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Heidi Knapp Rinella (food critic) CORRECTION on 12/8/09The recipe for Vintage Butterscotch Bars, which appeared in Wednesday's Taste section, had incorrect baking directions. The cookies should be baked at 350 to 375 degrees for 30 minutes, or until set in the center.
CORRECTION on 7/9/09 (This is likely a photographer or copy editor error) The restaurant affiliation for chef Carlos Guia and the location of a photo that appeared in the Wednesday Taste section were incorrect. Guia is executive chef at The Country Club at Wynn Las Vegas, where the photograph was taken. Arnold M. Knightly (business reporter) CORRECTION on 2/9/10 A story on Page One of Saturday's Review-Journal contained an error. Paris Las Vegas and Bally's are owned by Harrah's Entertainment. Knightly's 2009 corrections: CORRECTION on 7/9/09 An article in Thursday's Business section quoted a Fontainebleau Las Vegas bankruptcy filing that incorrectly stated that Bank of Nevada was seized by the federal government. The seized bank actually was First National Bank of Nevada, which was closed in 2008. The attorney who filed the document has acknowledged the mistake and has committed to file a corrected document with the Bankruptcy Court in Miami. Bank of Nevada also stated it has never had a relationship with Fontainebleau CORRECTION on 5/22/09 A story in the Business section of Thursday's Las Vegas Review-Journal needs clarification. Black Gaming announced Wednesday that a new cost reductions would not affect the Oasis golf course. The golf course affiliated with the Oasis is the Palms Golf Course. The Oasis Golf Club, a semi-private club that includes the Palmer and the Canyons courses, is owned by members of the Si Redd estate and has no affiliation with Black Gaming. CORRECTION on 4/8/09 A story in Tuesday's Business section contained an error. Bruce Allen, a fired security worker at M Resort who filed a National Labor Relations Board charge against the casino resort over his dismissal, said two security workers on another shift found confidential employee files in a company break room. CORRECTION 2/18/09 A headline in Tuesday's Business section was incorrect. The headline should have said, "Harrah's move presages bankruptcy." (Our note: the original headline was “Harrah’s move may preclude bankruptcy”)
Richard Lake (higher education reporter) CORRECTION on 5/7/10 Wednesday's Review-Journal misidentified the person who spoke on behalf of UNLV's Informatics program before the Faculty Senate on Tuesday. He was Bill Culbreth. CORRECTION on 12/31/09 A story Wednesday about a $750 cupcake at the Palazzo misspelled the head baker's name. It is Johann Springinsfeld.
CORRECTION on 6/30/09 A story in Monday's Review-Journal about several College of Southern Nevada satellite centers that will remain open should have said changes to how they are administered will save the college a total of $1 million over the next two years. CORRECTION on 6/21/09 A story in Saturday's Review-Journal misstated satellite centers to be closed by the College of Southern Nevada. Only the Henderson Business Resource Center and the CSN Center across from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas will close. All other satellite centers will remain in operation in one form or another. Phil Lawton (sports reporter) CORRECTION on 5/26/10 Teyler Williams, not Aisha Momodu, ran the anchor leg in the 800 relay for Rancho High School at the Class 4A girls state track meet Friday in Reno.
Corey Levitan (features reporter) CORRECTION on 11/24/09 The television station that airs "Live with Regis and Kelly" was incorrect in the Living section of Sunday's Las Vegas Review-Journal. The show airs from 9 to 10 a.m. weekdays on KVCW-TV, Channel 33. CORRECTION on 9/3/09 In a Sunday Living story about medical marijuana, a Metropolitan Police Department spokeswoman described buying an ounce or less of marijuana seeds from another country through the Internet as legal. However, federal law prohibits the mailing of marijuana seeds. Obtaining seeds or clones, for free, from another medical marijuana cardholder is the only legal way for Nevada cardholders to begin growing their own marijuana. In addition, the last name of Dr. Paul Michael was misspelled. CORRECTION on 8/27/09 The address listed for Nevada Pigeon Control in a feature that ran in the Aug. 16 Living section was an old one. The company's address is 2920 Brookspark CORRECTION on 6/28/09 Shellee Renee's name is misspelled in a caption with a story about living in high-rise buildings featured in today's Living section. CORRECTION on 5/16/09 Sin City," the Flying Burrito Brothers song featured in a Thursday Neon story, was written by Gram Parsons and Chris Hillman. Additional authors were incorrectly cited in the original story. CORRECTION on 5/15/09 "Sin City," a Flying Burrito Brothers song picked as No. 9 in Thursday's list of Top 10 Las Vegas-themed tunes, was written about Los Angeles. The list appeared on 1E in Neon Thursday. CORRECTION ON 2/20/09 The current lead singer for Skid Row was incorrectly identified in today's Neon. Johnny Solinger is the featured singer for the band.
