Is Communism Inevitable? (December 1934) Yes—John Strachey, English lecturer and author. No —George E. Sokolsky, lecturer and newspaper correspondent. Be a Pal to My Son? (January 1935) Yes—Clarence Mulholland, young lawyer. No “Pal Stuff” for My Boy—Webster Peterson, young journalist. Social Security (February 1935) 1. What of Social Insurance?—Harold B. But- ler, director, International Labor Office. 2. Unemployment Insurance? — Yes — Frances Perkins, United States Secretary of Labor. 3. Unemployment Insurance? — No — Virgil Jordan, economist, editor, president, National Industrial Conference Board. Child Labor Amendment? (March 1935) Yes—Jane Addams, social worker, founder of Hull House. No —Clinton L. Bardo, corporation executive and president, National Manufacturers’ Assn. What of the Gold Standard? (April 1935) 1. The Gold Bloc — Dr. F. H. Fentener van Vlissingen, Netherlands industrialist, president, International Chamber of Commerce. 2. England—Major C. H. Douglas, author of the Social Credit Plan, chief engineering representa- tive for British Westinghouse in India. 3. The United States—Dr. E. W. Kemmerer, professor of international finance at Princeton University. Is Government Spending the Way to Recovery ? (May 1935) Yes—Stuart Chase, economist and author. No —David Lawrence, editor, United States News. Railroads: Government Ownership? (June 1935) Yes—Burton K. Wheeler, United States Senator from Montana. No —Samuel O. Dunn, editor, Railway Age.