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Fish scales to fangs: Surprising tale of how teeth got their bite

WASHINGTON — The origins of the enamel that gives our teeth their bite is no ordinary fish tale.

Traveling alone… and not lonely

Text and Photos by Lea T. Dalawis

IT WAS IN 2003 when I had my first taste of international travel. After that trip, I knew that I was bitten by the proverbial travel bug. I’ve been to several other countries since then.

Your weekend guide

October 2-25, 2o15

Ready for SEA Games 2019

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo

FROM its humble beginnings in the late 1950s when it was still known as the Southeast Asian Peninsula Games, the Southeast Asian Games has gone on to become a much-awaited sporting event in this side of the world.

(1) New Notification: Your candidate is now online

By Pola E. del Monte   

YOUR CANDIDATE is now online. Political campaigning has expanded beyond the realm of TV, radio, and print media. Today, candidates are on the internet, delivering their platforms via network bandwidth, projecting their image through bytes of data.

Me, me, me, again!

Theater
No Filter 2.0
By Jasmine Agnes T. Cruz, Reporter

Mystery author Agatha Christie was queen of poison

TORQUAY, UNITED KINGDOM — Throughout her prolific career, mystery author Agatha Christie killed off hundreds of characters by bullets, daggers, even a blow of the cleaver. But her ultimate weapon, and the one she was most fond of, was poison.

Fall movie preview

By Richard Roeper

CONVENTIONAL movie wisdom says summer is for superheroes and sequels, reboots and R-rated comedies — but come autumn, it’s time for the potential classics, the Oscar contenders, “grown-up” movies.

Under the sea

By Jasmine Agnes T. Cruz
Exhibit
A Glass of the Sea: An Exhibition on the Coral Triangle

What TV shows do CEOs watch?

The Binge
by Jessica Zafra

Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala, chair and CEO, Ayala Corp.

Your weekend guide

September 26-October 31, 2015

Gender bender

LONDON — Scottish-born author Ali Smith has received a number of honors for her gender-bending novel How to be both that explores issues of sexual identity from Renaissance times to the present, the most recent being the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction in June.

Smith’s sixth novel, which had been short-listed for the 2014 Man Booker Prize, focuses on an Italian Renaissance painter who disguises herself as a man in order to pursue her artistic passions, and on a modern teenage girl named George grappling with the death of her mother and with her emerging sexuality.

“Ancient and modern meet and speak to each other in this tender, brilliant and witty novel of grief, love, sexuality and shape-shifting identity,” Chair of Judges Shami Chakrabarti said in a statement announcing the winner. The prize is awarded to a work of fiction written in English by a woman anywhere in the world and carries a £30,000 ($46,000) cash prize.

Smith’s critically well-received book intertwines the story of the actual Renaissance artist Francesco del Cossa, who disguised her femininity in order to create frescoes in a palazzo in Ferrara, and the fictional George, who is struggling to cope with the sudden death of her mother, with whom she had traveled to Italy to see Del Cossa’s works.

The book has the added twist of coming in two editions, one of which begins with Del Cossa’s story and the other with George’s.

“At its heart, How to be both… is an eloquent challenge to the binary notions governing our existence. Why, Smith seems to ask, should we expect a book to run from A to B, by way of a recognizable plot and subplot, peopled by characters who are easily understood to be one thing or another?,” Britain’s Guardian newspaper said in a review.

Smith, who was born in Inverness in August 1962 and lives in Cambridge, won the Saltire First Book Award and a Scottish Arts Council Award in 1995 for her first collection of stories, Free Love.

Her novels include Hotel World, which was short-listed for the Man Booker and the Orange Prize, and The Accidental which won the Whitbread Novel Award. — Reuters