Allan M. Siegal joined the New York Times in 1960. He has overseen usage and style at the Times since 1977.
After working as an editor on the foreign desk and heading the news desk, he became an assistant managing editor
in 1986.
Connolly, William G. : New York Times
William G. Connolly joined the Times in 1966 and has held editing posts on the foreign, national, and metropolitan
desks, The New York Times Magazine, Science Times, The Week in Review, and the Real Estate section. He became a
senior editor in 1987.
Summary
Is the deejay a wannabe?
Or does the D.J. just want to be?
When is heaven capitalized?
Do you stand in line or on line?
For anyone who writes�short stories or business plans, book reports or news articles�knotty choices of spelling,
grammar, punctuation, and meaning lurk in every line: Lay or lie? Who or whom? None is or none are? Is Touch-Tone
a trademark? How about Day-Glo? It�s enough to send you in search of a Martini. (Or is that a martini?) Now everyone
can find answers to these and thousands of other questions in the handy alphabetical guide used by the writers
and editors of the world�s most authoritative newspaper.
The guidelines to hyphenation, punctuation, capitalization, and spelling are crisp and compact, created for instant
reference in the rush of daily deadlines. This revised and expanded edition is updated with solutions to the tantalizing
problems that plague writers in the new century:
* How to express the equality of the sexes without using self-conscious devices like �he or she.�
* How to choose thoughtfully between African-American and black; Hispanic and Latino; American Indian and Native
American.
* How to translate the vocabulary of e-mail and cyberspace and cope with the eccentricities of Internet company
names and website addresses.
With wry wit, the authors, who have more than seventy-five years of combined newsroom experience at the New York
Times, have created an essential and entertaining reference tool.