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Corrections

Corrections

Published: April 13, 2010

BUSINESS DAY

An article on the Personal Tech pages on Thursday about Micro Four-Thirds cameras misstated the genesis of the name of the camera standard. Four Thirds refers to the size of the image sensor measured diagonally (4/3-inch, in a sizing system derived from video camera tubes, now obsolete). The name does not stem from the 4:3 aspect ratio of the sensor. (Go to Article)

An article on Monday about the demographics of the audience for “The Tonight Show” on NBC after Jay Leno’s return misstated the median age of Jon Stewart’s audience on the Comedy Central channel. It is 40, not 49. (Go to Article)

A picture caption on Saturday with an article about an increase in spending by well-off consumers misstated the surname of a pilot with XOJet, a jet-leasing company in San Francisco. He is David Kinser, not Kinsner. (Go to Article)

THE ARTS

Schedule information on Wednesday with a theater review about “Bellona, Destroyer of Cities” misidentified the Web site of the Kitchen, the Chelsea performance space where the play was staged. It is thekitchen.org — not kitchen.org, a Web site guide to kitchen and bath remodelers. (Go to Article)

OBITUARIES

An obituary on April 3 about the actor John Forsythe, using information provided by a family spokesman, referred incorrectly to Mr. Forsythe’s marital history. His marriage to Parker McCormick lasted from 1939 to 1943, not from 1938 to 1940, and he married Julie Warren the year they divorced, not three years later. (Go to Article)

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