Apologies to Andrew Hanuman, who was featured in our article on Monday to mark World Aids Day.

In the morning edition we used a picture of him overlaid with a headline saying "He said he was clean, now I've got HIV", which was in fact a quote from another man featured in the article.

Mr Hanuman, pictured, is a health promotion worker in Kemp Town, Brighton, and wants to be "disassociated" from the article, which he says could have given the impression the quote referred to him, even though the picture was captioned correctly.

I am happy to clarify any misunderstanding.

An item in Tuesday's morning edition about Preston Park in Brighton accidentally swapped city councillor Kevin Allen's party from Labour to Green. Apologies to him and thanks to Christopher Hawtree, from Hove, who spotted the error.

The teacher/football referee in the film Kes was Brian Glover and not Brian Cox, as an article on Monday on schools sport said. Thanks to Joan Williams for that one.

Tony Booker points out I should have referred to RAF Gatow and not Gaton in last week's column. Sorry, the error (also spotted by Gerald Spicer - see below) was mine and not the writer's. He also points out our sports item last Friday on new Peacehaven football club's new French coach Bechar Beujaoui stated an injury ruined his career "when beckoned stardom". It should, of course, have said "when stardom beckoned" but Tony jokes "perhaps it was a new son for a well-known England footballer".

He also asks what Julie Burchill, from Hove, meant by "dissing the USA" in her letter last Friday. I believe, Tony, diss is modern slang meaning to belittle and I daren't edit Julie's words since she is a columnist for The Guardian!

Mrs C Nabbs, from Portslade, was disappointed to find no review of Michael Ball's show at the Brighton Centre last Saturday.

She says: "It was almost sold out and probably one of the best crowds of the whole tour (yes, I have been to six of them) and I can't believe one of the most popular entertainers this country has seen for many a year doesn't even warrant a mention, never mind a full review."

Sorry, Mrs Nabbs, we simply didn't have a reviewer available to see the show but I think your words give a fair impression of what it was like!

June Stone, from Hove, was pleased to have two of her old photographs from St Nicholas Church of England School in Portslade published in Your Memories in Weekend last Saturday but points out the names of the children seated on chairs in the 1952 picture were not printed.

"Should you want to print them," says Mrs Stone, "their names were, left to right: Averil Darby, Hazel Doo, Sandra Kennett, Angela Cheal, Jennifer King, Sylvia Gander Marion Sutton and Barbara Mansbridge."

And finally back to Mr Spicer, from Portslade, who says in the Your Memories section of Weekend on November 22 we referred to Fishmarket Yard instead of Fishmarket Hard and in the same edition we said Pop Idol hopeful Chris Hide lived in Lancing Crescent, Lancing, instead of Lancing Close and we used a small c instead of a capital C to boot. Thanks.