Table of Contents

Volume 18, Number 5 · March 23, 1972

I.F. Stone, I.F. Stone Reports: The Pentagon and Peking

V.S. Pritchett, Late Starter

Neville Maxwell, A Passage to Pakistan

Pakistan Crisis by David Loshak

Calcutta by Geoffrey Moorhouse

India's Green Revolution: Economic Gains and Political Costs by Francine R. Frankel

Under Two Masters by N.B. Bonarjee

Soft State by Bernard D. Nossiter

The Government and Politics of India by W.H. Morris-Jones

Lewis Mumford, The Scholar as Activist

J.E. Spingarn by Marshall Van Deusen

Wilfrid Sheed, I Am a Cabaret

Cabaret directed by Bob Fosse, screenplay by Jay Allen

Emma Rothschild, GM in More Trouble

Richard Ellmann, Why Molly Bloom Menstruates

Martin Bernal, Who's Who in China

In Search of Wealth and Power: Yen Fu and the West by Benjamin Schwartz

Hu Shih and the Chinese Renaissance by Jerome Greider

Ting Wen-chiang: Science and China's New Culture by Charlotte Furth

Kuo Mo-jo: The Early Years by David Roy

Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period by Arthur Hummel

Biographical Dictionary of Republican China, Volume 1: Ai-Ch'u edited by Howard Boorman, edited by Richard Howard

Biographical Dictionary of Republican China, Volume 2: Dalai-Ma edited by Howard Boorman, edited by Richard Howard

Biographical Dictionary of Republican China, Volume 3: Mao-Wu edited by Howard Boorman, edited by Richard Howard

Biographical Dictionary of Republican China, Volume 4: Yang-Bibliography edited by Howard Boorman, edited by Richard Howard

Ku Chieh-kang and China's New History: Nationalism and the Quest for Alternative Traditions by Laurence A. Schneider

Biographic Dictionary of Chinese Communism, 1921-1965 by Donald Klein, by Anne B. Clark

Who's Who in Communist China compiled by Union Research Institute (Hong Kong)

Kenneth Koch, First Trip to China (poem)

Helen Muchnic, Art in spite of Polemics

Zinaida Hippius: An Intellectual Profile by Temira Pachmuss

The Life of a Useless Man by Maxim Gorki, translated by Moura Budberg

The Commissariat of Enlightenment: Soviet Organization of Education and the Arts under Lunacharsky by Sheila Fitzpatrick

The White Guard by Mikhail Bulgakov, translated by Michael Glenny, with an Epilogue by Viktor Nekrasov

Herbert R Kohl, Out Our Way

9226 Kercheval: The Storefront That Did Not Burn by Nancy Milio

Neighborhood Government: The Local Foundations of Political Life by Milton Kotler


Letters

Kenneth O. Morgan, Noel Annan, Lloyd George
Sylvain Bromberger, Noam Chomsky, et al. Recognize Cuba
I. Michael Lerner, I.F. Stone, Zhores, Not Jaures
Ladislas Farago, A.J.P. Taylor, Complaint
Thomas C. Wallace, Fallen Oaks Coming
Gerald J. Gross, The Case of Martin Sostre



Contributors

Kenneth Koch died on July 6. He was Professor of English at Columbia. During his lifetime, he published at least thirty volumes of poetry and plays. He was also the author of a novel, The Red Robins; two books on teaching poetry writing to children, Wishes, Lies, and Dreams and Rose, Where Did You Get That Red?; and I Never Told Anybody: Teaching Poetry Writing in a Nursing Home. A new collection of his poetry, A Possible World, and Sun Out: Selected Poems 1952–54, will be published this fall. (August 2002)

Emma Rothschild is a fellow of King's College, Cambridge, and will be teaching history at Harvard next fall. Her latest book is Economic Sentiments: Adam Smith, Condorcet and the Enlightenment. (March 2004)

I.F. Stone was an American journalist, publisher of I.F. Stone's Weekly, and a regular contributor to the Review. For more about him please visit www.ifstone.org.


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