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...proposals come from 32 existing concentrations as well as three interdisciplinary coordinating committees—archaeology, global health, and the Committee on Mind, Brain, and Behavior. A graduate program on the study of Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia has also submitted a plan for an undergraduate track...

Author: By Johannah S. Cornblatt, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Major Expansion in Minor Options | 11/7/2006 | See Source »

DIED. Joe Niekro, 61, right-handed pitcher whose deadly knuckleball helped him to a career 221 wins in 22 seasons and who, with his knuckleball-hurling brother Phil, famously won more games than any other pair of brothers in major league baseball history; of a brain aneurysm; in Tampa, Fla. In 1976 the longtime Houston Astro hit his only career home run--against Phil, then pitching for the Atlanta Braves...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones Nov. 13, 2006 | 11/5/2006 | See Source »

Stranger Than Fiction has a surer aim at getting through the brain to the heart. Zack Helm's script imagines a decent, solitary fellow named Harold Crick (Will Ferrell), then springs the notion that he may well be a fiction--a character in a work in progress by reclusive novelist Karen (Kay) Eiffel (Emma Thompson). And when Kay figures out how to kill off the character, Harold will...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Movies: Charm Offensive | 11/5/2006 | See Source »

...religion stand up to the progress of science? This debate long predates Darwin, but the antireligion position is being promoted with increasing insistence by scientists angered by intelligent design and excited, perhaps intoxicated, by their disciplines' increasing ability to map, quantify and change the nature of human experience. Brain imaging illustrates--in color!--the physical seat of the will and the passions, challenging the religious concept of a soul independent of glands and gristle. Brain chemists track imbalances that could account for the ecstatic states of visionary saints or, some suggest, of Jesus. Like Freudianism before it, the field...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: God vs. Science | 11/5/2006 | See Source »

...very simple beginnings and working up step by tiny incremental step to more complexity, more elegance, more adaptive perfection. Each step is not too improbable for us to countenance, but when you add them up cumulatively over millions of years, you get these monsters of improbability, like the human brain and the rain forest. It should warn us against ever again assuming that because something is complicated, God must have done...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: God vs. Science | 11/5/2006 | See Source »

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