Monday, November 15, 1976 MILC 5 s purpose or is established students University. We better meet them and the group to city is beyond one thing, but regardless of importance. the best best serve the equilibrium rd was for unfortunately should work where should merge, or rd could be for the best the best inter- of recoqui- KU. fact that the sign to the ideaicipation, it cost of inblems. to compensate time, should members for whom the whose name amite roster to respond To the notion learn to be a helpful mental process to motivation parties to parrot or not, some serve body throughinate. m exists for participation at KU. Students are interested in Economic Affairs to inform them their right to sittees of the offices and department. There are no in our present government. ION to any students in ties to the Senate to the Senate to ansan's guest more about and operations anate. His next object might not utter cynicism. student body Speakers at ethics seminar say capitalism short on social justice By MICHAEL KING Hall Writer Staff Writer Free enterprise isn't compatible with social justice, according to the three keynote speakers at last weekend's seminar on Ethics in Business and the Professions. The symposium was sponsored jointly by the University of Kansas School of Business and the department of philosophy, and business science, of academicers and business professionals. Michael Harrington, chairman of the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee, said he didn't think the United States was a free enterprise society. "There may have been free enterprise for five minutes in the 19th century in Great Britain, but I doubt it," he said. "We have never had it in the United States." **IRVING KRISTOL**, a contributing editor of the Wall Street Journal and a professor of urban values at New York University, said he couldn't免 enterprise, but social justice. "The term social justice was invented in order not to be compatible with free enterprise, so social said." Social justice has predeated egalitarian and authoritarian trust. Therefore, since capitalism is neither egalitarian nor authoritarian, they are not committed to it. H Johnsphes, a professor of philosophy at the University of Southern California and a Librarian Party candidate for president, agreed that the term social justice was suspect. University Daily Kansan Ham, pork chop prices highlighted in food survey ITEMS Diners (1.5%), Milk (3 per cent, 1 g), SALB, Coffee-granate, 1 lb, Cottage cheese - 24 oz. Colby cheese - S-1, 1 lb. Butter - 1 lb, sticks Ground beef - rage-1, 1 lb. Bone-in chicken - with bone Chicken - whole fried, 1 lb. Parch fillet - frozen, 1 lb. Orange juice - frozen, 6 oz. Egg cream - frozen, 6 oz. Ice cream - 1 g, SALB, Ginger granulated, 5 lb, SALB, Ginger flour - bleached enriched 5 lb, Flour - bleached enriched 5 lb, Dark Salmon - Dark Salmon, 13 oz. Peanut butter - Skippey, 12 oz. Peanut butter - Rice, 1 lb. Rice - long-grain, 1 lb, Rice - long-grain, 10 oz. Rice - no oil, with deposit Tapioca - Northern, 4 pck. Lettuce - iceberg Potatoes - 1 kg, Carrot - 1 kg, Potatoes - red, 1 kg bar Potatoes - yellow, 1 kg Bananas - lb. DINERS SALE PRICE X indicates item not available NINCIPLES SALE PRICE X indicates item not available 18 DEPTH SURVEY, PORK Pork coast-boneless, 1-lb. 1.19 1.19 1.09 8.9 1.29 1.29 1.16 47 Pork coast-center-lib, 1-lb. 1.30 1.30 1.08 7.5 1.29 1.29 1.14 41 Pork coast-end-lib, 1-lb. 1.30 1.30 1.08 7.5 1.29 1.29 1.12 39 Ham shank-armed, 1-lb. 89 1.09 X 1.09 79 1.09 99 30 Ham shank-armed-center-lib, 1-lb. 1.09 1.19 X 1.09 79 1.09 99 30 Ham-sem-boneless, 1-lb. 1.79 2.09 X 1.09 79 1.09 1.74 41 Ham-boneless, S.B. 1-lb. 1.79 2.09 X 1.09 79 1.09 1.74 41 Ham-center-lib, 1-lb. 2.29 X 1.29 1.69 1.89 1.72 35 Ham-canned, Armour, 1-lb. 1-lb. 3.10 X 1.29 2.83 1.89 1.20 48 Ham-canned, Armour, 1-lb. 1-lb. 3.10 X 1.29 2.83 1.89 1.20 48 "The free enterprise system has provided a level of affluence that reaches even to the well-less-off of our society," he said. "The vast majority of people was overpopulated with 500,000 Indians, because each needed so much space for hunting and fishing." SOCIAL JUSTICE, Hospers said, suggested a kind of "operative socialism." Hospiers said capitalism changed this overpopulation by providing the incentive for the discovery of technology that could address the amounts of food on small amounts of land. Harrington said capitalism had brought enormous benefits to the world and had made it possible for people to earn a living. "SOCIAL CLASSES are an invention of capitalism," he said, "and to capitalism the capitalist casts its eyes." "Capitalism does not extract a surplus by direct force—normally. It uses economic means, based on an unfair contract. Capitalism discovered the social power of people working together. That was its economic invention." On the whole, Harrington said, capitalist technology is very conservative in its technological inventions and its greatest history has been of the social nature of work. Kristol said capitalism had made every female a "lady." "Before capitalism, women were merely sex objects," he said. "Capitalism and humanity enter the world together. All humane movements—criminal reform, the women's movement, the women's movement—were founded by the rising middle class." Capitalist economics of the 19th century had great impacts to socialism, Kristol said. AND BECAUSE improvement of one's condition seemed to be impossible, he said, the only hope seemed to be in the redistribution of wealth. Harrington said the concepts of freedom and democracy must be applied to areas that capitalism never applied them to before. "We should move to democratize work. We should elect for elemen and allow workers to decide how to carry out production techniques," he said. "We need a bureaucratic relations act on the order of the Labor Relations Act. Every university should have a public review board. Where there is bureaucracy there must be appeal, and bureaucrats can't handle a review of themselves." The symposium was made possible by grants from the Kansas Committee for the Humanities; Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Hyman Accountants; and the Westport Fund. To Give The Students FASTER DELIVERY SERVICE THE GREEN PEPPER is now delivering to Campus only. The delivery area includes All University Housing, Fraternities and Sororities, Jayhawk Towers, and Naismith Hall. New Delivery Hours 5 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Mon.—Thurs. Fri. & Sat. Sun. 5 p.m.-12:30 p.m. 4 p.m. - 11 p.m. 544 W.23rd 842-9003 100% luxurious lambswool cabled — crewneck Sweaters reg. $25 Now $1350 A-smile pleated Denim Jeans reg. $1850 Now $1290 Another Group of lambswool crewneck Sweaters reg. $900 Now $1290 Our own Roughrider Khaki Hiking Pants reg. $1850 Now $1290 Long Sleeve Knit Shirts in solid and stripes reg. $1750 Now $12^{90} 1 large selection of 3 piece Suits in the classics, tweeds, chalk stripes & solids all this season's favorites! 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