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For the record - Jan. 22, 2012

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Johnny Otis: The obituary of pioneering R&B musician, producer and disc jockey Johnny Otis in the Jan. 19 LATExtra section said that Otis first came to Los Angeles to join Harlan Leonard’s Kansas City Rockers. The group’s name was the Kansas City Rockets. The obituary also said that Otis and his wife, Phyllis, had been married for 60 years. They were married for 70 years.

John Muir heir: An article in the Jan. 10 Section A about John Muir’s great-great-grandson said the Muir-Hanna Trust’s copyrighted archives are housed at the College of the Pacific’s Center for John Muir Environmental Studies in Stockton. The archives are at the University of the Pacific Library’s Holt-Atherton Special Collections department.

Rules of war: An article in the Jan. 15 California section about the difficulties faced by modern military personnel in determining who is the enemy said that the U.S. Coast Guard Academy is in New Haven, Conn. The academy is in New London, Conn.

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Tree trimming: An article in the Jan. 15 California section about a La Cañada Flintridge resident fined for excessive tree trimming said that Franklin Wang would have to pay a $3,650 fine. In fact, that figure was the city staff’s recommendation, and the Planning Commission reduced the fine to $2,000.

Bat deaths: An article in the Jan. 18 LATExtra section about a fungus that has killed millions more bats than previously estimated misspelled the last name of U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service spokeswoman Ann Froschauer as Froschaur.

Council election: An article in the Jan. 15 California section about the Los Angeles City Council runoff between Joe Buscaino and state Assemblyman Warren Furutani said that after the Pearl Harbor attack, Furutani’s grandparents were among Japanese Americans sent to interment camps. It should have said internment camps.

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