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- Newsgroups: rec.railroad
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!emory!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!spool.mu.edu!sdd.hp.com!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!roma
- From: roma@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu (Jon Roma)
- Subject: ``Gauntlet'' vs. ``Gantlet'' (was Re: South Shore Wreck 1/18)
- Message-ID: <C17wDp.34H@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Keywords: press
- Organization: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- References: <1993Jan20.160557.9328@sei.cmu.edu> <1993Jan21.135739.14978@news.nd.edu>
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 18:51:10 GMT
- Lines: 54
-
- phinton@larson.helios.nd.edu (paul hinton) writes:
-
- >In article <1993Jan20.160557.9328@sei.cmu.edu>, weinstoc@sei.cmu.edu (Chuck Weinstock) writes:
-
- >|> Just a quick question: the USA Today writeup of the wreck talked about a
- >|> bridge in a place called "gantlet". I assume the reporter got confused at
- >|> that they really meant that the bridge had a gauntlet track. Or is there a
- >|> place on the South Shore with a gauntlet track called gantlet?
-
- >The correct spelling is "gantlet." A gauntlet is a type of weapon.
-
- Actually, a gauntlet is a medieval form of armored glove, not a weapon.
-
- The issue of ``gantlet'' vs. ``gauntlet'' has come up in this newsgroup in
- the past. Both spellings are correct and in common use, according to
- various sources. Both editions of Webster's I checked give the railroad
- definition under ``gantlet'' but goes on to say that ``gantlet'' and
- ``gauntlet'' are alternative spellings. Our online Oxford English Dictionary
- server does not list the railroad usage of the word but states that
- ``gantlet'' is an obsolete form of ``gauntlet''. (Perhaps U. K. railroads
- do not use this term at all.)
-
- Within the railroad industry, the usage of ``gantlet'' is more common but
- not universal. South Shore operating timetables use the term ``gauntlet
- track'' in reference to the two locations on the railroad where this track
- arrangement was in use. (I commonly use this spelling because it's the one
- I encountered first.)
-
- >Just
- >read James J. Kilpatrick's articles on spelling pitfalls and the press. The
- >South Bend Tribune got the spelling right in all of its articles, but the
- >Chicago Tribune was downright pitiful, using both spellings all over the
- >place.
-
- Regardless of which spelling one uses, I agree that a newspaper should choose
- one style and stick with it. This word, however, is not in common enough use
- in the [non-rail] press for it to appear in most newspapers' style books.
-
- As an aside, Tuesday's Chicago _Tribune_ gave a good description of a gauntlet
- track. This description and accompanying drawing were good enough that
- readers not familiar with railroading should be able to understand the
- concept. This was the best description I've read in the press -- some very
- confusing and misleading ones have appeared elsewhere.
-
- An article in Wednesday's _Tribune_ addressed the issue of the safety of
- gauntlet track arrangements and seemed to observe that gauntlet track
- arrangements, while not common, are no more unsafe than a conventional section
- of single track with turnouts, contrary to some misconceptions in the news
- media (and in rec.railroad).
- --
- Jon Roma
- Computing and Communications Services Office,
- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Internet: roma@uiuc.edu UUCP: uunet!uiucuxc!uiuc.edu!roma
-