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Show Friday, June 30, 10G1 SOUTH SALT LAKE HERALD Page r 3 c? The Only School in the Country Dedicated to Today a whole series of concepts alien to the American ideal of 1776 has become acceptable to a great number of American people. American business finds its back to the wall, confronted by outrageously high taxes, by regulations which impair its ability to operate and, additionally, by union organizers who not only force wages .to rise in a manner disassociated with production but who are now usurping the functions of management in the field of hiring and firing. Without deep and thoughtful study of the economic and moral principles underlying a free to withstand union and government market todays executive is interventions. American workers, caught in a vise between mounting taxes and soaring prices, and conditioned by various public media of education and com- munication, find themselves individually confronted with what appear to be only two possible alternatives: submit to unionism, or face unemployment and economic strangulation. American students seeking to acquire an education are confronted with compulsion, illogic and ineptitude. Those who express a love and devotion to the ideas and ideals of the American founders are scorned, and admon FREEDOM notions about the Declaration of Indepenished to forget dence and the Bill of Rights. They are advised that capitalism is outmoded, that private ownership of the means of production and distribution is and improper, and that a brave new world awaits them if they will conform to governmental intrusion in their lives, submit to authority at every level and try always to keep in mind that Society has become responsible for everything and everybody. In a climate sired by big government, enormous taxes, legal intrusions, union violence, the threat of war, inflation and educational paucity, the individual must equip himself with the proper means of combatting false ideas and of standing firm in a sea of confusion. Only YOU can decide where you will stand in the ideological warfare of freedom vs. slavery. This is a call to all Americans who are in rebellion against the foregoing evils and who wish to discover practical ways and means of meeting the challenge to their business and industries, to their families, their jobs and their property, and to their own intellectual integrity. Come to the FREEDOM SCHOOL. old-fashio- ned out-dat- ed ped & Guest Instructors Guest Instructors founder - president, Leonard E. Reed Economic Foundation for Education, New York; former general manager, Los Angeles Chamber of E. Earl Root author-poe- t, Connecticut; former professor of English and Earlham College, Indiana; latest prose, Collectivism on the Campus; eight volumes of poetry, latest The Light Wind Over. R. W. Holmes design engineer, Boeing Aircraft, Seattle, Washington. Freedom School graduate and trustee. Chas. E. Stenicka, HI labor relations Lincoln, consultant, Nebraska; manager, Lincoln office of Midwest Employment Council; Freedom School graduate. Professor Oscar D. Cooley Department of Economics, Ohio Northern U.; column carried by Freedom Newspapers. Commerce. insurance salesman, Bryson Reinhardt author; Oregon; Freedom School graduate. vice president, The Robert W. Baird, Jr. Marine Corporation, Milwaukee; former partner, Nymeyer & Baird, Management Consultants; Freedom School trustee. chairman of the board Win. J. Grede and president, J. I. Case Co., Racine, Wis.; past president, National Association of Manufacturers; Freedom School trustee. . Dr. Georg Frostenson, Swedish economist; principal editor, The Agricultural-TechnicCalendar. Prof. George Loweke Department of Engineering Mechanics, Wayne State University, Detroit. Dr. Ruth Shallcross Maynard professor of economics, Lake Erie Womens College, Ohio; Freedom School graduate. Ned W. Kimball attorney, Washington; Freedom School graduate and trustee. Elgie C. Marcks professor of economics, at Milwaukee; Wisconsin of University Freedom School graduate. Frank Chodorov author, journalist, New York City; former editor, Analysis, Hu- al man Events, The Freeman. James L. Doenges surgeon, Anderson, Indiana; past president, Association of American Physicians and Surgeons; Freedom School trustee. ' Intellectual Feasts Held All Summer Long in This Beautiful Rocky Mountain Setting Two-Wee- k 1961 SCHEDULE July Regular course of instruction at the Freedom School takes two weeks. A minimum of six hours per day is spent in classroom work. Customarily, mornings are devoted to study, recreation and free time. Classroom sessions occur in the afternoon and evening. 3-- July 24 - August 7-- Sept. 5 Here is the schedule of classes for the 96 season: incl Economics for Executives 6 May Sept; June October 1 1 15-2- June 5-- 19-3- incl 16 0 Comprehensive Comrehensive incl incl Comprehensive 30 incl. Workshop Comrehensive Comrehensive 14 4-1- 18-2- ( incl 18 incl incl 9 2-- 13 ...Comprehensive incl Graduates and top-flig- ht Write For Free Catalogue THE FREEDOM Box 165 SCHOOL Colorado Springs, Colorado Economics for Executives teachers and students only) |