Sunday, April 20, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five _________PRFILE WOMAN PELLS COUPON THE MIXED MEDIA OF EDWINA DROBNY Best Spring Treat in Town! APRIL 6-30 ANGUS CAMPBELL More than numbers: JSR's intrepid chief FIRST FLOOR MICHIGAN UNION TUES., THURS. 1-8 WED., FRI., SAT. 10-5 SUN. 12-5 By HERBERT TRIX HARRY T R U M A N was a fiesty, profane, sparkplug of a man. Angus Campbell is exactly the opposite - soft- spoken, withdrawn, and modest. But in 1948, they had something very important in common. Un- like everyone else, they both knew Harry was going to beat Tom Dewey. Harry knew because ne be- lieved in the. innate wisdom of the American people. Campbell knew because he believed in the wisdom of his polling tech- niques. As Director of the In- stitute for S o c i a l Research, Campbell has to know just about everything. To oversee the 100 or so pro- jects currently conducted under the Institute's auspices, Camp- bell has to be schooled not only in political behavior, but eco- nomic and social principles of action as well. In. its 25 years, ISR has investigated such di- verse facets of the human con- dition as Chicago street gangs, uric acid levels in the blood, and people's satisfaction with their automobile insurance For most peoplr. ISR, the world's largest center for social science research, is the epi- tome of the impersonal think- tank. It's harsh architecture and complex publications in- spire visions of huge computer banks spewing out cold, moun- tains of statistics on how we be- have. But there is nothing imper- sonal about- ISR's founder. At home in his small spartan office decorated with numerous piles of books and folders, Campbell, a slowly balding man, occasion- ally fidgets as he talks about himself, his past and his work., For a visionary, he is extreme- ly unpretentious. "I WOULD take my career as the example of how futile it is to predict when you are a student what will eventually happen to you," Campbell says. "I started life as an experi- mental psychologist working on white rats, conditioned reflexes and so on." He soon moved on to a more sophisticated rat-the human- in much more sophisticated mazes. Survey research, how- ever, came about more by acci- dent than intent. During the Second World War, he landed a job at the Division of Program Surveys in the Department of Agriculture. Before the war, the office had done "little" surveys of farmers, but with the coming of hostilities, it served as the general survey organization for the entire government. Realizing that the Division would go back to agricultural surveys after the war, Campbell and several of his colleagues b e g a n contacting universities around the country. They pro- posed they be hired as a group to set up an institute for social research. IN THOSE days, this was a radical proposal. But thanks' to several far-sighted individ- uals here at the University, they were "hired." "We came with no University support whatever. They said, 'We will provide you space and give you the opportunity to use the University as a base to de- velop t h i s crazy adventure} you're t ell i n g us about,'"' Campbell recalls. Today, in addition to directing the ISR and conducting his own research, Campbell teaches a law school seminar. "I teach because I find that a different kind of experience. I like the contact with y o u n g people. They're fun once they over- come their difference to an old- er figure." But Michigan duties aren't the only ones Campbell has shoul- dered. His biography is chock- full of memberships on advisory panels ranging from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to the Amer- ican. Psychological Association. The Federal Aviation Admin- istration Committee on SST- Sonic Boom which concluded that the public disliked the in-; tense boom, was one of his pet projects. Of his work he char- acteristically says, "Now wheth- er those studies actually were important later when the Senate turned down the SST develop-! ment by one vote, I don't know.j I don't take credit for it. I'd like to." Organizational work to the contrary, Campbell's most influ- ential work remains The Ameri- can Voter. Working within an eight year period (1948-1956), he and three others used extensive survey research to show Ameri- cans had a low political aware-I ness level and a very loosely organized set of political opin- ions. Despite the passage of time, Campbell says the findingsI Going to Israel this summer or next year? Come to a get-together for people planning on j going to Israel soon. Exchange plans-discuss problems. Sunday, April 20th 7:30 p.m. i II I 'I k1 