Word: error
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Although long-term interventions may be required, it is reassuring to know that we can maintain memory with aging via fairly modest lifestyle changes” he said. [SEE CORRECTION BELOW] CORRECTION: Due to an editing error, the Nov. 29 news article "Beta Carotene May Boost Brain" incorrectly referred to Harvard School of Public Health associate professor Francine Grodstein as male. In fact, Grodstein is female...
...challenge, says Piccard, is to keep going until the next sunrise before the batteries are empty: "We have very little margin of error from night into day. Each dawn will be a moment of incredible suspense." For the 2011 flight, he and Boschberg will do alternating stints of five days and five nights between landings. A day on the ground spent charging in the sunlight should be enough to get the plane back into the air the next morning for another stage in its globe-girdling journey...
...energy thing is the number one priority.” One recurring theme during the conversation was the gap between his generation and that of current undergrads. Baldwin posited that young people today hesitate to make decisions about their futures because there is “less margin for error now in life,” likening their experience to choosing from a menu. “Maybe they’re not wrong when they’re saying, ‘What else have you got?’” he said. Regina N. Bediako...
...upset it suffered at the hands of the Lions on its last trip to New York in 2005. That loss broke Harvard’s streak of 12 dual-meet victories and represented the first time Columbia defeated the Crimson since 1989. This time, Harvard left no room for error in meticulously dismantling the Lions. “Two years ago, it was really disheartening,” co-captain Geoff Rathgeber said. “We hung our heads the whole meet, and it was an awful, awful experience. We had a bitter taste and wanted to prove that...
...outran McLeod. So many breaks went Harvard’s way that it would not be hard to imagine that divine powers were assisting our crimson and white-clad warriors in smiting Yale. When Pizzotti fumbled a snap, Harvard still got a first down. When Pizzotti made a rare error and threw the ball to a lucky Yalie, it was bobbled—straight into the open arms of a Harvard receiver. And when, with only a few minutes left, a Yale punt return took advantage of the lone Harvard lapse in the entire game, the Eli could not even...