without pollution the prob- lem would be staggering. The answer, Prof. Brown suggests, will be to convert seawater to freshwater-at a per-gallon price of, at best, ten times what we pay today. As if these various resource problems, considered separately, w e r e n 't bad enough, the fact that they are interde- pendent multiplies the headaches. To overcome a shortage of one type of re- source by more advanced technological methods will require greater and greater amounts of energy. Prof. Brown concludes that, by proper implementation of all these technological ideas, resulting in a worldwide industry dependent only upon "seawater, air, or- dinary rock, sedimentary deposits of lime- stone and phosphate rock, and sunlight," a world population of 50 billion people magnitude of that would a industrial civi For anyone new, better c ruins of the note: the indu was a once-on sible once becE were available plentiful supp But if resoi its present rs caught in a i unable to bu: needed for pr sources that require machi ores. In all li a primitive ex IT IS APPAl our spirallii itably will sto halt to the por es of nature e precedented go birth rates-tl is responsible tion, and the d In general, to stem this rates until the by emigration cess" people I lowering birth rates. The argume rates is obviou, are trying to a suggestion, hov ically, the shi: places to the remain virtual many problemt duce people to how do we m: people leave, s and receiving a quate proportih adults? There are a] adaptation or a grants arrive, a Conclu Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE