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- ╚January 2, 1956Man of the Year:Harlow CurticeFirst Among Equals
-
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-
- When the Founding Fathers set these words--A New Order of
- the Ages--in the Great Seal of the United States, they had in
- mind a social order that would guarantee the individual political
- and personal freedom under law. They only dimly foresaw that they
- were also establishing a new economic order that would break the
- bonds of scarcity that had bound men's actions, thoughts, hopes
- and dreams in earlier times. In 1955 this new order of the world
- -- the free, competitive, expanding American economy -- not only
- showed the world the way to a plenty undreamed of only a few
- years ago, it was also the keystone of the defense of the West
- against the Communist world. Because the U.S. was strong, the
- West was strong -- and more prosperous than it had ever been.
-
- "Our prosperity could never exist," said Sir Norman Kipping,
- director general of the Federation of British Industries,
- "without a prospering United States."
-
- "Let's face it," said Wilhelm Vorwig, general manager of the
- German Automobile Manufacturers' Association, "our present
- achievements are based on the copying of the American economy."
-
- Because of the success of the American economic system, the
- U.S. rolled through 1955 in two-toned splendor to an alltime
- crest of prosperity, heralded around the world. Much of this
- prosperity was directly attributable to the manufacture and sale
- of that quintessential American product, the automobile. Some
- 8,000,000 of them were produced and sold, and a good half of them
- were made and marketed by General Motors under the direction of
- President Harlow Herbert Curtice -- the Man of the Year.
-
- Yet this production alone would not make Harlow Herbert
- Curtice, 62, the Man of the Year. Nor would the fact that he is
- president of the world's biggest manufacturing corporation -- and
- the first president of a corporation -- and the first president
- of a corporation to make more than $1 billion in net profits in a
- year. Curtice is not the Man of 1955 because these phenomenal
- figures measure him off as first among scores of equals whose
- skill, daring and foresight are forever opening new frontiers for
- the expanding American economy by granting millions to colleges,
- making new toasters that pop up twice as fast, or planning
- satellites to circle the earth. Harlow Curtice is the Man of
- 1955 because, in a job that required it, he has assumed the
- responsibility of leadership for American business. In his words
- "General Motors must always lead."
-
- How does Curtice lead?
-
- Bet a Billion. In the early days of 1954, there was gloomy
- talk of a slowing -- and possible end -- to the postwar boom.
- Though the economy was still strong, business was falling off
- and the total of jobless was growing, along with uncertainty
- about the future. In this critical period, "Red" Curtice stood up
- before 500 of the nation's top businessmen and industrialists and
- gave his own pronouncement on the future. General Motors he said,
- would spend $1 billion to expand its plants for the increase in
- auto sales to come. Screamed the headlines: G.M. BETS BILLION:
- NO SLUMP.
-
- Curtice was aware that the U.S., with its growing population,
- growing bank accounts, growing suburbs and decentralized
- industry, could well afford to buy more new cars than it ever had
- before -- if everyone had confidence that the boom would
- continue. As head of G.M., with more income and more resources at
- his command than most sovereign nations, he was in the best
- position to do something about confidence. As a result of his
- billion-dollar bet, confidence spread throughout G.M.'s own
- sizable world. The 514,000 employees in 119 plants in 65 cities
- in 19 states quit hoarding for layoffs and began buying -- among
- other things, autos. By midyear most of the 17,000 Chevrolet,
- Pontiac, Buick, Oldsmobile and Cadillac dealers in the U.S. were
- selling more new and used cars than they ever had before. Some
- 21,000 independent G.M. suppliers had to step up their buying of
- steel, copper, aluminum and other materials. Ford Motor Co., $500
- million already ticketed for expansion, added $625 million last
- spring to expand its plants. Then Chrysler added another billion.
- Meanwhile, Curtice had upped his own expansion spending to $2
- billion. On all sides, other businessmen also raised their own
- sights, putting more dollars into pockets to spend, and sending
- the economy booming through 1955's record year. Says Curtice:
- "People had money and credit. I think I pushed them off the fence
- to the right side."
-
- Time for Decisions. The Russians, of course, did not like
- Curtice's kind of confidence, but they finally gave up their
- repeated predictions of an early collapse the U.S. economy and,
- for a brief period even showed signs of thawing the cold war.
- Because that brief thaw took place while U.S. military and
- economic strength remained steadfast, 1955 was not -- as many
- thought it might be -- a Year of Decision. It was, rather, a Year
- of Decisions, as the U.S. turned from preoccupation with crisis
- to get on with the business of making America work. Items:
-
- -- In literature, Novelist Herman Wouk upset the cliches by
- letting Marjorie Morningstar discover the difference between
- modernist sophistry and durable values like home, faith and
- family. Marjorie Morningstar was no masterpiece, but she
- indicated that American intellectuals could find their voices
- after years of what the late Russell Davenport called "this
- inability to explain to others our most cherished goals."
-
- -- In giving, Henry Ford II announced the Ford Foundation's
- grant of $500 million to privately supported colleges,
- universities (for increases in teachers' salaries), nonprofit
- hospitals and medical schools; including Ford's record-breaker,
- private foundations, prospering with business, passed along
- nearly a billion dollars in grants during 1955.
-
- -- In labor, George Meany, the plumber who has never been on
- strike, became president of the new, 15-million-member American
- Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations.
- Among his first acts: a friendly speech to the National
- Association of Manufacturers, and a suggestion that unions invest
- their millions in housing projects. Among his reasons: union
- members are now in such high income brackets that they can no
- longer qualify for Government-subsidized low-rent housing.
-
- -- In law, Chief Justice Earl Warren read out the Supreme
- Court's unanimous order calling for desegregation of public
- schools "with all deliberate speed" -- a classic application of
- the unchanging principles of constitutional law to ever-changing,
- everyday U.S. life.
-
- But the decisions that men saw changing the skylines of the
- cities, turning poor farm land into prosperous factories (and
- parking lots), bringing new credit and buying power into backward
- areas -- these were the decisions of American businessmen. (In
- fact, while the Supreme Court attacked segregation in schools,
- businessmen attacked it in industry by: 1) raising living
- standards of Southern Negroes, and 2) teaching whites and Negroes
- to work side by side in new Southern factories.) All through the
- year, industry exploded to catch up with the twin demands of the
- mid-20th century: a rapidly rising standard of living and a
- long-range increase in population.
-
- Everywhere that industry grew, the managers studied how to
- pull all the far-flung parts together and make them work more
- efficiently -- so that, in effect, share-holders, executives and
- workmen would get increasing return from an hour's productive
- work. And what they studied hardest was the amazing efficiency of
- General Motors and how it had achieved it.
-
- Shares for All. Like most of today's great corporations,
- G.M. achieved it because giants of old had laid the foundations
- with big, visionary ideas. The man who founded General Motors was
- William C. Durant, an ex-carriage, ex-bicycle, ex-wagon maker who
- first hit the jackpot by backing an auto designer named David
- Buick. In 1905, Billy Durant capitalized Buick for a staggering
- $10 million, three years later tried to corner the auto
- manufacturing business. (Henry Ford agreed to sell for
- $8,000,000, but at the last minute Durant's bankers backed away
- from the $2,000,000 down payment.) Durant settled instead, in
- 1908, for a combine that included Buick, Oldsmobile, Cadillac
- Northway and Oakland, and called it the General Motors Co.
- Detroit called it "Durant's folly" until, in 1910, G.M. sold $34
- million worth of automobiles and netted $10.5 million (since it
- was before taxes, literally).
-
- When Durant's optimistic expansions and mergers ran him out
- of cash, the bankers began talking of the "saturation point" in
- the auto market, and moved in on him. After Durant went out of
- G.M. he drew on his enormous prestige with Chevrolet as part of a
- plan to regain control of G.M. In little more than a year
- Chevrolet was valued at a fabulous $ million. He offered a
- bargain trade of five shares of Chevrolet for one of G.M., while
- he also bought G.M. stock (G.M. stock went from $82 to a high of
- $558 within a year). Thus he gained control of G.M. and added
- Chevrolet to the corporation. Meanwhile, the Du Ponts had become
- large G.M. stockholders, and when Durant went under in the 1920
- crash(trying to bolster the price of G.M. stock), they bought him
- out. (Four months later, he incorporated the $5,000,000 Durant
- Motors, which, on the strength of his name, had $31 million in
- orders before it had a factory site. He got out of automobiles in
- 1926, lost everything in the 1929 crash, and died in 1947 at 85.)
-
- Redheaded Energy. Billy Durant endowed G.M. with optimism
- (1921 was G.M.'s only deficit year), a reputation for good
- automobiles, a flair for sales, and a spirit of unsophisticated
- boldness and high adventure that is still the hallmark in
- Detroit. The man who cast G.M. in present its mold is Alfred P.
- Sloan Jr., an engineer by training and an organizational genius
- by instinct. He became president five years after his company
- (United Motors) was merged with G.M. With him he brought a new
- concept of decentralized organization that is probably as
- significant to the science of corporation management today as
- the U.S. Federal system is to political life. Sloan bred
- independence and intramural competition, handsomely rewarded hard
- work and the inquiring spirit. He welded all these diverse
- talents into a powerful management team that was designed to
- develop leaders just as engineers develop cars. As G.M.'s
- eleventh president, Harlow Curtice is as surely a product of
- General Motors as Dwight Eisenhower is of the U.S. Army.
-
- Curtice brought little but redheaded energy with him when,
- with only a business-school education, he landed a job in Flint,
- Mich, as a bookkeeper for the AC Spark Plug Division of G.M. in
- 1914. His energetic curiosity led him behind the ledger down into
- the plant, to find out what his figures meant in terms of men and
- production. In a year he knew AC so well that, at 21, he was made
- comptroller. At 36 he was AC's president and one of G.M.'s
- junior-grade hot prospects. Put in charge of ailing Buick, he
- pulled the division out of a mid-depression slump, ran it through
- the war years. It was the fourth-biggest-selling car when he was
- boosted to a G.M. vice presidency. In 1948, as the postwar market
- got rolling, G.M. President Charles Wilson made Curtice an
- executive vice president. Three years ago, when Charlie Wilson
- went to Washington to be Secretary of Defense, Red Curtice, at
- 59, became president. His current salary, plus bonuses: more than
- $800,000 a year.
-
- "The rough process of elimination at G.M.," says a knowing
- competitor, "absolutely prevents a phony from getting that job."
-
- Legitimate Prince. Curtice would be the first to snort at
- the suggestion that he is a throwback to Billy Durant -- because
- his Sloan-bred sense of organization rebels at the memory of
- Durant's wild and woolly ways. But Curtice, the corporate
- statesman, and Durant, the irrepressible, share an uncanny
- instinct when it comes to the average American's feelings about
- automobiles -- an
- even sharper sense than the engineering-minded presidents between
- the two who developed the annual model change and the customer
- research system. Curtice is generally typed as a supersalesman,
- but he is much more: he is the legitimate prince of the auto
- buyers, in close communion with his subjects, the size of their
- garages, their chance for advancement (say, from Chevrolet to
- Pontiac), their bank accounts, and the exact degree of new
- styling, e.g., the panoramic windshield required to make them
- accidentally stop by a dealer to see how much he might give on
- the old car.
-
- Red Curtice loses some of the friendly crinkles around his
- eyes when he settles down between his two desks to run the
- corporation from the 14th floor of Detroit's General Motors
- Building. As he scans the reports from G.M.'s earth-girdling
- ventures in autos, Frigidaires, diesel locomotives, radios and
- earth-movers, he becomes again the eagle-sharp comptroller who
- can tell from figures how men and machines are doing. His
- predecessor, rumpled Engineer Charlie Wilson, used to gab
- cheerfully with friends, and occasionally gave friendly advice to
- some of his lesser competitors, such as Nash and Kaiser. Curtice
- rarely finds time for such activity, a fact that has not endeared
- him to his fellow corporation executives outside of G.M. For
- example, Curtice is a member of the Department of Commerce's
- Business Advisory Council but hardly ever attends the meetings.
-
- But inside G.M., Curtice's brisk efficiency is genuinely
- respected. Wilson used to keep the staff (including Executive
- Vice President Curtice) waiting around for hours while he made
- decisions. But Curtice is swift in decision and rarely wrong. If
- executives do not expect compassionate sympathy, they do
- expect -- and get -- justice. One result: there is little
- infighting in G.M.'s executive suites. Says Executive Vice
- President Albert Bradley: "We are all living in glass houses,
- and we go to great lengths to play fair with each other."
-
- Fast Company. No G.M. president could ever be a dictator,
- even if he had the inclination, because the unwritten
- constitution of G.M. has its full quota of checks and balances.
- Big decisions at the top are made in committee, and the president
- must sell the top committees (of which he is a member) on his
- policies before he can execute them. Curtice had to sell the
- powerful Operations and Financial Policy Committees (which report
- directly to the board) before he could bet his big billion in
- January 1954. Says a fellow committeeman: "He prepares his
- presentation for the committees just as if he expects 100%
- opposition."
