FRONT PAGE
An article on Saturday about the approval of a gene-editing treatment for patients with sickle cell disease misstated the clinical trial in which the adult sickle cell center at the University of Alabama at Birmingham participated. It was the trial by Bluebird Bio, not Vertex Pharmaceuticals.
PAGES A2-A3
The Mini Crossword in Sunday’s paper was published in error. It was a duplicate of the previous day’s Mini Crossword. We regret the error, especially if it affected any solving streaks.
INTERNATIONAL
An article on Sunday about excavations of ancient Pompeii that revealed the grim life of enslaved workers misidentified which part of “The Golden Ass” describes working conditions in mills. It is Book IX, not Book XI.
NATIONAL
A picture caption with an article on Sunday about the ways in which Norman Lear reshaped the representation of Black families on television misstated the given name of an actor who starred in “Sanford and Son.” He is Demond Wilson, not Desmond.
ARTS
A Critic’s Notebook article on Saturday about the meaning of flight in Hayao Miyazaki’s films misstated the time period in which “Porco Rosso” is set. It takes place in the years between World War I and World War II, not during World War II. A picture caption with the article also misidentified the film from which one image is drawn. It is from the movie “The Wind Rises,” not “Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind.”
An article on Monday about this week’s television roundup misidentified a TV show on NBC. It is “That Clip Show,” not “The Clip Show.”
WEEKEND ARTS
An article on Friday about “Women Dressing Women,” a show by the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute, misspelled the names of a fashion house and a designer. The house was Jeanne Hallée, not Jean Hallée; the designer was Madeleine Lepeyre, not Madeleine Lepaeyre.
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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