
Corrections: June 17, 2025
An article on Saturday about the attacks in Israel and Iran on Friday misstated which Iranian official addressed the United Nations Security Council on Friday. It was Iran's U.N. ambassador, Amir Saeid Iravani, not Iran's foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi.
An article on Saturday about the victims of the Air India flight from Ahmedabad to London's Gatwick Airport that crashed into the facilities of a nearby medical college misstated the surname of a family friend of one of the crash victims. He is Sanjay Jhajjar, not Chhibber.
An article on Saturday about the Trump administration's shifting rationale for detaining Mahmoud Khalil after a federal judge ruled that the government could not continue to hold the Columbia University graduate under its initial justification misspelled the surname of a former homeland security official. He is Scott Shuchart, not Schuchart.
An article on Monday about the wedding of Huma Abedin and Alex Soros's wedding in the Hamptons misstated Ms. Abedin's age. She is 48, not 49.
An article on Friday about the six-episode Australian murder mini-series 'The Survivors' misidentified the character Mia in the series. Mia is Kieran's girlfriend and the mother of his child; she is not his wife.
An obituary on June 11 about Frederick Forsyth, the author of 'The Day of the Jackal' and other thrillers, referred incorrectly to an incident in 1973 when Mr. Forsyth, working for British intelligence, traveled to Dresden, which was then in East Germany. Although he recalled that Vladimir V. Putin was the K.G.B. station chief there at the time, Mr. Putin did not join the K.G.B. until 1975 and was not stationed in Dresden until 1985.
An obituary on Sunday about Harris Yulin, the award-winning actor and director, misstated part of the name of a play in which Mr. Yulin appeared in 1963. It is 'Next Time I'll Sing to You,' not 'Next Time I'll Sing for You.'
Errors are corrected during the press run whenever possible, so some errors noted here may not have appeared in all editions.
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