Word: signaled
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...slowly, Harvard has begun to turn those numbers around. After losing the turnover battle for four straight weeks, the Crimson has now created more turnovers than it has surrendered for three straight games. Not surprisingly, the change has started with O’Hagan. Harvard’s signal caller has limited his mistakes, putting together back to back interception free performances against Lafayette and Princeton before throwing two picks last week against Dartmouth. “I give Liam an A for effort and an A for toughness and resiliency,” Murphy said. “He?...
...would send the signal to students that the House community is important—that Lowell residents ought to be with other Lowellians once in a while, and that Winthrop can actually be for Winthropes, and not just a cappella groups...
...clue that we would get to a gene [linked to the disorder] could lead us to information that could lead us to discover remedies.” The variants associated with bipolar disorder will not definitively indicate that someone will have the disease, she said, but will signal an increased risk for the disorder, much like high cholesterol indicates an elevated risk for heart disease. Diabetes and bipolar disorder are only two of the diseases being studied. In the Boston area alone, researchers are using similar genetic methods to learn more about autism, multiple sclerosis, and heart disease, Altshuler said...
...chance, but the tabloids sending their reporters on his plane (at $11,000 apiece) are on high gaffe alert. Will Charles, who asked 12 years ago, "How can any realistic person not take the threat of global warming seriously?" and intends to raise the issue privately with Bush, signal the slightest flicker of frustration with the President in public? Will someone, somewhere hold up a sign that implies that Yanks prefer Diana to Camilla? Like all caricatures, the view of Charles as not quite connected with the world holds some truth. Yet it is also fair to say that within...
...think the current leadership of the country is doing a very poor job when it comes to foreign policy and domestic policy.” Pittinsky said such sentiments are widespread among Americans. “I think in general there is a fairly strong signal that people have a strong desire to see stronger leadership pretty much across sectors,” he said. “That goes across political parties, economic groups, and gender.” However, the results of the study can also be viewed in a positive light, said Myers. She hopes that...