Table of Contents

Volume 6, Number 4 · March 17, 1966

Helen Muchnic, Larger Than Life

Mayakovsky translated and edited by Herbert Marshall

Robert Oppenheimer, On Albert Einstein

V.S. Pritchett, True to Life

Selections from London Labour and the London Poor by Henry Mayhew, edited by John L. Bradley

Bernard B. Fall, Vietnam: The Undiscovered Country

Les Americaines face an Vietcong by Fernand Gigon

Un million de dollars le Viet: la seconde guerre d'Indochine by Jean Lartéguy

Ronald Steel, The Magician

The Three Lives of Charles de Gaulle by David Schoenbrun

Robert L. Heilbroner, Where Do We Go From Here?

The Shape of Automation by Herbert Simon

The Guaranteed Income: Next Step in Economic Evolution? edited by Robert Theobald

W.S. Merwin, A Poet in Exile

Collected Poems by Edwin Muir

J.H. Plumb, Unconditional Negotiations

The Peacemakers: The Great Powers and American Independence by Richard B. Morris

Bernard Bergonzi, Bouillabaisse

The Solid Mandala by Patrick White

The Magus by John Fowles

The Evening of the Holiday by Shirley Hazzard

A True Story by Stephen Hudson

Peter Gay, Man in The Middle

A History of Modern France by Alfred Cobban

Alasdair MacIntyre, Modern Times

An Introduction to Contemporary History by Geoffrey Barraclough

Power and Human Destiny by Herbert Rosinski

Stanley Kunitz, River Road (poem)


Letters

Martin G. Aronstein, The Jewish Establishment
Gershon Weiler, The Jewish Establishment
Eric Werner, The Jewish Establishment
Meyer Schapiro, The Jewish Establishment
Marie Syrkin, Hannah Arendt, The Jewish Establishment
Elaine Dundy, Dwight MacDonald, Tom Wolfe Issue
Carleton S. Coon, Edmund R. Leach, Prejudice
Tom Wolfe, Dwight MacDonald, Tom Wolfe Issue
Stephen Levy, Okay



Contributors

Peter Gay is Director of the Center for Scholars and Writers at the New York Public Library. His Schnitzler's Century: The Making of Middle-Class Culture, 1815–1914 will be published in late October. (October 2001)

W.S. Merwin was born in New York City in 1927 and grew up in Union City, New Jersey, and in Scranton, Pennsylvania. From 1949 to 1951 he worked as a tutor in France, Portugal, and Majorca. He has since lived in many parts of the world, most recently on Maui in the Hawaiian Islands. He is the author of many books of poems, prose, and translations and has received both the Pulitzer and the Bollingen Prizes for poetry, among numerous other awards.

Ronald Steel is Professor of International Relations at the University of Southern California, a recent fellow at the American Academy in Berlin, and the author of biographies of Walter Lippmann and Robert Kennedy. (June 2006)


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