Word: nazis
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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After reading the article "Taking a Sharp Turn Towards the Right," [May 7] I was first disgusted and then a bit enlightened. There is such a thing as progress. In Nazi Germany, those who were hated were forced to wear labels. Now, people like Sumner Anderson are at least isolating the problem with society. He proposes blue squares. Good. Now it will be those who hate that wear badges. And those of us who remember what labelling and hatred lead to will know precisely where to spit in public. Ivan J. Dominguez...
...Barbie trial, the Waldheim election -- but when she ventures off the beaten track, which she does fairly often, she discovers some very interesting things. Like the fact that the Dutch government still pays a pension of about $11,000 a year to the widow of the country's deputy Nazi leader during the German Occupation, and that she unrepentantly spends part of the money to distribute neo-Nazi propaganda. Or that the monument the Soviets reluctantly built at Babi Yar is actually half a mile away from the ravine where thousands of Jews were slaughtered, and that in the process...
...pink triangle has its roots in the oppression and extinction of a minority in Nazi Germany," says Jarrett T. Barrios '90, co-chair of Bisexual Gay Lebsian Students Association (BGLSA). "For him to want to oppose that with a blue square is to call for discrimination, hate and intolerance in our society. It underlines the ludicrous goals of the Republican Club...
Anderson and his supporters say that the HRC's policies are in line with the GOP national platform, "even if people on this campus think we're ultra-conservative or neo-Nazi...
Jews too have found that in a climate that seems to tolerate intolerance, incidents of harassment are on the rise. A Trinity University fraternity in San Antonio was placed on probation after requiring a Jewish pledge to dress in a Nazi uniform and parade through the campus cafeteria. Jewish women are derided as "Jewish-American princesses." At Cornell and elsewhere, students wear T shirts reading SLAP-A-JAP! and BACK OFF BITCH, I'M A JAP-BUSTER! "Anti-Semitism masked as sexism is more socially acceptable," says Rabbi Laura Geller, director of the Hillel Jewish Center at the University...