Angela Reeves was "horrified" to read the At The Bar pub review column in last week's ahead section.
Angela, who is Commanding Officer of the Newhaven and Seaford Unit 442 of the Sea Cadets, had just returned from escorting youngsters abroad when she sat down "for a quiet read of my local paper" and saw the headline on the review of the Inn at Newhaven, "a stone's throw" from the unit's headquarters.
It said: "Sea cadets' drinks club".
"We do not use the Bridge Inn on our parade nights or in our spare time," says Angela. "The title of the article wrongly implies that we do. I feel it is misleading and detrimental to the good name of our unit."
Of course, the headline was not meant to refer to the unit - only that the pub was a traditional seaside inn seemingly trying to appeal to youngsters - and made this clear by the use of a small c in "cadets".
Nevertheless, I accept it was misleading - Angela says it has been noticed in the local community - and I apologise for any offence or wrong impression given.
Who was the oldest person at the Argus party to celebrate the Queen's Mother's 100th birthday? Certainly not 99-year-old Ethel Quinner, as we reported on August 4.
In fact, there was one woman of 100 and two others of 104, says Margaret Welton, organiser of the British Red Cross's Rottingdean and District Centre, which organised the trio's transport to the event. I am happy to acknowledge the trio's fine achievements here.
Now to sport and Freddie Watts, of Hove, who wonders why we had no mention of the first women's day/night match to be held in England at Hove last Wednesday, which he watched.
"I would have thought that such a history-making match deserved at least a paragraph," he says. Quite right, too. In fact we did have a short report but didn't find space for it on the following day. We did include it in our women's cricket round-up this Wednesday.
Sheila Simmons, from Coulsdon in Surrey, wonders why we mixed up the scorers' names from Albion's under-19 and under-17 teams' games in last Thursday's paper and reported the club's youth team had lost 3-2 at Southend in last week's Sports Argus, when in fact in was the under-17s who had lost.
The first error was actually caused by an Albion staff member, who I shall not name for fear of embarrassment but who supplied us with the information, and the second was due to wrong information supplied to us by the Press Association.
I am happy to say we recorded the correct facts in our Albion youth update in yesterday's Argus.
John Byrd, of Saltdean, says he enjoys reading our Community News but wonders why we have correspondents for both Rottingdean and Saltdean since, even together, they don't form a "large conurbation".
The answer, John, is that our both are keen contributors and retaining them both ensures you get ALL the best local news, even if this has sometimes led to duplication. Better too much than none at all?
Sorry to readers of our West Sussex edition on Monday who did not get a report and picture from the RAFA show at Shoreham at the weekend due an oversight on our part.
The full report and six pictures appeared in our Night Final edition.
Finally, our apologies to Jason Anthony Pelling, who we stated in our edition of August 23 had appeared before Brighton Magistrates' and been convicted of unlawful possession and supplying cannabis and been committed to crown court for sentence.
In fact, Mr Pelling admitted possession but was not convicted of supplying cannabis and the magistrates directed a crown court trial in relation to possession with intent to supply Class B drugs. I am happy to put the record straight.
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