-
- The committee system can move fast when it has to: for
- example, after the laments of a few G.M. dealers were widely
- publicized in the hearings before Wyoming's Senator Joseph C.
- O'Mahoney last month, Curtice and the Operations Policy Committee
- went into session one Sunday, came out that evening with a far-
- reaching decision to extend all G.M. dealers' contracts from one
- to five years. This also indicated how the committee system can
- put pressure on Curtice. He thought that the complaints of
- dealers were exaggerated, that he did not have to pay much
- attention to them. But other top men thought that Curtice was
- wrong, and they made no bones about saying so.
-
- The G.M. constitution reserves considerable power to the
- semi-sovereign, ever-competitive divisions. Curtice could
- probably fire a divisional vice president outright if he wanted
- to act out a Hollywood version of the tycoon, but he would not.
- The unwritten law demands that such a grave personal decision be
- discussed up and down the committees. A divisional vice president
- with the prestige of Buick's Ivan Wiles spends a huge operating
- budget as he sees fit, and goes to the top only when he thinks
- his actions might affect the other divisions, or when he wants
- new capital.
-
- Fast Recovery. Only in emergencies does Curtice move in and
- take over. Soon after he became president, he stepped in to
- straighten out the Allison Division (aircraft engines), which was
- in trouble because it had been afraid to invest money in research
- and development unless armed forces orders were assured. By
- contrast, Competitor Pratt & Whitney had sunk millions in engine
- development.
-
- In 1953 G.M.'s Engines Vice President Cyrus Osborn told
- Curtice that there were three alternatives for Allison: 1)
- continue as is, "which is ridiculous"; 2) get out of the business
- entirely; or 3) make the moves necessary to ensure leadership.
- Curtice said that he would "only be satisfied with leadership."
- Together Curtice and Osborn spent three months visiting military
- and airframe people, then laid out a $74 million investment to
- produce "a whole new family of aircraft engines."
-
- Last week Curtice and Eastern Air Lines Chairman Eddie
- Rickenbacker jointly announced that Eastern's 40 new Lockheed
- Electra airliners, scheduled for service in 1958, will be powered
- by $26 million worth of Allison turboprop engines.
-
- Since Curtice's drive for leadership is as relentless as a
- turnbuckle, his success has naturally brought some new strains
- for G.M. In the furiously competitive race for auto sales,
- relations are more tense between G.M. and its major competitor,
- Ford, than ever before. Ford executives, who used to meet G.M.
- friends for a Sunday round of golf, now only nod perfunctorily
- when they bump into the G.M. crowd at the Bloomfield Hills
- Country Club. G.M. blames Ford for giving in last summer to the
- United Automobile Workers' Walter Reuther on the guaranteed
- annual wage. Fordmen blame G.M. for keeping silent while Reuther
- turned on Ford first.
-
- Stop Sign. Curtice's problems in Washington are tougher to
- deal with. With annual sales ($13 billion) almost twice as large
- as those of the second-largest corporation (Standard Oil Co. of
- N.J.), G.M. is an ever-tempting political target. Moreover, some
- of Eisenhower's economic advisers are complaining about the rapid
- increase in consumer credit (up $4 billion in the first nine
- months of 1955, to $34.3 billion), and at the automobile
- industry's $14 billion share of it (although repayments are
- remarkably regular and repossessions low). Because Defense
- Secretary Wilson is an ex-G.M. man, G.O.P. politicians have
- tactfully suggested that he taper off on G.M.'s defense
- contracts. They are now down from 19% of G.M.'s business in 1953
- to less than 10% in 1955, although Pentagon purchasing agents
- give G.M. topmost marks for quick decisions and on-schedule
- delivery.
-
- Over in the Justice Department's Anti-Trust Division, the
- trustbusters keep a close watch on Curtice. The Administration
- tactfully told him to settle for no more than 50% of the auto
- market and keep out of trouble.
-
- Curtice will not -- and for reasons that are fundamental to
- the vitality of any large, competitive corporation. "If you stand
- still," says G.M. Chairman Sloan, now 80, "you go behind."
- Competition demands efficiency, and the whole efficient, smooth-
- running corporation could soon turn sour, as the Allison Division
- did, if it were forced to slow down to an artificial pace.
- Profits, in a modern corporation, have a function beyond
- providing earned surplus and dividends (and taxes). Under G.M.'s
- cost-accounting system, they are the key indicator of worth of
- divisional management, worth of product, personnel policy and
- planning.
