Corrections & Amplifications

Mount Rainier was misspelled as Ranier in a Personal Journal article on June 19 about a Washington state couple who have a morning meeting to schedule their day, including time alone.

Stamford Bridge, the home stadium of London's Chelsea Football Club, was misspelled as Stanford Bridge in a Corporate News article Tuesday about Delta Air Lines Inc.'s sponsorship deal with the club.

The surname of Alvin "Tex" Johnston, the test pilot who performed an unapproved 360-degree roll in the Boeing "Dash 80" aircraft during a demonstration for airline executives in 1955, was misspelled as Johnson in a Corporate News article Tuesday about Boeing Co.'s plans for the Farnborough International Air Show next month.

Minnesota last voted for a Republican presidential candidate in 1972. In some editions Tuesday, the Capital Journal column incorrectly listed, in one reference, the date as 1988.

Actress Geena Davis was a semifinalist in the 1999 U.S. Olympic qualifying competition in archery. The Snapshot feature in the latest Friday Journal incorrectly said she was an Olympic semifinalist.

Many of the names of people quoted in a June 18 article about the re-opening of the 103rd Street Pedestrian Bridge in Manhattan were fabricated by a reporting intern, Liane Membis, and the quotes couldn't be independently verified. The article has been removed from The Wall Street Journal's online archives. In addition, a quote contributed by Ms. Membis was removed from a June 11 article about "stop and frisk" police tactics. The name attributed to the quote couldn't be independently verified. Ms. Membis is no longer working at The Wall Street Journal.

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