I made a plea last week for readers' views on what we should include on our City pages after Victoria Stewart's suggestion they should carry only local, not national, stories.

Margaret Julyan, from Haywards Heath, responds: "I do not buy a paper every day so appreciate stories of national interest. So put me down for a yes for them to continue."

Our page 3 story last Saturday about Sussex writer Virginia Nicholson criticising the casting of Nicole Kidman as her great-aunt Virginia Woolf in the new film The Hours contained an error in the secondary headline.

It said: "Ancestor of literary star points out the errors in historical film". What it should have said was "Descendant of . . . " as Douglas d'Enno, from Saltdean, and Russell Ridout, from Hailsham, point out. My thanks to both.

Many readers have said how much they enjoyed our colour picture in Tuesday's paper of the dramatic sunset on Sunday evening over the Sussex coast.

But it puzzled Lorraine Forbes, from Eastbourne, who says she had always believed the sun sets in the West but our picture showed it rising over the sea.

Well, Lorraine, it does set in the West and our picture showed that. It was taken from near Rottingdean looking over the sea towards Worthing.

A caption to a picture accompanying the story on January 16 about artist Bonny Cummins' paintings of the West Pier in Brighton stated she would be donating the profits from the sale of the work to the West Pier Trust.

In fact, she will be donating a percentage of the proceeds. Bonny has to make a living, after all!

The article in Monday's paper about a murder at a block of flats in Broadwater Road, Worthing, said the scene was next to the Oasis Centre used by the Broadwater Christian Fellowship.

I have been asked to point out by Neil Condon and Mark Langham that the fellowship had no connection with the incident.

A couple of queries now, the first from Jenny Jeffrey, from Brighton, who wonders why we never print the Wednesday Thunderball numbers in our National Lottery panel on page 10 when we print all the others for both the Saturday and Wednesday night draws.

The answer is it was a pure oversight. We have now started publishing them - thanks to Jenny.

The second query comes from David Cooper, also from Brighton, who says he is puzzled as to why in our weather spot on page 2 we publish the temperature in degrees Fahrenheit as well as Celsius when the former measurement was abolished years ago.

The reason, David, is that, rather like feet and inches and pounds and ounces, there are some readers who prefer the old measurements.