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CORRECTIONS

Wednesday, February 23, 2005; Page A02

A Feb. 22 article incorrectly quoted Harvard University President Lawrence H. Summers as saying in a January speech that there are differences in "innate aptitude" between men and women that help explain why men more often excel on science and engineering tests. As stated earlier in the article, Summers used the phrase "intrinsic aptitude."

A Feb. 22 Sports column said that five members of the 2005 National Basketball Association all-star team went straight from high school to the NBA. There were actually seven: Kobe Bryant, Tracy McGrady, Kevin Garnett, Amare Stoudemire, LeBron James, Jermaine O'Neal and Rashard Lewis.

A Feb. 22 Health article about a wireless radio-frequency identification tag for locating hospital patients misspelled the name of the device's maker. The company is Radianse Inc.

The Fast Forward column in the Feb. 20 Business section incorrectly said that Apple's .Mac Web hosting service does not allow users to restrict access to online photo albums. To set a password for an online album or any other site, .Mac subscribers need to log in at the service's Web site (www.mac.com), click the "HomePage" link, select a site and click the "Edit" button.

The Feb. 20 Sunday Source entertainment listings incorrectly said that the D.C. Film Society's 13th annual party was being held that evening. The party is next Sunday.

The What's the Deal? column in the Feb. 20 Travel section incorrectly said that a family of four with two children between 6 and 12 years old would pay $318 plus taxes for the "Wild Thing Weekend" package March 4-6 at Canaan Valley Resort in Davis, W.Va. The correct price is $510 plus taxes.

The first name of a prosecutor was misspelled in the caption for a courtroom sketch with a Feb. 19 Metro article. The assistant U.S. attorney who appeared in federal court in the case of a man charged in a carjacking that resulted in the death of a Pentagon police officer was Erik Barnett.

A Feb. 18 Business article incorrectly said that the Senate Judiciary Committee voted against an amendment by Sen. Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.) to give military personnel added protections in a bill that would impose new limits on people filing for bankruptcy. That amendment was not offered.


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