Maggie Lillis (police reporter) Uncorrected breaking news item from 11/23/09. Flamingo and Desert Inn don't cross paths. http://www.lvrj.com/news/breaking_news/Woman-found-dead-in-burning-home-71809732.html The location was subsequently corrected in the print version of the paper. The web version is still wrong, and with no amended correction. John Locher (staff photographer) CORRECTION on 4/16/09 A Friday photo caption on the Canstruction sculpture project at Fashion Show Mall misstated when the event ends. It ends Sunday. The canned food used to make sculptures will be donated to the Three Square Food.
Doug McMurdo CLARIFICATION on 12/8/09 Longtime Las Vegas attorney Howard Douglas Clark is not Douglas H. Clark, an attorney mentioned in a report published last week regarding lawyers who face disciplinary proceedings. CORRECTION on 10/27/09 In this story from Thursday’s Nevada section about an appeal from two convicted sex offenders heard Wednesday by a panel of Nevada Supreme Court justices should have said that District Judge Elizabeth Gonzalez decided not to provide funding for an investigator and refused to order a psychiatric evaluation for one of the victims of David J. Tiffany. He was sentenced to multiple life sentences with the possibility of parole after he pleaded guilty to 10 counts of child molestation and related charges in 2007.
Thomas Mitchell (editor) CLARIFICATION on 3/15/10 In Sunday's column, Editor Thomas Mitchell described the 2010 Census long form. The Census has changed its terminology. It now calls the 28-page form being sent every year to homes the American Community Survey. 'The ACS will replace the long form in 2010 and thereafter by collecting long-form-type information throughout the decade rather than only once every 10 years,' the Census Bureau says. CORRECTION on 11/24/09 Thomas Mitchell's Sunday column mistakenly stated a CAT bus was used to block photographers while an officer's body was being loaded into a coroner's van. The incident occurred when the body was being unloaded at the coroner's office. CORRECTION on 4/28/09 In his Sunday column, editor Thomas Mitchell mistakenly stated that the 14th Amendment granted suffrage to free slaves. The 14th granted civil rights, while the 15th granted the right to vote. CORRECTION on 3/23/09 In Thomas Mitchell's Sunday column listing cities in which major newspapers have been described as "endangered," he mistakenly listed Minneapolis twice and failed to list San Francisco. In some printed copies he also wrote that the Tucson Citizen had been closed. At the last minute the Citizen announced it would publish at least through Friday. Craig Moran (photographer) CORRECTION on 8/5/10 A photo in Wednesday's Review-Journal about a Regional Justice Center bomb threat misidentified Clark County Marshal Services officer Randy Hawkes. CORRECTION on 8/4/10 The name of a Senior League softball player in a photo accompanying a weather story in Tuesday's Las Vegas Review-Journal was misspelled. Chuck Godman was pictured cooling himself with a portable fan at Lorenzi Park. CORRECTION on 3/23/10 A story and photo caption in Monday's Review-Journal about a wastewater treatment facility being built by North Las Vegas incorrectly identified the facility's location. The treatment plant is being built on land leased from the U.S. Air Force at Carey Avenue, south of Nellis Air Force Base. Jane Ann Morrison (general interest columnist) CORRECTION on 8/10/10 Jane Ann Morrison's Monday column erroneously reported that Perry Rogers made more money from Andre Agassi's foundation than three other executives made from their charities. The IRS 990 report for the Agassi foundation for 2008 listed $377,000 Rogers was paid by a related for-profit company. Rogers said he took no salary and no expenses for the 15 years he worked on