3. Interview, or write to, the officials of a trade union, regarding their attitude toward profit sharing.
4. Write to the Co÷perative League of America, 2 West 13th Street, New York City, asking for free literature on co÷peration in your section. If any of the groups of co÷perators in your section are found to be close at hand, make a study of a typical co÷perative group.
5. Draw up a plan for a co÷perative buying club, and discuss with your fellow students the chances for its success. (Consult Harris, Co÷peration, the Hope of the Consumer, chapter xiv.)
6. Draw up a plan for the co÷perative marketing of some agricultural product in your section. Send a description of the plan, giving advantages, etc., to a farm journal in your section. (Consult Powell, _Co÷peration in Agriculture>/i>, chapter iv, and Coulter, Co÷peration Among Farmers.)
II
7. Profit sharing as a method of securing industrial peace. (Burritt, and others, Profit Sharing, chapter vii.)
8. Profit sharing as a means of stabilizing labor. (Burritt, and others, Profit Sharing, chapter vi.)
9. Relation of co÷peration to advertising. (Harris, Co÷peration, the Hope of the Consumer, chapter xix.)
10. Credit co÷peration in Germany. (Fay, Co÷peration at Home and Abroad, part i, chapter ii.)
11. Co÷peration in dairying. (Fay, Co÷peration at Home and Abroad, part ii, chapter vi.)