Let’s License the Motorist! (July 1935) 1.It Would Help Reduce Accidents—Roy F. Britton, director, National Highways Users’ Con- ference. 2. Yes—but Examination Is Essential—Sidney J. Williams, director, public safety division and chief engineer of National Safety Council. The Feminist Movement (August 1935) 1. The Everlasting Woman Question—Stephen Leacock, economist and humorist. . 2. These Men!—Nina Wilcox Putnam, popular magazine and newspaper syndicate contributor. Are Too Many Going to College? (September 1935) Yes—Warren Piper, Chicago jewelry wholesaler. No —David Kinley, president emeritus, University of Illinois. Let’s Save the Ducks! (October 1935) 1. No Hunting in 1936—William T. Hornaday, eminent zodlogist and director, Permanent Wild Life Protective Fund. 2. Regulate—Don’t Stop It—J. N. Darling, car- toonist, and chief, United States Biological Survey. Who Should Pay the Doctor? (November 1935) 1. The Group—William Trufant Foster, direc- tor, Pollak Foundation for Economic Research. 2. The Patient— Dr. Morris Fishbein, editor, Journal of the American Medical Association. Installment Buying (December 1935) 1. Regulate It—James M. Curley, governor of Massachusetts. 2. Law May Stifle It—John R. Walker, executive vice president, National Association of Sales Finance Companies. Social Credit (January 1936) Yes—Major C. H. Douglas, father of the Social Credit scheme. No —H. Parker Willis, economist and author, and Benjamin H. Beckhart.