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...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 activities illegal. Much more important is its function as symbolic politics, as drawing a line for the public." Not enough of that defining, of what is acceptable and what is not, has been done...

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

...wide agreement among experts on right-wing extremism, who see a crackdown as only part of the solution. "Xenophobia in the public is still relatively strong, and it is being separated ((from the criminal acts)). There is nothing in this ((program)) to overcome it," says Wilhelm Heitmayer, a social scientist at the University of Bielefeld. He argues that the crackdown has the misleading effect of "reinterpreting" the attacks as being those of a few criminals on the periphery. Among the statistics experts use to illustrate the depth of the problem is a poll this month by the Allensbach Institute showing...

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

Every biologist knows that females spend a lot of energy making a small number of eggs, while males churn out huge quantities of sperm almost effortlessly. Not so, says a scientist who has studied the sex life of a worm no bigger than an apostrophe. Male soil nematodes that copulate a lot -- and thus produce a lot of sperm -- live only two-thirds as long as fellow worms that copulate but don't make sperm, according to a report in Nature. University of Arizona researcher Wayne Van Voorhies warns that it may be a mistake to make the leap from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sex and the Single Worm | 12/14/1992 | See Source »

Reich, 46, is a political scientist, although much of his work has focused on economics...

Author: By Brian D. Ellison, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Clinton Names Reich Labor Secretary | 12/12/1992 | See Source »

...Like mad scientist eager to test their new creation, the staff insists they have the cure to a disease which does not exist. Race relations is far from "Harvard's biggest problem," as the editors would have us believe. Overlapping bureaucracies and random graffiti (from an unknown and potentially non-Harvard source) are hardly symptoms of racial disharmony...

Author: By Mark J. Sneider, | Title: Only Students Can Solve Racial Problems | 12/11/1992 | See Source »

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