Three Views on Movies and the Public © (February 1936) 1. Effects on the World’s Children—Dr. Luci- ano de Feo, director, International Educational Cinematographic Institute (Rome, Italy). 2. A Candid Assay from an American—Arthur W. Bailey, clergyman, Winsted, Conn. 3. The Position of the Film Producer—Ned E. Depinet, president, RKO Distributing Corp. Skyscrapers Doomed? (March 1936) Yes—Frank Lloyd Wright, author and architect, No—¥V. G. Iden, secretary, American Institute of Steel Construction. Control Agricultural Production? (April 1936) Yes—Edward O’Neal, president, American Farm Bureau Federation. No—L. J. Dickinson, U. S. Senator from Iowa. Is My Competitor My Enemy? (May 1936) Yes—Charles S. Ryckman, editorial writer, Chi- cago (Ill.) Herald & Examiner. No —William R. Yendall, general manager, Rich- ards-Wilcox Canadian Co., Ltd. Should We “Buy National’? (June 1936) Yes—Francis P. Garvan, president, Chemical Foundation, Inc., New York City. No —Sir Charles A. Mander, Bart., managing director, Mander Brothers, Ltd., varnish manu- facturers, Wolverhampton, England. Can Business Run Itself? (July 1936) Government Intervention is Indispensable— Says Hugh S. Johnson, former NRA ad- ministrator. Yes: Government ‘Policing’? Hinders — Says John W. O’Leary, president, Machinery and Allied Products Institute. Shall We Legalize Horse-Race Betting? (August 1936) Yes—Sisley Huddleston, author and journalist, Paris, France. No—Dr. Lester H. Klee, New Jersey State Senator.