-
- Curtice refuses to talk in percentages of the car market-
- talks instead in terms of expanding gross national product. "We
- have 3% of the G.N.P. now, and we won't have any less than 3% in
- 1956," he says. Translating into automobile figures, he predicts
- 1956 U.S. auto production at 7,060,000 (plus 1,190,000 trucks)--
- down about a million from 1955. G.M.'s share, if it holds its
- own, will be 3,500,00 cars.
-
- Dawn Patrol. Curtice's genial competitor, Chrysler President
- Lester Lum ("Tex") Colbert, thinks he works about as hard as any
- man should, trying to get Chrysler back to 20% of the automobile
- market. "But most every Monday morning when I'm shaving out home
- in Bloomfield Hills," says Colbert, "I hear old Red Curtice's
- airplane flying in from Flint. And every Friday night when I'm
- home and tired and walking my dog, I hear Red Curtice flying home
- again." When he is in Michigan. Curtice spends most of his week
- nights not in his home in Flint but in the nine-room suite in the
- G.M. Building. On top of this, he is often on the road for days
- at a time. During the course of a year he probably glad-hands
- more people than the President of the U.S. But he likes it all --
- the headaches, the demanding hours, and the vast rewards.
-
- In many ways he lives a life that is beyond the comprehension
- of most of his car owners. Platoons of subordinates jump when he
- twitches. Garages filled with gleaming limousines and beaming
- chauffeurs stand ready to transport him wherever he desires. A
- private 18-plane air force of multi-engined, red-white-and-blue
- airplanes is at his disposal. Private secretaries and
- public-relations men take care of bothersome detail, see to
- it that Cadillacs, hotel suites, restaurant tables and theater
- seats are there when and where he wants them. High-salaried
- assistants smooth his path, greet him wherever he arrives, order
- his drinks, fetch his newspapers.
-
- Beneath all the glitter, Curtice is regarded by friends as
- essentially still the small-town boy who came out of Petrieville,
- Mich. He likes to watch the fights and The $64,000 Question on
- television, read the papers, hunt, watch the Detroit Tigers (the
- night games only). He puffs casually on Luckies, likes his Scotch
- and soda strong and unstirred. His idea of Saturday fun in Flint
- is a run through the Buick plant in the morning and a poker game
- with his City Club cronies in the afternoon. He lives in a
- relatively modest red brick corner house, with a three-car
- garage. In the garage: his wife's Buick Roadmaster convertible,
- daughter Dorothy Anne's Buick Century convertible, and his
- personal, flashy Buick Skylark convertible, now being hopped up
- with a new experimental engine and transmission.
-
- Safe at Home. Flint is the world's most General Motorized
- city, and it says more about the state of the nation today than
- volumes of statistics. To begin with, the tricked-up Buick of the
- highest salaried man in the U.S. is hardly noticeable among the
- bright new Buicks and Chevrolets along Flint's main streets.
- Flint is the home of the main Buick and Chevrolet plants, the
- Fisher Body. AC Spark Plug and Ternstedt Division (G.M. auto
- hardware).
-
- There is a job in the Flint area for virtually anyone who
- wants one. Of a work force of 135,400, some 86,700 are employed
- by G.M. The 83,000 hourly employees draw wages averaging $100 a
- week -- with some skilled oldtimers at the forge plants earning
- $10,000 a year, Flint has an automobile for every 2.8, persons,
- v. a nationwide average of one for every 3.7. Nearly 80% of the
- residents own their own homes, and 80% of the homes have
- television (even though 15-or 20-ft. aerials must be stuck on
- rooftops to pick up Detroit). Spending is heavy, but savings
- accounts are going up too. "People have got money," says
- President E.S. Mulholland of Flint's largest department store.
- "They feel safe."
-
- Sitdown Strike. In 1937 much of Flint was sprayed by tear
- gas as the U.A.W. staged its first major sitdown strike against
- G.M. Today most people agree that the U.A.W. raised Flint's level
- of prosperity by getting its members a bigger share of G.M.'s
- increasing income by continuing to increase the income.
-
- Management and employees are a little proud of the fact that
- G.M. was the first automaker to accept the labor-dispute umpire
- system (in 1940), first to hitch link wage increases to
- productivity. Last year G.M. lost an average (nationwide) of only
- three minutes in labor troubles for each wage earner. Today's
- happier version of the sitdown in Flint occurs when local U.A.W.
