Population (Continued from P' 81 that space, a more rapid use of moe rsouices is bound to effect' cha standaid. Statistics show how disproportionately well off we 1 e when compared to the rest of the world. The average daily diet in India (1,590 calories) is less than half that in the United States. The United States per capita consumption of energy is double that of Britain and more than 20 times that of India. We use 80 times more iron than India per capita and nearly two and one- half times more newsprint per capita than Britain. Americans use nearly two thirds of the world's production of oil. Still, the problem of overpopu- lation in the United States is not essentially an economic one, not a matter of the quantity of our food, Puerto Rico (Continued from Page 5) most industries, Moscoso explain- ed. The Development Company sometimes makes loans, he said, but most often this function is carried out by the Development Bank. By no means all of Fomento's activity is confined to plant de- velopment, Moscoso is quick to point out. Extensive studies of inter-related industries, such as the various aspects of food pro- duction or of chemical production, are carried out; new industries are created (use of sugar-cane waste as paper pulp is an example), and local industry is stimulated. Ramey Air Force Base and Roosevelt Roads Naval Base cooperated, to illustrate the latter point, in a' program to give them specially de- signed new furniture, made in Puerto Rico to their specifications. PROBABLY the most spectacular area of Fomento development, at least to the visitor, is the tourist, business. Indeed, "ten years ago," as Fomento literature points out, "Puerto Ricans never thought of their land as a tourist center, and certainly almost no one else did either." Fomento had no place to accom- modate businessmen it brought to the island after the war, and when! no one was willing to risk a hotel project Fomento had the Develop- ment Company build one. The result was the plush Caribe Hilton, 95 per cent Fomento-own- ed, and one of the nation's finest, hotels. Instead of meeting the de- mand, however, the Caribe stimu- lated it; the San Juan Intercon- tinental and La Concha hotels have followed (among others), the latter opening only this past' winter. In these Fomento owns a lesser share, Moscoso notes, having fulfilled its role by stimulating growth. STILL FURTHBR afield from in- dustrial growth is a project administered under a wing of the Development Company: Festival Casals, Incorporated. This Spring's Casals Festival will feature, in three weeks of music from Vivaldi to Mendels- sohn, musicians such as Isaac Stern, Eileen Farrell, Eugene Is- tomin, Jesus Maria Sanroma, and the Budapest String Quartet. And of course Pablo Casals, the world's greatest cellist, will play and con- duct. Concern with the island's cul-! ture marks more than further stress on the already booming tourist trade, according to Gov- ernor Munoz. In his opinion, a new concept of the role of government in Puerto Rico is emerging, and with it a further justification of the Com- monwealth status. "We want every Puerto Rican to know that rising prosperity is not an end in itself. It is the servant of a spiritual purpose. You can see the signs already. After little more than 10 years as a Commonwealth, a new creative up- surge is being felt in Puerto Rico. Our people are no longer despond- ent. They are proud." SUNDAY, APRIL 19, 1959 would be an immense block of courage or demand more aestheti- houses stretching 50 miles from cally pleasing houses and stores the center in all directions, he and schools. And as for the prob- may have been a bit pessimistic. lem of population itself-that too But in his description of the peo- can be controlled, and science ., ple as "uniformly clad, municipally promises increasingly more effc- -ylodged, governmentally forced in- live methods to achieve this. to schools and training establish- But the question is not: Can menuo all of the same pattern," he :we do anythin"? Rather it is: Will hit upon a moral. America do anything? To this one s A mass society of countless but must reply: Not soon. numbered persons will probably Behind this answer lies our ir- be much as Sir Albert describes rational fear of planning (except it, much as Aldous Huxley pictured in the preparation for and waging it in his "Brave New World." of war), our failure to realize tha', < }In such a society, man's soul, goodness and beauty cannot be 'that is his imaginative, his infiec- separated in the life of man, and, tive and most human part, cut off ultimately, our inability emotion- from nature and the possibility of ally to face the question of selec- solitude, will become, through tive population control. Factories Dot the Countryside Today lack of use, as vestigial as his little Our hypothetical historian will toe. It is ,doubtful whether any indeed say that the American clothing or shelter, but a matter our basic necessities, the problem degree of freedom, bound as it is countryside disappeared in the of the quality of our lives. of population in America is gen- to the ideal of the importance of 20th century. And we may say with The great danger here is to our erally thought to be a theoretical the individual, could survive amid some certainty that before any- very selves, our souls, if you will, one. But this is not true. such a faceless mass. thing is done, Ann Arbor, once and to the most precious ideals of Can the United States do =y- justly evoking images of unspoiled our society. And because this WHEN Sir Albert Richardson, thing? Of course, as far as build- groves, will become a name as threat is not yet dramatic, be- past president of Britain's ing goes-better use of the decay- quaint and meaningless to future cause Ann Arbor, for example, can Royal Academy, recently predicted ing centers of towns, more and generations of students as that of grow a great deal without effecting that by the year 2000 London larger -parks, arts councils to en- Greenwich Village is to us. Makes it EASIER-THAN-EVER !LLETT'S to step up to the thrill ef --__COLOR-SLIDE PHOTOGRAPHY! specbuculgor gift*,Wn- Color-slider *And erfwW just look a ytolunch Your ow CAMERA L-loW price $29/50 COMPLETE OUTFIT $1O49-s Kodak Pony 11 Camera - high-precision, jhigh-prestige 35mm mitiatire ..bit y,' easy toIseasa snapshot camera. Makes black-and-white and tolor snaps as well as color slides. 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