NATIONAL

Because of a production error, an article on Friday about the growing number of psychics practicing in Salem, Mass., omitted the last passage in some editions. It should have read: “Now, talk has started about new regulations that would include a cap on the number of psychic businesses, but the grumbling has in no way reached the level of viciousness that occurred in 2007, when someone left the mutilated body of a raccoon outside Ms. Szafranski’s shop and Mr. Day and Ms. Stathopoulos got into a fight. Ms. Szafranski says she plans to send the council an official complaint in June. This time, she has no prediction how it will turn out.”

An article on Friday about efforts in Joplin, Mo., to identify people unaccounted for since Sunday’s tornado misstated the name of a child who was on a list of the missing. He is Hayze Howard, not Howard Hayze.

An article on Tuesday, about the Democratic Party’s wooing of Elizabeth Warren to run for the United States Senate from Massachusetts instead of pursuing nomination as the first head of a new federal consumer financial protection bureau, misstated the year when the incumbent Republican senator, Scott Brown, was elected. It was 2010, not 2009.

BUSINESS DAY

An article on Thursday about the announcement by Christine Lagarde, the French finance minister, that she would be a candidate for managing director of the International Monetary Fund erroneously attributed a distinction to Ms. Lagarde should she be appointed. She would be the first woman to head an international financial institution, not an international institution. (The World Health Organization, Unicef and the United Nations High Commission for Refugees, among others, are or have been headed by women.)

An article on Friday about the efforts of Sony’s chief executive, Howard Stringer, to turn the company around, misspelled the name of a smartphone from Sony Ericsson, Sony’s joint venture with the Swedish telecommunications giant. The device, which is expected to rival Sony’s own portable video game machine, is called Xperia Play, not Experia Play.

WEEKEND

The House Tour column on Friday, about a home in Cheviot, N.Y., misidentified the railroad that has a station in Rhinecliff, about 16 miles away. It is Amtrak, not Metro North.

TRAVEL

The Practical Traveler column on Page 3 this weekend, about bargain summer trips, misstates, using information from a publicist, the starting rate for a room at the Renaissance Vinoy hotel in downtown St. Petersburg, Fla. It is $129, not $104.

OBITUARIES

An obituary on Friday about the artist Leonora Carrington misstated the number of grandchildren who survive her. It is five, not four.

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