Corrections that appeared in print on Thursday, March 14, 2024.
INTERNATIONAL
An article on Saturday about a proposed national security law in Hong Kong misstated the number of days a person suspected of endangering national security could be detained, without charge, under proposed legislation. It is as many as 16 days, not as many as 14 days.
An article on Wednesday about Zimbabwe’s accusations that deported U.S. officials were promoting a regime change in the country misstated the conditions of the expulsion two years ago of Larry Garber, an American democracy consultant with The Carter Center. He was asked to leave by Zimbabwean officials, but not officially deported. The article also misstated how long it was after Mr. Garber’s expulsion that staff members with the U.S. Congress visiting Zimbabwe were chased by people they believed were security officials. It was several weeks, not several months.
NATIONAL
An article on Sunday about a criminal investigation into Boeing after a panel on one of the company’s planes blew out misstated two elements included in a letter that Boeing sent to Senator Maria Cantwell. The letter stated that Boeing had provided employee names to the National Transportation Safety Board on March 6, not March 4, and that the names may have included people who were not on the company’s 737 door team, not just people on that team.
An article on Wednesday about the ousting of a California women’s prison warden after allegations of sexual abuse against inmates misstated the new title of Nancy T. McKinney. She is the interim warden, not the deputy warden.
An article on Wednesday about a discussion on civics and civility between Supreme Court Justices Amy Coney Barrett and Sonia Sotomayor misstated the name of a nonprofit group. It is Citizen University, not Citizens University.
ARTS
An article on Tuesday about the TEFAF Art Fair misstated the location of the Kimbell Art Museum. It is in Fort Worth, not Dallas.
OBITUARIES
An obituary on Monday about the writer and editor William Whitworth misidentified the publication in which an article about him by the sociologist Renée C. Fox appeared. It was Society, not Commentary.
An obituary on Wednesday about the singer and songwriter Eric Carmen referred incorrectly at one point to the song “All by Myself.” As noted elsewhere in the obituary, it was released in 1975; it is not a “1980s anthem.” Because of an editing error, the obituary also misstated who wrote the song “Hungry Eyes,” which was a hit for Mr. Carmen in 1987. It was written by John DeNicola and Franke Previte, not by Mr. Carmen. And the obituary misstated the name of the debut album by Mr. Carmen’s band the Raspberries. It was “Raspberries,” not “The Raspberries.”
Errors are corrected during the press run whenever possible, so some errors noted here may not have appeared in all editions.
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Source: Elections - nytimes.com