From:	CBS%UK.AC.RUTHERFORD.MAIL::CA.UTORONTO.UTCS.VM::POSTMSTR 14-JAN-1989 09:16:48.51
To:	archive
CC:	
Subj:	

Via: UK.AC.RUTHERFORD.MAIL; Sat, 14 Jan 89   9:16 GMT
Received: from UKACRL by UK.AC.RL.IB (Mailer X1.25) with BSMTP id 9242; Sat, 14
          Jan 89 09:15:24 GM
Received: from vm.utcs.utoronto.ca by UKACRL.BITNET (Mailer X1.25) with BSMTP
          id 1845; Sat, 14 Jan 89 09:15:22 G
Received: by UTORONTO (Mailer X1.25) id 0351; Fri, 13 Jan 89 14:43:15 EST
Date:     Fri, 13 Jan 89 14:43:06 EST
From:     "Steve Younker (Postmaster)" <POSTMSTR@CA.UTORONTO.UTCS.VM>
To:       archive@UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX

=========================================================================
Date:         1 June 1987, 14:13:58 EDT
Reply-To:     MCCARTY@UTOREPAS
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         MCCARTY@UTOREPAS
 
Two recently promulgated errors: (1) I was given the wrong information
about fetching a list of resident files from the UTORONTO node. I will
let you know when the proper syntax has been determined, and I'll then
be able to give you some idea of how much we can afford to store
centrally. (2) A bad address for a colleague on MLNET has caused a rash
of irrelevant chatter, for which I apologize. The problem is being
investigated, but since other messages get through to him at the same
address, it's difficult to know what's responsible.
Yours, W.M.
=========================================================================
Date:         1 June 1987, 14:35:53 EDT
Reply-To:     MCCARTY@UTOREPAS
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         MCCARTY@UTOREPAS
 
Received: from watdaisy.uucp by water; Mon, 1 Jun 87 08:43:16 EDT
Received: by watdaisy; Mon, 1 Jun 87 08:43:12 EDT
Date: Mon, 1 Jun 87 08:43:12 EDT
From: Frank Wm Tompa <fwtompa@watdaisy.UUCP>
Message-Id: <8706011243.AA20128@watdaisy.uucp>
To: MCCARTY@utorepas.bitnet
Subject: electronic publication
 
Because HUMANIST is non-refereed, I would think that it falls in
a completely different category than a refereed journal.  I believe
that an author could honestly claim that circulation in HUMANIST is
similar to circulation of a technical report -- regardless of its
quality, it is not perceived as a publication (wrt brownie points).
On the other hand, such circulation does not in any way infringe on
journal publication of the same document.  I would claim that, in
CS at least, there would be no conflict nor any perceived conflict.
 
P.S. Were there to be a conflict, I as an author, would definitely
     choose a refereed journal if I thought the paper was of
     sufficient quality.
=========================================================================
Date:         2 June 1987, 21:45:04 EDT
Reply-To:     MCCARTY@UTOREPAS
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         MCCARTY@UTOREPAS
 
A contribution from Jeff Gillette, whom many of you must know,
at least by reputation (as author of the Duke University Toolkit,
that is):
====================================================================
 
Received: by TUCCVM (Mailer X1.24) id 6058; Sun, 31 May 87 21:08:47 EDT
Date:         Sun, 31 May 87 20:48:10 EDT
From:         Jeffrey William Gillette <DYBBUK@TUCCVM>
Subject:      Re: Electronic publishing
To:           Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
 
Regarding the subject of electronic vs. printed journal publishing, Perhaps
I might throw my own 2 cents into the discussion.  Let me start with two
observations: a) many major journals in the computer trade press sponsor
electronic discussions on various systems (e.g. Byte and Bix, Dr. Dobbs
and Compuserve).  These magazines have increasingly featured a "best of..."
section in their printed issues.  b) Many of the major professional
journals (MLJ, Foreign Languae Annals, etc.) are featuring columns on
computer applications and research.  Generally these are written by a
continuing scholar who has earned a reputation for being "computer wise."
 
Would there be any advantage in contacting one or several professional
journals who have editorial members involved in ACH, your Humanist project,
or some subset of the two, inviting them to publish the "best of the
Humanist discussion" - that is applicable to the appropriate discipline(s).
It seems to me that the short question/answer/comment format of, e.g. Byte,
would not be entirely appropriate.  Perhaps, however, several "mini-columns"
or longer discussions that take place each month would prove useful to the
larger audience of the traditional journals.
 
