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...surveillance and pressure on police to act decisively will almost surely help in cracking down on the right, some of the other measures taken by the authorities are dubious. The banning of extremist groups will probably mean little in practical terms. Most of those who commit the crimes either belong to groups that barely deserve to be called extremist or are lone operators. Officials admit that a ban also forces the more organized groups underground, making it tougher to track them. Nonetheless, political scientist Gerd Mielke maintains that the ban "is a blow against right-wing extremists in making their...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cracking Down on the Right | 12/14/1992 | See Source »

...choice has eased the houses in the direction of diversification. And already, there have been gains. Adams House is a perfect example. It's still filled with uniquely Adams events (no other house could pull off Secret Sado-Santa.) But those events are no longer tainted with the we-belong-and-you-don't obnoxiousness that once made them exclusive and off-putting...

Author: By Brad EDWARD White, | Title: Randomization: Playing God, Again | 12/8/1992 | See Source »

...roommates are really well-rounded people. They do all these extracurriculars, belong to all these papers and stuff. Last year when I did the Nutcracker, I danced with all these people for whom dance is their career. This is all they do. That's a full life for them--and I still have school. That's why I feel like I am compromising both school and ballet right now. This is because I want to devote myself solely to one or the other, and I'm not doing that right now. I hope to do just ballet during my year...

Author: By Aparajita Ramakrishnan, CONTRIBUTING REPORTER | Title: The Art of Dance Reborn at Harvard | 12/3/1992 | See Source »

This kind of abuse doesn't belong on the opinion page of a newspaper. I'm not suggesting that The Crimson censor ideas--the paper should try to promote a lively and sometimes heated clash of views. But Mulkerin's piece represented less a view than an attitude--an attitude, I gather, of arrogant disdain and self-conscious display, of a writer carried off by what he can get away with in print...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Offensive Tone Has No Place on the Page | 11/23/1992 | See Source »

...kitchen (some of you will deny even this), it doesn't necessarily mean the H stands for hubris or hypocrite. Chances are, you've come to such a conclusion yourself; perhaps you've already justified the choice into oblivion, purged yourself of any guilt. If so, you now belong here. You have kept your erasers in order...

Author: By Peter Nohrnberg, | Title: Bedazzled Gerbils or Distant Astronomers | 11/19/1992 | See Source »

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