The nation . igna-tion of the moderate Minister of Fi-naiu The authors are not blind to the prob-lems Castro must eventually lace. Whatwill be the eventual relationship be-tween the rich and the poor coopera-tives? I \ differential rent is suggestedto make the distribution of income moreequitable.) And what relationship isto prevail between the cooperativestasthemselves and the rural day workerswho remain outside the cooperatives?(The authors seem to me too optimisticwhen thej assert that the latter willibsorbed by either the cooperativesor the industrial labor force in a fewyears; they fail t


The nation . igna-tion of the moderate Minister of Fi-naiu The authors are not blind to the prob-lems Castro must eventually lace. Whatwill be the eventual relationship be-tween the rich and the poor coopera-tives? I \ differential rent is suggestedto make the distribution of income moreequitable.) And what relationship isto prevail between the cooperativestasthemselves and the rural day workerswho remain outside the cooperatives?(The authors seem to me too optimisticwhen thej assert that the latter willibsorbed by either the cooperativesor the industrial labor force in a fewyears; they fail to state that less thanhall of Cubas agricultural workers areactually in cooperatives now.) A finalquestion they retrain from asking: 1 low-cm a central planning authority beStructured so that it will retain the localflavor of the revolution? Often uneven, with values sometimesmasquerading as tacts, this Marxisthistory of a unique revolution neverthe-less contains a great deal of originaland incisive The Brain Market THE CHILD BUYER. By John A. Knopf. 25S PP. $4. Robert Hatch IT HAS been John Herseys shortcom-ing that he is a most stylish books are always the most polishedfacsimiles of their particular forms —even his novels are brilliant imitationsof novels — and the impression thusgiven is that the author has sensed thisor that trend and cannily launchedhimself into it. Whereas, in fact, , the child of missionaries, ishimself moved by the impulse to im-prove his readers. He writes to edify;yet a natural gift for mimicry, strength-ened by training in the self-consciousschool of news-magazine journalism, hasgiven him an air of manipulating fash-ionable machinerv. In The Child Buyer, however, may have hit on the device that r 0, i960 turns his talents into virtues. He isembarked on satire, and there the giftfor imitation serves him well. It canbe objected that aspects of this lampoonare too broad to cut very sharply,


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