Victoria Stewart, from Hove, offers congratulations on our new Life section, which has taken the place of our old Business and Evolution section on Tuesdays.

She says it is "a refreshing addition".

We have not forgotten business news, however, and now publish two City pages each weekday, combining the best elements of the old section with some additions.

Victoria still questions the criteria for choosing national stories for the pages rather than local, citing one about a change of personnel at a Birmingham company and a similar one about a Reading firm.

"Surely anyone that interested in national business would buy a national newspaper?" she asks.

Well, she's right and wrong in that stories like those she mentions are irrelevant but others - such as the Safeway takeover, interest rate changes and the like - are, we think, of interest even though they're not local.

Perhaps other readers would like to let me know if they agree or not.

Several readers have written to say Phil Plaine's letter published last Saturday was accompanied by a picture not of an Atlantic Class locomotive, as the caption stated, but a former Great Central Railway 4-6-0 and it wasn't photographed at London Victoria but at Nottingham Victoria.

My thanks to Roy Butcher, from Uckfield, John Sanderson, from Worthing, and Robert Turtle, from Shoreham, who all spotted the error.

I have no excuse for the next complaint from Ron Stead, from Bognor, who says the Pick of the Day on our television pages on Monday, January 13, strongly hinted Richard Hillman (Brian Capron) was to kill Maxine Peacock (Tracy Shaw) in Coronation Street.

The murder plot had been something of an enthralling mystery which we ruined, says Ron, adding: "It was like reading the last page of a whodunnit before the rest of the story."

Sorry to Ron and other fans of the soap whose enjoyment we spoilt. I'll take steps to ensure it doesn't happen again.

Our report in earlier editions of Thursday last week about a woman caught smoking in the toilet of a plane bound for Gatwick wrongly stated the aircraft was a JMC Boeing 737. In fact it was a 757 because JMC doesn't have any 737s, says Kate Bowes, a public relations executive with the Thomas Cook-owned company. Sorry.

E Oliver, from Portslade, says our story on Wednesday last week about a forthcoming gig by Portslade band No Direxion in aid of the Albion Forty Note Fund incorrectly spelt their name as No Direction. An understandable error, methinks.

J Tribe, from Hove, spotted a story in Tuesday's paper about an open day at a library, which failed to say which one it was. It was the one near you in Hove.

And finally, I return to last week's grammar debate and the "blistering attack" by Judy Moore as fellow reader Elizabeth Syrett, from Lewes, calls it in a letter of response.

She says: "When Judy concluded that Americans and Canadians were 'better at it than we are' the victims of her tirade might legitimately ask 'at what?'

"If we disregard the obvious joke, is 'it' perhaps her aforementioned 'misspellings, sloppy grammar and clichs'?

"Misuse of English does indeed cause unnecessary suffering to those of us who love and respect our language. However, there is always a danger implicit in presenting oneself as an authority."

Amen to that!