Well, I asked for it - and got it, all right. Readers' views of our new-look TV pages, that is.

David Kenny, of Hove, is not a fan: "What ineffective, lop-sided idiot have you got compiling them? The layout is so weak I couldn't find it and it looks like an advertising section.

"And can't he/she even count up to four? Someone should tell him we number things 1,2,3,4, not 1,2,4,3. Put him/her back on obituaries."

John Plowman, of Brighton, agrees, saying it causes confusion when recording programmes: "Needless to say, I have already missed one programme and no doubt will miss some more when I am in a hurry. Explanations please!"

Here goes. We switched ITV and Channel 4 around because the former requires more space than the latter.

It is only possible to give this by putting Channel 4 third, to allow room for the ITV variations panel.

Plus, I think you may get used to it. As to the placement of the pages, they are always on the centre spread of the main paper (which is under the pull-out, if there is one) and, more often than not, are cross-referenced from the front page.

I have to mention, too, Glyn George, of Hove (a national paper's TV writer), who says: "Well done. The new pages work very well and are a vast improvement on before."

Still on the subject of TV and Mr P Winton, of Worthing, noticed our Friday TV page in the Weekend section of October 27 was labelled Friday, November 1, instead of November 2.

"I appreciate the clocks went back an hour," he says, "but, oh dear, somewhere along the line you lost a complete day! As I had a hospital appointment for Monday, November 5, I had to refer back to my calendar. Your date changer will have to learn to sleep with his hands under the pillow."

Maurice Packham is wondering where he is, too, after we published a letter from him last Wednesday and managed to move his address from Horsham to Worthing! Sorry, Mr Packham.

Tony Booker says he had "a little chuckle" after reading about the London to Brighton veteran car race in last Friday's If It's On ... section.

He explains: "What is a Daimler Tonneaym? Tonneau, perhaps? Also, the picture didn't show a veteran car but a Thirties Morris 8 open tourer. Veteran cars are those built up to the end of 1904, Edwardian (1905-1916) and Vintage (1919-1930). Certain cars after this may be deemed Post-Vintage Thoroughbred." Thanks.

In last Saturday's story about new Sussex Chief Constable Ken Jones, we said another applicant, Kent Deputy Chief Constable Bob Ayling, had led the inquiry that led to the downfall of the previous chief, Paul Whitehouse. In fact, the inquiry was carried out by Kent Assistant Chief Constable Barbara Wilding.

I am grateful to Beryl Brett, of Steyning, who says our report on October 29 should have said Nora Potter started as secretary of the Federation of Sussex Industries (FSI) and not a founder director.

And she should know - her grandfather, William Offord MBE, first employed Nora, who later become the FSI's first director-general.

A car which we reported on October 13 had been stolen from Shoreham fire station had not.

In fact, it had been scrapped after being donated to the station and used for fire crews to practise the use of cutting equipment. The error was due to incorrect information supplied to us in good faith by police.

Finally, fireworks and sorry to all those people expecting a guide to Sussex bonfires in Monday's (November 5) paper.

We actually published it in If It's On ... last Friday because there were so many bonfire events happening over the weekend as well.

And we didn't publish the map guide to the Lewes event, as some people asked, because the organisers were trying to keep the numbers down for safety reasons.

Apologies, too, from Brighton Lions Club for a wrong telephone number in their advertisement for their displays at Southwick and Withdean stadia.