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CORRECTIONS

Wednesday, February 9, 2005; Page A02

The TV Column in the Feb. 8 Style section incorrectly described one of the Super Bowl commercials that were scrapped. The ad featured the bare bottom of Mickey Rooney, not Andy Rooney.

An Associated Press item in the Feb. 7 Washington in Brief column incorrectly reported that a judge dismissed a lawsuit challenging the Army's right to force soldiers to serve past the dates of their enlistments. The judge rejected Spec. David Qualls's request for a preliminary injunction that would have removed him from active duty. Qualls and seven other soldiers had filed suit challenging their active-duty extensions, and that remains before the court.

Style's Feb. 7 television highlights incorrectly identified the star of this season's "The Bachelorette" on ABC. She is Jen Schefft.

A Feb. 6 Arts article misidentified the curator of the Baltimore Museum of Art's exhibition on how slides have been used in art. The curator is Darsie Alexander, not Chris Gilbert.

The Feb. 5 obituary of Ossie Davis incorrectly said that he died the previous Tuesday. He was found dead Friday, Feb. 4. The article also said that "Evening Shade" was an NBC series; it was on CBS.

A Feb. 5 Real Estate article about how to appeal property tax assessments incorrectly said that Maryland "for the first time lets homeowners look online for the county analysis of their property, called a worksheet, before they file an appeal." Homeowners cannot view worksheets online, but for the first time they can order them online before they file an appeal.

A Feb. 1 Business article about the Washington Examiner quoted media consultant Barbara G. Cohen, who questioned the Examiner's plan for free distribution. The story should have noted that Cohen earned a consulting fee in 2003 from The Washington Post, which competes with the Examiner, for an analysis she did on classified advertising. The same article incorrectly reported that Examiner owner Philip F. Anschutz converted the San Francisco Examiner from a broadsheet to a tabloid. The format change was made by the paper's previous owners.


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