“brilliaM”rnArthur R. Jensen,rnUniversity of California, Berkeleyrn”[a] storehouse of wellintegratedrninformation”rnHans J. Eysenck, University of Londonrn”major synthesis of socialrnscience and evolutionaryrntheory”rnRichard Lynn, University of Ulsterrn”bold hypothesis”rnThomas J. Bouchard,rnUniversity of Minnesotarn”brilliant synthesis”rnBarry R. Gross, City University of New Yorkrn”has the simplicity and explanatoryrnpower that indicaterntruth”rnMichael Levin, City University of New Yorkrn”organizes well-establishedrngroup differences into arnmeaningful pattern”rnRobert A. Gordon,rnThe Johns Hopkins Universityrn”explain[s] the distribution ofrnpoverty among nations”rnEdward M. Miller,rnUniversity of New OrleansrnRACE,rnEVOLUTION,rnand BEHAVIORrna -ife hisiory perspecbvernP-i;:uornhNfjiio;! IrnRace,rnEvolution,rnandrnBehaviorrnJ. Philippe RushtonrnWhy are the races different? How different arernthey? This book examines genetic theories tornoverturn the prevailing view that if all peoplernwere treated the same, most race differencesrnwould disappear. Rushton examines internationalrndata on over 60 variables, includingrnbrain size, intelligence, crime, and sexualrnbehavior, and finds that Asians and Africansrnaverage at opposite ends of a continuum withrnEuropeans intermediate.rnISBN: 1-56000-146-1(cloth); $34.95;rn63 illustrations; 344pp.rnOrder from your bookstore or direct from the publisher.rnMajor credit cards accepted. Call (908) 932-2280.rnTransaction PublishersrnDepartment 94A RU 12rnRutgers—The State UniversityrnNew Brunswick, NJ 08903 trani^^ti^ mrntransactionrnrnrn