All The News That's Fit to Print?
It amazes me that a news organization like the New York Times who makes hideous errors reporting daily has the gaul to criticize the goverment for "false intellegence" seems to me that these smarties have had intelligence failures of thier own. They can't even write stories about little league baseball teams that are deviod of bias and falsehoods.
THIS is Just One Days Worth of NEW YORK TIMES Corrections!
Corrections
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Published: January 6, 2006
The headline with an article yesterday about a letter from Representative Jane Harman, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, to President Bush about a National Security Agency eavesdropping program misstated her complaint in some copies. She complained that the limited briefings for Congress about the program violated the law, not that the program itself violated the law. (Go to Article)
For the Record
An article on Oct. 26 about baseball fields around New York City that are off limits to players who do not belong to one of the private leagues that maintain them quoted John Colon, president of the board of the Co-op City Little League, as saying that children who cannot afford to join the club cannot play on the field it uses. After the article was published, Little League Baseball and Softball, the parent organization, contacted The Times to say its rules prohibit a locally chartered club from turning away players for any reason, including inability to pay. This correction was delayed by an editing lapse. (Go to Article)
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An article in The Arts yesterday about Ted Koppel's decision to join the Discovery Channel misstated the role of John Malone on Discovery's board. He is a member, not the chairman. (John S. Hendricks is the chairman.) (Go to Article)
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An article in The Arts on Wednesday about celebrations of the 20th anniversary of the reopening of the Willard Hotel in Washington misstated the history of the founding of the Gridiron Club, a journalists' group. The club was founded in the 1880's elsewhere in Washington, not at a bar in the Willard. (Go to Article)
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Because of an editing error, an article in The Arts yesterday about the appointment of Terence Riley as director of the Miami Art Museum reversed the old and new names of the site of its new building. It is now Bicentennial Park, and will be renamed Museum Park. (Go to Article)
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