The outline of United States railway history is as follows:
1810s-1830s: Various inventors and entrepreneurs make suggestions about building model railways in the United States; someone named Stevens[?] builds a test track and runs a locomotive around it in Hoboken[?], New Jersey.
1870s and 1880s: Strikes break out against railroads and the Pullman Palace Car Company[?]. Corporations hire Pinkerton guards to break up the strikes. Nonetheless, much violence occurs in the strikes; folks are shot dead, buildings and rolling stock are burned, and reports of rioting shocks middle-class Americans.
1940s: World War II brings railroads the highest ridership[?] in American history, as soldiers are being sent to fight overseas in the Pacific Theater and the European Theater[?]. However, automobile travel causes ridership to decline after the war ends.
1950s and 1960s[?]: Drastic decline in railroad travel in the United States of America, due to automobiles, trucks[?], and airplanes, as first jetliners take to the air. Railroads respond through mergers[?] and attempts to shut down trains and railroad lines. However, the FCC refuses to let railroads shut down many trains.
1970s and 1980s: Amtrak introduces double-deckSuperliner[?] rolling stock. Auto Train[?] begins running as independent line (is this in the 1960s?) , but fails a few years later; Amtrak later runs Auto Train as one of its more-heavily-promoted lines.
1990s: Amtrak funding comes under heavier scrutiny by Congress, while Amtrak creates new trains such as the Talgo[?] and the Acela.
... (soft palate[?]) (k, kh, g, gh, n as in ing)
Palatal (hard palate[?]) (c, ch, j, jh, ~n)
Retroflex[?] (roughly the place of articulation of English ...