FRONT PAGE
An article on Monday about the colonial roots of poverty in the Philippines referred incorrectly to the background of Luis F. Lorenzo Sr., founder of Lapanday Foods and a former senior executive of Del Monte. He was not a former governor of the province Davao del Sur.
INTERNATIONAL
An article on Thursday about the abrupt dismissal of several commanders from China’s legislature misstated the surname of one of the dismissed officers. He is Ju Xinchun, not Jin.
NATIONAL
An article on Thursday about Gov. Kathy Hochul’s proposal to change how New York schools teach literacy referred incorrectly to New York students’ performance on national reading exams compared with students in other states. While New York students’ scores declined in 2022, the states were not ranked.
An article on Dec. 28 about a Republican in Michigan who acted as a fake elector for Donald J. Trump misstated the month in 2020 when Mr. Trump was taped pressuring two members of the Wayne County Board of Canvassers, according to The Detroit News. The newspaper said it happened in November, not December.
BUSINESS
An article on Tuesday about The Eugene Weekly, a newspaper in Oregon that shut down after an employee embezzled funds, relying on information from an editor at the newspaper, misstated the actions taken against the person accused of embezzlement. The paper has asked the police to pursue charges, but no charges have been filed. As the article noted, the Eugene Police are still investigating.
WEEKEND ARTS
An article on Friday about the art show “Luna Luna: Forgotten Fantasy” misspelled the name of a photographer of Luna Luna, the art amusement park, whose work appears in a catalog from Phaidon. She is Sabina Sarnitz, not Sabrina.
OBITUARIES
An obituary on Thursday about the dancer and actor Maurice Hines referred imprecisely to his replacement of his brother, Gregory, in the musical “Jelly’s Last Jam” in 1994. Maurice Hines replaced Gregory Hines in a touring production of the show, not on Broadway.
MAGAZINE
An article on Dec. 31 about Tina Turner misstated the location of the hospital where she was born. The hospital was near the community of Nutbush, Tenn., not in it.
Errors are corrected during the press run whenever possible, so some errors noted here may not have appeared in all editions.