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...lopsided dynamics of Who's Got Who are a teetery transition into the final act, when the two characters make their fiercest lunges for each other's throats. The Loeb production had its strongest moments here, as both actors uncovered a layer of rage they had not yet tapped. Their physical movements, formerly cagey and dry, were freer, sharper and more open. But by then, the show had already shipwrecked, its narrative power sunk by an essential emotional emptiness...

Author: By Nicholas K. Davis, | Title: An Overly Simplistic 'He Said, She Said' | 3/13/1997 | See Source »

Despite his humanitarian nature, Da Vinci also created many machines of war. He built a predecessor of the modern tank which would allow soldiers to attack from behind a protected layer of armor...

Author: By Benjamin A. Stingle, | Title: Leonardo da Vinci: Scientist, Inventor, Artist | 3/11/1997 | See Source »

...cerebral cortex, an intricately folded layer of neural tissue which is much larger and more complex in humans than in any other animal, is thought to be responsible for many of the so-called "higher brain functions"--such as the reasoning and logic capabilities which are unique to humans...

Author: By Benjamin A. Stingle, | Title: The Road to Understanding Brains | 2/25/1997 | See Source »

University of Chicago pediatric neurologist Dr. Peter Huttenlocher has chronicled this extraordinary epoch in brain development by autopsying the brains of infants and young children who have died unexpectedly. The number of synapses in one layer of the visual cortex, Huttenlocher reports, rises from around 2,500 per neuron at birth to as many as 18,000 about six months later. Other regions of the cortex score similarly spectacular increases but on slightly different schedules. And while these microscopic connections between nerve fibers continue to form throughout life, they reach their highest average densities (15,000 synapses per neuron...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FERTILE MINDS | 2/3/1997 | See Source »

That dance begins at around the third week of gestation, when a thin layer of cells in the developing embryo performs an origami-like trick, folding inward to give rise to a fluid-filled cylinder known as the neural tube. As cells in the neural tube proliferate at the astonishing rate of 250,000 a minute, the brain and spinal cord assemble themselves in a series of tightly choreographed steps. Nature is the dominant partner during this phase of development, but nurture plays a vital supportive role. Changes in the environment of the womb--whether caused by maternal malnutrition, drug...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FERTILE MINDS | 2/3/1997 | See Source »

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