FRONT PAGE

An article on Thursday about tensions between President Obama and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel misstated the location of a speech last week in which Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton announced that Mr. Obama would offer details soon about America’s policies in the Middle East. It was in Washington, D.C., at a meeting of the U.S.-Islamic World Forum, not in Qatar.

NEW YORK

Because of an editing error, an article on Wednesday about the decision by Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem to provide bail for a teenage girl facing drug and weapons charges referred incorrectly in two instances to the Rev. Eboni Marshall Turman, an assistant to the pastor. She is a woman.

An article on Thursday about Mayor Bloomberg’s visit to Coney Island to open an amusement park misstated the given name of the president of a company that designs and manufactures amusement park rides. He is Alberto Zamperla, not Antonio.

BUSINESS

An article on Thursday about a National Labor Relations Board complaint seeking to prevent Boeing from moving some airplane production to a nonunion plant in South Carolina misstated the status of a rule to require private sector employers to post a notice about workers’ right to unionize. An N.L.R.B. proposal for such a rule is pending; it has not been made final.

An article on April 6 about an investigation by Nevada state officials into payments to a group of Las Vegas cardiologists by a little-known heart device manufacturer, Biotronik, misstated, based on information provided by St. Rose Dominican Hospitals, the trend in the number of implants performed by those cardiologists since 2008 at St. Rose, which does not use Biotronik devices. It has remained relatively constant; it has not declined.

The Reuters Breakingviews column on Wednesday, about the insider trading trial of Raj Rajaratnam, the founder of the Galleon Group hedge fund, misstated the party that eliminated 23 of the 37 charges against him. It was the prosecution, not the judge.

The DealBook column on Tuesday, about denials by Goldman Sachs that it had bet against the mortgage market before the housing collapse, misspelled, on second reference, the surname of the author of “Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World.” As noted on first reference, he is William D. Cohan, not Cohen.

SPORTS

An article in some editions on Thursday about the Rangers’ 4-3 loss in double overtime to the Washington Capitals in Game 4 of their first-round playoff series misidentified the Capitals player whose shot led to tying the score at 3-3. It was John Carlson who shot the puck from the blue line, not Marcus Johansson. (Johansson tipped it in.)

Because of an editing error, an article on Tuesday about Geoffrey Mutai’s performance in the Boston Marathon, the fastest marathon ever run, misstated a reason that his time, 2 hours 3 minutes 2 seconds, was not an official world record. In addition to the course’s elevation drop, it is because its start and finish are separated by more than 50 percent of the race distance; the type of course — whether point-to-point or loop — is not a determining factor. The error was repeated in a picture caption with the article and in the On Running column.

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