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...help doctors distinguish between patients with a psychiatric disorder and those with head trauma (which can trigger similar symptoms). CTs have been particularly useful in identifying schizophrenia patients. In the 1970s researchers uncovered the first distinguishing abnormality in these patients' brains: the ventricles (fluid-filled open spaces), circled in yellow, are significantly larger in those with the disease, left, than in normal subjects, far left. This provided the first clue that schizophrenics may have less brain tissue affecting cognitive functions such as attention and memory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Imaging: Postcards From The Brain | 1/20/2003 | See Source »

...club scene dominated by trance music, Moshe Lahav had modest ambitions for his nostalgia singalong show. But after 20 years in the business, this pudgy, scruffy guitarist is suddenly riding a wave of sentimentality among young Israelis yearning for less complicated times. From midnight to 4 a.m. at the Yellow Submarine in Jerusalem's Talpiot industrial district, Lahav sings tunes written when Israel was a brand-new state by people who, if they are still alive, are probably in bed with their teeth on the nightstand by the time Lahav takes the stage. At 2 a.m., Lahav wraps...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Back To Zionism | 1/12/2003 | See Source »

...last week, in what the sheik believes was an attempt to intimidate them into silence before the election. If the Shin Bet was making a veiled threat to Salah, it's the overt and violent Palestinian threat that dominates the election for Israel's Jews. Back at the Yellow Submarine, it's 2:30 a.m. and a fat, middle-aged man joins Lahav on stage to sing about the Zionist philanthropist Moses Montefiore, who built the first Jewish neighborhood outside Jerusalem's Old City in the 19th century. "I must help the Jews in Israel," he croons, as the clubbers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Back To Zionism | 1/12/2003 | See Source »

UNITED NATIONS—In the United Nations delegates’ dining room high above the East River yesterday, 35 members of an Institute of Politics (IOP) study group confronted three different kinds of forks, seared grouper and braised duck with yellow rice...

Author: By Ben A. Black, SPECIAL TO THE CRIMSON | Title: IOP Group Takes Inside Look at U.N. | 1/8/2003 | See Source »

...always the first step of a storied culinary life. But for Jeffrey Lord, chef and owner of Betelnut on Koh Samui, skinning spuds at Chez Panisse?the cradle of California cuisine?was the start of a cooking career that has carried him around the world. His intimate yellow dining room on a quiet side street off Chaweng beach is worthy of his beginnings. If ever two cuisines were dying to meet each other, they're Thai and Californian, and Lord brings them together brilliantly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Asian Table | 1/6/2003 | See Source »

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