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...Fermat's Last Theorem The puzzler that stumped the world's greatest mathematical minds for 350 years was finally solved by Princeton's Andrew Wiles -- or was it? Like French mathematician Pierre de Fermat, who claimed to have discovered a marvelous proof he couldn't fit in the margin of his notebook, Wiles has run into a last-minute problem but says he is sure he can resolve...
...develop nuclear capabilities without actually developing nuclear weapons. According to ElBaradei, these nations pose a major threat because they are capable of turning that potential into actual weaponry in a relatively short period of time. “To me, if we continue along that path, the security margin we have is almost fictional,” ElBaradei said. Much of ElBaradei’s talk centered around terrorism. He asserted that terrorists pose a serious threat, but that it remains difficult for them to actually obtain the materials and assemble a true nuclear weapon. The speech?...
...number eleven this year. Martin J. Ince, a contributing editor at THES and the coordinator of the rankings, said that does not foresee Harvard’s dominance of the list coming to an end any time soon. “Harvard came in this year by a bigger margin than in 2004, and it would take something very usual to move it from that position,” he said. “I can’t really see it happening.” Harvard also took top honors in separate rankings of programs in the humanities...
...second place Charleston. “I haven’t won a division before,” Baker said. “It was great. There were a lot of good competitors [at the race].” Those eighteen points would turn out to be the margin of victory, as the A division team, consisting of captain Sloan Devlin and junior Christina Dahlman, battled Charleston to a second place tie. Both the Cougars and the Crimson finished with 93 points in the A division, but the Harvard emerged victorious, thanks to its edge in the B division. Harvard...
...score several times, the Quaker defense limited Harvard to a .078 hitting percentage en route to a 30-23 victory. Feeding off its momentum, Penn took advantage of five Crimson errors to open up a 10-6 lead in game three. Despite making many runs, Harvard never cut the margin to less than three and eventually fell, 30-26. Harvard will travels to Ithaca, N.Y., on Friday to face first-place Cornell before taking on perennial bottom-feeder Columbia. “Cornell’s definitely the team to beat,” Blotky said...