- leaders, G.M. brass and civic bigwigs sit down at a luncheon
- meeting to plot the Community Chest campaign.
-
- Flint's current No. I campaign is culture. The city is
- building housing projects, new churches, school buildings and a
- huge $5,000,000 civic center. In addition the Flint Junior
- College is expanding to become the nucleus of the new Flint
- campus of the University of Michigan which will open next
- September. One of its main structures: the Harlow H. Curtice
- Academic Building. Flint's adult education program has an
- enrollment of 40,000 people, who study everything from classical
- languages to the fine art of tying trout flies. The Flint
- Community Music Association comprises 42 independent groups,
- including a symphony orchestra civic opera, and square dances
- that draw as many as 5,000 people -- dancers all.
-
- This Town & Flint. Give or take a few dollars and a few
- square dancers Flint could represent -- qualitatively -- almost
- any industrial city in the land. It could be Arlington, Texas,
- which jumped in population from 7,000 to 35,000 in five years,
- as new plants moved into the area between Dallas and Fort Worth,
- drawing most of their new employees from agricultural areas.
- It could be Los Angeles, which added as many factory workers
- in the past five years (27,400) as in the previous 21. Or even
- New England, which put its brains to work and found new research
- and electronics industries after textiles slumped. Or Buffalo,
- Cleveland or Toledo, little Detroits all, and all building in
- anticipation of the opening of the Lake Erie portion of the St.
- Lawrence Seaway in 1959.
-
- How far is Flint from London, Paris, Madrid, Rome, Mexico
- City and the other cities of the non-Communist world? Not far, in
- the sense that a prosperous, strong U.S. economic system is
- clearly the basis for the record-breaking prosperity of the whole
- free world.
-
- What's Good for Flint. In another sense -- the sense of
- setting an example -- Flint is farther away but getting closer.
- Britain, eyeing the freely competitive U.S., has this year been
- hearing its strongest parliamentary attacks on monopolies, and
- may wind up with the first anti-monopoly bill in its history.
- Last summer, news of the U.A.W. Ford guaranteed annual wage
- agreement rocked the national convention of France's
- 2,000,000-member Confederation Generale du Travail, and seriously
- weakened Communist control in today's booming Federal Republic of
- Germany, an industrialist who has not been to the U.S. to study
- production methods is not seriously listened to. In Mexico,
- Sears, Roebuck & Co., G.M. and Ford have raised wages, granted
- pensions and health plans, and given Mexico's unions new leverage
- for working on rich local capitalists. In Saudi Arabia the
- Arabian American Oil Co. has staked hundreds of local bright
- young men to prosperous careers as importers, contractors,
- teachers. (Its American methods have also created a feeling of
- sullen restlessness among other natives who are just discovering
- what the good life looks like.)
-
- Harlow Curtice does not go in much for high-flown economic
- or social theory, but he is convinced that what Flint has found
- to be good can be emulated by the rest of the world. Thus, since
- late 1954 he has committed G.M. to $200 million for European
- expansions, primarily of its Opel plant in Russelsheim-am-Main,
- Germany, and its Vauxhall plant in Bedfordshire, England. Also,
- he is bucking local resistance to move both companies toward the
- annual model change. He wants to create a secondhand market so
- that cars can be bought by everyone. At the same time, he is
- pressing European automobile men to move with G.M. toward a 40-
- hour week, while maintaining the rate of pay of the current 48-
- hour week.
-
- Newer for New. Some American thinkers shake their heads at
- the materialism and the waste implied in the annual model change.
- But, as in Billy Durant's day, their thinking takes no account of
- the nature of the American system, where something newer must
- replace the nearly new so that those who cannot afford the newer
- can still afford what was once new, whether it is a house, a
- sewing machine or a car.
-
- But even the sleekest, hottest automobiles, as the proudest
- new car owner will ruefully admit, are not ends in themselves,
- but only means -- means to roll free of the city into the
- countryside, to swing from the farm into town for a school-board
- meeting or a movie, to move the family across the country to find
- a better job, or to drive the kids to school and the beach and
- pick them up again. And so it is with the economic system that
- Harlow Curtice represents. This, too, is but a means to something
- far beyond fad and fashion, perhaps to a new level of community
- enterprise and culture-by-plan, as in Flint. Not far distant is
- the time when Americans need spend comparatively little time
- earning a living. Then they will be able to unleash their
- considerable powers for cultural, ethical and spiritual
- accomplishments of a magnitude yet unimagined.
-
-
-