M I 'f '1 'UuI U I the Price of ONE AFTERNOONS ONLY (12-6 P.M.) Mo n alour Ic (ramPrlu I I I I I I I 117 W. WASHINGTON PLEASE BRING THIS COUPON i Valid thru April 30 Daily Photo by GORDON TUCKER are just as correct today. "You just can't assume that people who have had the advantages5 of college have a very sophis-' ticated concept of politics or very much interest in it." Currently, Campbell is re- searching what has been placedy under the mantle of the "quality of life." Americans, Campbell, believes, have relied too long on "dollars - and - cents" meas- ures; so Campbell is askingI samples for their subjective opinions of their lives. Two results impress Campbell immediately. One concerns the! number of under-30 women who still seem to respond to the tra- ditional concept of marriage as the principal achievement of their lives. The other is the enormous importance of chil- dren and the strain they cause on family relationships, espe- cially for the mother. This real- ization, he believes, is having an effect on the birth rate. So this man, quietly destroy- ing the paper clip in his hand as he talks, has a do-ers profile large enough to fill six Scotch ads. Which one does he value the most? "The thing I've done that's most likely to endure is help build this Institute. I've put a lot of effort and thought and blood and tears into it and I think it's clearly unique," he says, pride bursting forth. Not the sort of sentiments you'd ex- pect from a man who runs a think-tank. THE SECOND INVITATIONAL FESTIVAL OF EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE at the University of funded by a grant from the National ' Endowment for the \rts, Washington, D.C., a federal agency r ' - - . ,? Join Julian Beck and Judith Malina, co-directors of THE LIVING THEATRE COLLECTIVE, at the Festiva I in Ann Arbor, May 7-11, 1975 (S+ PERFORMANCES and WORKSHOPS by 5 INDEPENDENT COMPANIES 8 COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY COMPANIES Iowa Theatre Lab (Iowa City) Antioch College (Yellow Springs, Ohio) Livinq Staqe (a venture of the Arena Bard College (Anondale-on-the-Hudson, NY) Stoae, Washington, D.C.) California State University at Northridge Livinq Theatre Collective (Pittsburgh) Community Colleqe of Alleqheny County 'Performance Group (NYC) * ( Pittsburgh ) ProVisional Theatre (Los Angeles) National Technical Institute of the Deof (Rochester, NY) 6 FRINGE COMPANIES New York University (Graduate Drama Friends Road Show (Europe & U.S.) Department, School for the Arts, NYC) GelmanPalidofsky Dance Theatre Northeastern Illinois U (Chicago) " 2 University of Minnesota (Minneapolis) 64a ~~~(Ann Arbor)Alent:CrhqCoee Great Salt Lake Mime Troupe (Utah) A '"rate: Carthage Colle e Kuku Ryku Theatre Laboratory, Inc. (NYC) enosha, Wisc.) (3 Royal Canadian Aerial Theatre (Vancouver, B.C.) For. a schedule of events, housing or ticket information, ' write: Coordinator, Experimental Festival, Mendelssohn 'oresented by special arrangement with the Theatre, U-M, Ann Arbor, OR stop by the PTP offices in 40 " University Movement Theatre Repertorv the Michigan Leaque. &0 tr23i n.~, s....,, .,,,w $y,.r$..r.n .$a Caru$$$ ! 1. ur,.s. s...$e.s.oe.a . 4 ,* w. Jw . $ *1 L «wia a3 . J : + N W N+3+.ia .e$Nl iNN 11cNrbe' '1ii.% is a LDaily staff MUSKET announces A FALL PRODUCTION OF GODSPELL NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR CENTRAL COMMITTEE... DIRECTOR MUSICAL DIRECTOR CHOREOGRAPHER SET DESIGNER COSTUME DESIGNER And all other Design and Business Positions APPLICATIONS DUE WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23 AT UAC OFFICES, 2ND FLOOR, UNION for more information, coil 763-1107 or 764-1630 Hebrew House The Kosher Co-ed Co-op has openings for Spring, Summer and Fall 1975 HURRY Call DEBBY 763-6416 or BOB 668-8059 or stop in anytime at 800 LINCOLN Today at 24su ry 1 -3-5-7-9 p.m. Open at12:45p.m. -from the novel by MICHAEL MOORCOCK LAST DAYS OF MAN ON EARTH This weekend- children's matinee "RUMPLESTILTSKIN" Shows at 1 & 3 p.m.- Sat, and Sun. All seats $1.00 Sat-Sun. at 5-7-9 p.m. Open at 12:45 " 4 s " " " N ~"% 3 female seniors need a 4th for a bi-level in Forest Post Apts. for fall. $88 per month. CALL 764-1060 'I Ias efySat., Sun., Wed. at 1 -3-5-7-9 Coen at 12:45 Mon. & Tues., Thurs. & Fri. at 7 &9 p.m. Open at 6:45 Theatre' Phone665-6290 MONDAY is GUEST NIGHT You and a quest--only $2.50 The Second Greatest Fijer in theXorld The war was over-and the world's greatest flyers had never met in combat. But Waldo was going to change all that even if it killed him. 12x tL 1 a s z 1 s; I 3 i ice, $L LAUGH YOU t 0 Q f jift III U' II "'p., III