the Agassi foundation. CORRECTION on 8/3/10 Jane Ann Morrison's column Monday contained an error. Romy Ashjian says she is not in business with her ex-husband, auctioneer Guy Deiro, and while he works in California, he has not relocated there. CORRECTION on 4/15/10 A correction in Wednesday's paper included incorrect information. Las Vegas attorney Noel Gage has not been charged with a tax violation. CORRECTION on 4/14/10 In her Saturday column, Jane Ann Morrison incorrectly stated a plea entered by Las Vegas attorney Noel Gage in a federal tax case. Gage negotiated a plea to obstruction of justice. CORRECTION on 2/7/10 Amber Candelaria's place of employment was incorrect in Jane Ann Morrison's Saturday column. Candelaria is director of the Family Law Self Help Center at Family Court. CORRECTION on 1/23/10 All the money raised in a charity event mentioned in Jane Ann Morrison's column Thursday went to Congregation Ner Tamid and was not split with the Meadows School. Morrison's 2009 corrections CORRECTION on 1/5/10 referring to 12/31/09 column Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman was found guilty of an ethics violation by the Nevada Ethics Commission, as stated in Jane Ann Morrison's column Thursday. However, District Judge Mark Denton overturned the commission and the judge's decision was upheld in 2007 by the Nevada Supreme Court. CORRECTION on 12/22/09 State Sen. Floyd Lamb was misidentified as Ralph Lamb in Jane Ann Morrison's column Monday. The park recently was transferred from the state to the city of Las Vegas and the present name is Floyd Lamb Park at Tule Springs, not Floyd Lamb State Park at Tule Springs.
CORRECTION on 11/1/09 The attempted car bombing of Harry Reid’s car occurred in the month of July in 1981, not June as reported in Jane Ann Morrison’s Saturday column. CORRECTION on 9/18/09 The events for Lincoln County High School's 100th anniversary are being held Friday, Sept. 25 and Saturday, Sept. 26, not this weekend as reported in Thursday's Jane Ann Morrison column. CORRECTION on 7/21/09 If U.S. Sen. John Ensign resigns, whoever is appointed would run at the next general election, not necessarily the full term, as reported in Jane Ann Morrison's Monday column. CORRECTION on 6/05/09 The name of successful Las Vegas Justice of the Peace candidate Melanie Tobiasson was misspelled in Jane Ann Morrison’s Thursday column as well as her May 19 column.s CORRECTION on 5/25/09 Jane Ann Morrison’s Monday column was unclear about Claudine and Shelby Williams being the first to open a buffet on the Las Vegas Strip. In her oral history, Claudine Williams said the first Las Vegas Strip buffet was started at their Silver Slipper Casino. A misplaced clause in the column incorrectly made it sound like she was referring to the Holiday Casino. However, historians credit the late Herb McDonald for starting the first Las Vegas Strip buffet, starting with a “chuck wagon” of mostly cold cuts at the El Rancho Vegas in 1946. CORRECTION on 4/29/09 The word "not" was missing in Jane Ann Morrison's Saturday column. The sentence should have read: "Many resorts simply lease space to nightclubs and do not manage them."
CORRECTION on 4/14/09 Jane Ann Morrison's column in Monday's Las Vegas Review-Journal contained an error. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld U.S. District Judge James Mahan's dismissal of a securities case against Daniel Chapman, Sean Flanagan and Herbert Jacobi. The case is closed, not unresolved as stated in the column.
CORRECTION on 4/10/09 Gaming Control Board Chairman Ed Olsen was not Nevada's first board chairman as Jane Ann Morrison wrote in a blog item republished on Wednesday's editorial page.
CORRECTION on 03/02/09 -- The name of the law firm Bullivant Houser Bailey PC was misspelled in Jane Ann Morrison’s Saturday column. |
