Should the United States Recognize Russia? (October 1933) Yes—Thomas A. Morgan, president, Curtiss- Wright Corporation. No —Bainbridge Colby, attorney and U. S. secre- tary of state during the Wilson administration. Capital Punishment? (November 1983) Yes—Henry Barrett Chamberlin, director, Crime Detection Bureau and the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology. No —Clarence Darrow, distinguished trial lawyer. License the U. S. Press? (December 1933) Yes—Silas Bent, newspaper correspondent and magazine contributor. No —Marlen Pew, editor of Editor and Publisher. / Liquor Control in the United States (January 1934) 1. The State Store Plan—Gifford Pinchot, gov- ernor of the State of Pennsylvania. 2.The Regulated, Licensed Retailer Plan — Frank J. Loesch, president, Chicago Crime Com- mission. Permit Citizens to Carry Firearms? (February 1934) Yes—Restriction Aids the Lawbreaker—J. Lov- ell Johnson, president, Iver Johnson (fire- arms) Company. No —Except Under Strict Control—Royal S. Copeland, United States Senator from New York, authority on crime control. The Thirty-Hour Week? (March 1934) Yes—William Green, president, American Federa- tion of Labor. No —Robert L. Lund, former president, Nationa] Manufacturers’ Association. Do We Need Birth Control for Ideas (Inventions) ? (April 1934) : 1. A Technique of Accommodation—Sir Josiah Stamp, British industrialist and economist. 2. Inventors Don’t Invent Enough—Charles F. Kettering, vice-president in charge of research, General Motors.