NATIONAL

A picture caption on Wednesday with an article about the relationship between the Microsoft founders Paul Allen and Bill Gates and their impact on Seattle misstated the name of Mr. Allen’s museum of rock ’n’ roll there. As the article and accompanying chart said, it is the Experience Music Project, not the Music Experience Project.

BUSINESS

An article in the Square Feet pages on Wednesday about the federal government’s difficulty in divesting some of its real estate holdings misspelled the name of a deputy director in the Office of Management and Budget. He is Jeffrey D. Zients, not Jeffrey D. Zeints.

SPORTS

An article on April 14 about the recruitment of a New York City high school basketball player, Marquis Barnett, misstated his former Bronx neighborhood. It was Crotona Park, not Katonah, which is in Westchester County.

CULTURE

The Books of The Times review on April 15, about “The Dead Yard” by Ian Thomson, a look at modern Jamaica, misidentified the event described by Mr. Thomson at which people wore “spiffy” tracksuits and “glittery” jewelry. It was a funeral, not a concert.

SCIENCE TIMES

An article on Tuesday about a vision experiment that indicated that the neurological connection between sight and touch is learned rather than innate misstated the role of Pawan Sinha of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dr. Sinha was the senior author of a study published in Nature Neuroscience describing the experiment, not the lead author. (Richard Held, also of M.I.T., was the lead author.)

OBITUARIES

An obituary on Wednesday about the singer-songwriter Phoebe Snow misidentified the producers of her first album, “Phoebe Snow,” on Shelter Records. They were Dino Airali and Phil Ramone, not Denny Cordell. (Mr. Cordell, the president of the label, produced earlier versions of some songs on the album, but nothing on the album itself. The tracks he produced were included on a later CD reissue of the album.) The obituary also misidentified the Shelter executive who discovered Ms. Snow at the Bitter End in Greenwich Village. It was Mr. Airali, not Mr. Cordell.

An obituary on April 19 about Evelyn Einstein, Albert Einstein’s granddaughter, misidentified the writer of an unpublished manuscript she had in her possession, which led to the discovery of letters written by Einstein in 1986. The manuscript was written by her mother, Frieda — not by her grandfather.

STYLES

A report on April 14 in the Browsing column misidentified the new creative director for the fashion label Project Alabama. She is Charlotte Greenough, not Morgane Le Fay. (Morgane Le Fay is the company Ms. Greenough used to work for.)

The Scene City column last Thursday misspelled the surname of a guest at the 30th anniversary party for the art magazine Bomb. She is A. M. Homes, not Holmes.

An article on March 17 about wearing stretch yoga pants at work misspelled part of the name of a woman who frequently wears them. She is Lisa Berlenbach Dixon, not Bierlenbach. Ms. Dixon pointed out the error in an e-mail received by The Times on April 13.

An article on April 7 about substance abuse treatment centers in Brooklyn misstated the type of treatment offered by the branch of the Hazelden rehabilitation center in the Chelsea section of Manhattan. It is outpatient, not residential.

HOME & GARDEN

An article last Thursday about the International Furniture Fair in Milan misstated the contribution of the designers Enzo Mari and Antonio Citterio to the new Hermès furniture collection. Their pieces were not based on work by Jean-Michel Frank. (Only the furniture designed by RDAI Studio was based on Mr. Frank’s work.)

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