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New York Times Prints Correction 161 Years Later
Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2014 3:53 pm
by silverscreenselect
Today, the New York Times printed a correction to an 1853 story in which it described the kidnapping and return of Solomon Northup, the man whose story formed the basis of this year's Oscar winning Best Picture, 12 Years a Slave. Someone checked the original article in the Times, and noted that the paper spelled his name "Northrup" in the headline and "Northrop" in the story itself. The New York Times correction was rather brief, in its corrections section along with other corrections of the last couple of days, but other articles about the correction went into more detail.
http://www.latimes.com/nation/nationnow ... z2v2888wlV
Better late than never.
Re: New York Times Prints Correction 161 Years Later
Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2014 4:35 pm
by littlebeast13
silverscreenselect wrote:Today, the New York Times printed a correction to an 1853 story in which it described the kidnapping and return of Solomon Northup, the man whose story formed the basis of this year's Oscar winning Best Picture, 12 Years a Slave. Someone checked the original article in the Times, and noted that the paper spelled his name "Northrup" in the headline and "Northrop" in the story itself. The New York Times correction was rather brief, in its corrections section along with other corrections of the last couple of days, but other articles about the correction went into more detail.
http://www.latimes.com/nation/nationnow ... z2v2888wlV
Better late than never.
It's never too late to admit you were wrong...
lb13
Re: New York Times Prints Correction 161 Years Later
Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2014 5:03 pm
by MarleysGh0st
littlebeast13 wrote:silverscreenselect wrote:Today, the New York Times printed a correction to an 1853 story in which it described the kidnapping and return of Solomon Northup, the man whose story formed the basis of this year's Oscar winning Best Picture, 12 Years a Slave. Someone checked the original article in the Times, and noted that the paper spelled his name "Northrup" in the headline and "Northrop" in the story itself. The New York Times correction was rather brief, in its corrections section along with other corrections of the last couple of days, but other articles about the correction went into more detail.
http://www.latimes.com/nation/nationnow ... z2v2888wlV
Better late than never.
It's never too late to admit you were wrong...
lb13
Found it!
