FRONT PAGE
An article on Wednesday about sexual harassment allegations against the restaurateur Ken Friedman misstated the year in which Mr. Friedman sent Carla Rza Betts, then a wine director at his restaurant the Breslin, a series of texts seeking nude pictures of her. It was 2010, not 2009.
NATIONAL
An article on Wednesday about apparently biased text messages sent between F.B.I. agents investigating Donald J. Trump misidentified the F.B.I. official who wrote that Hillary Clinton “has to win.” It was Lisa Page, not Peter Strzok.
NEW YORK
An article on Wednesday about the tunnel in Times Square that was the target of a recent unsuccessful terrorist attack misstated the cost of a subway ride in 1932. It was 5 cents, not 10 cents. It also misstated that the tunnel spared commuters from paying an additional fare when transferring between lines. An additional fare was required.
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An article on Wednesday about planned repairs on the East River subway tunnel misstated when a shutdown of the Canarsie Tunnel will begin. It is April 2019, not next April.
BUSINESS DAY
An article on Monday about net neutrality rules in Europe included a quotation that misstated the availability of internet access in Cuba. It is severely restricted there, not totally unavailable.
Continue reading the main storyTHURSDAY STYLES
The Browsing column last Thursday, using information from the company, misstated the price of the WANT Les Essentiels leather backpack. It is $450, not $550.
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The Scene City column last Thursday, about the parties held during Art Basel Miami Beach, misspelled the name of the Champagne served at a party. It is Perrier Jouet, not Pierre Jouet.
OBITUARIES
An obituary on Monday about Mickey Gurdus, who monitored the airwaves for Israel Radio, misstated where his parents settled after fleeing Warsaw in 1939. It was the British mandate of Palestine — not the state of Israel, which did not exist until 1948.
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An obituary on Wednesday about the filmmaker Bruce Brown misidentified the writer who reviewed his surfing documentary “The Endless Summer” for The New Yorker. It was Susan Lardner, not Pauline Kael.
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