Corrections: June 4, 2022 – The New York Times

INTERNATIONAL
A March 23 article about a potential agreement between six groups of victims of the September 11, 2001 attacks to divide the assets of the Afghan central bank misstated the first name of a member of a group of September 11 plaintiffs, known as the business name Ashton. He’s Brett Eagleson, not Brian. This fix was delayed as the editors were only recently notified of the error.
ARTS & LEISURE
A page 18 article from this weekend about an Inuit art hub in the Canadian Arctic misspells the names of the Indigenous First Nations peoples of Canada and the United States with whom Wanda Nanibush is identified. The people are Anishinaabe, not Anishabee.
WEEKEND ART
An article published Friday about TV shows to watch this weekend misspelled the title of a CBS political drama. It’s “Madame secretary” and not “Madame secretary”.
SPECIAL SECTION: DESIGN
A post on Page 2 this weekend about highlights of Milan Design Week misnamed the exhibition space in Milan showing the work of design firm Studiopepe. This is Baranzate Ateliers, not Baranzate Studios. The article also misrepresented the name of the Milan space exhibiting products from the lighting company Flos. It’s Fabbrica Orobia, not Fabricca Orobia.
An image caption with an article on page 13 this weekend about nature-based patterned homewares misrepresents the price of Bloom fabric from Brook Perdigon Textiles. The fabric is $216 per yard, not $9 per yard.
MAGAZINE
A page 18 article from this weekend about why people come to New York misspells the name of a woman who moved from Newtown, Pennsylvania. Her name is Susan Carey Dempsey, not Susan Cary Dempsey.
OPINION
A Friday column on voters’ responses to inflation misstated the month of Eurostat’s inflation estimate released on May 30. This was a preliminary estimate for May, not March.
Errors are corrected in print whenever possible, so some errors noted here may not have appeared in all editions.
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