Our search for names for the Brighton and Hove Walk of Fame provoked lots of interest - and some corrections to our long list of nominees.

Roy Banks, from Brighton, says last Friday we claimed Victor Chandler owned several racehorses, including Hi Joe - who was, in fact, a dog.

"Ooops," says Roy, adding: "I think, if my memory serves me right, Hi Joe was kidnapped."

Indeed the black dog was stolen just before the 1965 Greyhound Derby for which he was favourite.

He was found a year later in a garage in Dunstable but a man was later found not guilty of kidnap.

As to the error, our reporter Rowan Dore says he mistakenly read the word Derby and assumed it was the horse kind. Ooops indeed.

Tom Chilton, of Hove, says he was extremely sorry to see we omitted from the nominees Captain Crowe VC, a "very brave and most modest" man who lived and died in Woodingdean.

He was awarded the Victoria Cross after capturing a German machinegun post during the First World War.

David Bennett (last week's "Sir" Ted Dexter corrector) says it gives him no pleasure to point out that on Wednesday last week we not only spelt the name of David Sheppard, a former Sussex cricket captain and Bishop of Liverpool, as Shepherd but we also used a picture of the wildlife artist of that same (incorrect) name!

Mr Bennett, from Hove, adds: "Errors such as these, which - let's face it - are horrendous, merely alienate readers. What hope is there?"

Well, maybe some. Marjorie Crock, from Brighton, says she is a friend of Ann Collard, the unfortunate woman who lost a son and her mother within days of each other, and feels our reporting was very good.

She adds: "Obviously you have to report news in such a way that it is interesting to your readers but I feel your reports showed sensitivity and avoided dramatisation and over sentimentality. Thank you." No, Miss Crock, thank you.

Similarly, Helen Fuller, from Brighton, comes to my defence of the word "executed" in a headline about Bruce the police dog, which I referred to last week.

"You were so right to use that emotive term," she says. "It was something that needed to be referred to in the strongest (correct) terms." Once again, many thanks.

Jo Crabbe, from Portslade, on the other hand, was disappointed to find no mention of the London Marathon in the evening edition on Monday last week: "Supposedly the best marathon in the world and you don't seem to think it warrants a mention."

Sorry, Jo. There was a report and picture of the women's race winner, Paula Radcliffe, in the morning edition but it had been overtaken by more up-to-date national news by the evening.

Gerald Spicer, of Portslade, says we spelt the word plaque as plague in Peter Leeds' letter about band leader Ray Noble on Tuesday, April 9. Thanks, Gerald, and sorry Peter.

Brighton and Hove Councillor Susan Joy questions whether the three councillors (herself included) who took part in the Middle East peace march through the city last weekend could rightly be described as "several" councillors, as we reported.

She says that her dictionary says several means more than three and anyway they were the only councillors out of more than a possible 70 who could have attended so the term was surely overstretched.

Well, Susan, my dictionary says several means "more than two but not many". Three for example.

Finally, I am indebted to Misha Glenny, a Seagulls season ticket holder who says our page 3 Serbian headline on Tuesday - Komicar na temelju te Seagulls (Come on you Seagulls) - was not quite right.

Misha, who speaks Serbian, says properly translated the headline said: "Comedian on the basis of the Seagulls".

He adds: "And for the sake of any unsuspecting Brightonians who find themselves in the Serbian capital, can I urge that they avoid making the claim that Albion are the second most popular side in Belgrade after Red Star - especially if they are chatting to Partizan Belgrade fans at the time."

Hvala, Misha. (To non-Serbian speakers, that's thanks - I think!)