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Conner has been a classical pianist since theage of 15 and was first introduced to show musicas an adult when he produced Irving Berlin'sAnnie Get Your...

Author: By Molly J. Moore, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: HLS Administrators Rhapsodize Gershwin | 10/30/1998 | See Source »

Sears and Conner will perform tonight at 8 p.m. at the Cambridge Center for Adult Education on Brattle Street. Their show is titled, "Oh Kay, Oh George," after the composers Kay Swift and George Gershwin...

Author: By Molly J. Moore, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: HLS Administrators Rhapsodize Gershwin | 10/30/1998 | See Source »

...assembles a cast of Londoners, misfits all, for her novel. Lily, the girl born wihtout fully-formed organs: Sara, Lily's mother and a boar farmer: Luke, the former pornographic photographer who smells of fish; Ronny, missing his big toes. At the slippery heart of her tale are two adult brothers, Nathan and Jim (whose name is really Ronny--all will be explained later) and Nathan's quest for redemption at not forcing his brother to escape from their pedophilic father...

Author: By Daryl Sng, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Into the Great Wide British Open | 10/30/1998 | See Source »

Feeling brain-dead? Don?t worry ?- your tired old gray matter may work hard for you yet. Research to be published November in the journal Nature Medicine suggests that at least one area of the adult brain can reproduce and generate new cells, even after death. That is, of course, utterly contrary to everything we thought about the brain up until now. It was assumed that at some point in your grown-up life, brain cells stopped generating and started dying off. Not true -? at least not in the hippocampus, according to a team of American and Swedish scientists...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Brain Growth: Using Your Head | 10/30/1998 | See Source »

...results confirm a number of other studies made ?- but essentially ignored -- over the past 30 years, which saw the same growth occur in the same area of the brain in rats and birds. The hippocampus is our learning and memory center -? and in adult birds, it grew every time they learned new songs. Could lifelong education literally boost your brainpower? "We have to try to determine whether we might be able to have some positive control over how the human brain cells divide," said Dr. Fred Gage, the team leader. Not to mention whether this could help arrest the neurological...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Brain Growth: Using Your Head | 10/30/1998 | See Source »

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