How ironic The Argus last Saturday included an interview with punctuation queen Lynne Truss and a letter on the letters page misspelling its as it's.

"Perhaps you had better ask Lynne to proof read," says Mari Booker, from Portslade, who was among those who spotted the error and adds: "If she is busy, I am happy to help."

Perhaps she could help us with our geography too.

Percy Upton, from Hove, says in a report on July 8 we said (not for the first time) Church Street is in Hove when it's in Brighton.

Mr Upton adds: "Apart from Adam Trimingham, is there no one with local knowledge?"

Not according to Mr T Lamb, from Shoreham, who says even the usually infallible Adam made an error in his report on Bedford Square in Brighton on Tuesday last week.

He explains: "Adam stated that near the bottom stood the imposing Bedford Hotel, sadly destroyed by fire in 1964 and replaced by a Sixties building with a new hotel and flats.

"The actual location is on the seafront at the bottom of Little Preston Street. Bedford Square lies between the bottom of Montpelier Road and the Jarvis Norfolk Hotel."

The introductory paragraph of our story last Friday about plans for a fabulous glass crescent in Pelham Place, Hastings, was exaggerated in saying that the scheme was "on the rocks after it emerged the project is illegal".

In fact, as the rest of the story made clear, the law may have been technically breached by Hastings Borough Council 111 years ago by not establishing a charitable trust to manage the foreshore as demanded in a covenant but the current council is confident of overcoming this problem without affecting the scheme.

I am grateful to the council's marketing and communications manager Kevin Boorman for the clarification.

Roger Whaley, chairman of Folders Lane Action Group, which is fighting a proposed housing development in Burgess Hill, has asked us to make clear the group has not questioned Mid Sussex MP Nicholas Soames about his role in a trust which invests in the developers as we stated on July 9. In fact, it has only sought his views on the development itself. I am happy to do so.

Now to the reference in Feedback two weeks ago to the recruiting officer for the National Service Association. He is Graham Weaver, of 20 Beach Hill Road, Sutton Coldfield B72 1DT (and not Wolverhampton as I, on a reader's advice, put).

What is it about us and rainbows? In the morning edition of Tuesday, July 6, we carried a picture of a rainbow in black and white. And then in the same edition on Monday this week, there was a similar picture on the letters pages again in monochrome and, to add insult to injury, an accompanying caption beginning "Colourful". I think I can safely say that's enough rainbows.

And finally, Douglas Eden, from Brighton, says thank you for our recent offer to readers to dine out at the city's top restaurants for just £10.

Douglas and three friends went to Latin in the Lane and had "a super meal and glass of wine".

"An excellent choice," he says, "thank you, Argus and staff at Latin in the Lane, for a very enjoyable evening. What's next for £10? The car could do with a service!"