The first objection I see to this type of arrangement would be the problem
of credit - does the university consider the regular computer column of Dan
Brink or Bob Kraft in their particular discipline journals as valid a con-
tribution to the academy as their more traditional contributions.  Could
some type of peer review of such columns be set up by which tenure commitees
could be satisfied that this publication was indeed a valid contribution
to the discipline?   In the case of a school like Duke I have serious doubts.
Perhaps other faculty are more enlightened.
 
I know this suggestion is unpolished, but I guess it is as useful as any,
given the ofttimes languid pace with which electronic media are being
integrated into many of our disciplines.
 
Peace,
 
Jeff
=========================================================================
Date:         Wed,  3 Jun 87 16:18:25 GMT
Reply-To:     CMI011%UK.AC.SOUTHAMPTON.IBM@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         CMI011%UK.AC.SOUTHAMPTON.IBM@AC.UK
 
 
Heres my thoughts on the 'how to run Humanist' debate, which is
of general interest beyond Humanist, I think (the debate, not my thoughts!).
I think Willard's introductory note to new readers adequately defines what
is and is not proper material for the list, so that leaves three problems:
  a) should the distribution be a weekly digest? at present, Toronto just
forwards incoming material as soon as it arrives. This means that most days
one gets a Humanist or two, each of which may add to a debate. This is all
very fine in theory, but in practice I find it confusing as I get flustered
by the size of my mailbox. I would much prefer it if all messages were collecte
d
for a week and then mailed on to us in a batch, so that, say, every
Monday morning one got a huge mail full of peoples thoughts. As it is,
I wonder who else is behaving like me - I waited for a few days, then
printed out all the Humanist stuff and am now replying.
 
 b) mail vs. filestore. I would say that no contribution should normally
exceed 150 lines, and that most should fit on a single screen or two. It
simply is not possible to comfortably read the text on a VDU for most of
us (I exclude the SUN owners, lucky dogs). I would go so far as to suggest
that a Humanist editor (presumably Willard - sorry!) be asked to look
at messages and put those over 150 lines into a file server system.
 
 c) "publication" - is this a real issue? anything as long as an article
that is going to give any brownie points in ones institution isnt appropriate
for electronic distribution in the present state of the technology, unless
we start agreeing standards (Interleaf files? TeX? raw PostScript) its
just not on to present a complex document on the screen across n
continents. Ergo, only paper publication will do, so the Humanist version
isnt the 'real' version, so editors should not be upset. . . However, as
is common practice anyway, sending out drafts for comment is normal
practice, so why not do it via Humanist? For myself, I intend to use
Humanist for a) gossip cum question and answer b) sending out stuff that
I would otherwise send xeroxes of c) giving synopses of work which is
being fully published elsewhere.
 
Flame off, as they say. lets get into the adverts - does anyone over in
North America want to go and buy "Information Technology in the Humanities",
ed. S. Rahtz, Halsted Press (John Wiley) 1987? It consists of 14 chapters
by English academics about the problems of introducing computing into
humanities curricula, both general issues (whether to learn programming,
whether word-processing is academic etc) and discussions of particular
subjects (the more unusual ones - Archaeology, Music, Classics etc - are
present, while the much-written-about Computer Assisted Language Learning
is not). Its about teaching ABOUT computing, not teaching WITH it.
 
Does anyone else teach Prolog? Leslie Burkholder's ideas were welcome, and I
would be curious to hear others. my students dont get any further than a
dating agency - I wish I could get them as far as foxes, geese and grain!
 
sebastian rahtz
=========================================================================
Date:         Wed,  3 Jun 87 16:58:46 CDT
Reply-To:     Michael Sperberg-McQueen <U18189@UICVM>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         Michael Sperberg-McQueen <U18189@UICVM>
Subject:      Weekly updates?
 
This is to comment on Sebastian Rahtz's suggestion to make HUMANIST
produce a weekly digest instead of a daily stream of new mail.  I agree
that daily influxes of new mail can be distracting, but I think we are
better off with the system as it stands.
 
I won't dwell on the obvious point that a weekly digest would involve a
fairly substantial change to LISTSERV (which runs a continuously active
'server machine' to accept mail sent to a list, and forward it to
the active members of that list automatically; most LISTSERV machines
also handle subscriptions and cancellations without human intervention).
Nor shall I belabor the point that a weekly digest requires preparation
and editing -- thankless work for which it really seems unfair for us to
volunteer Willard.  ListServ makes it <ital> relatively </ital> easy
to run a conference, but only because the host must seldom intervene.
If the conference host must edit the mail and produce a digest manually,
who will ever volunteer to be a host?
 
The mild inefficiency of sending multiple copies of the mail across
the Atlantic is readily corrected if someone on that side has
a VM/CMS machine and the new "distributed LISTSERV" -- assuming
UToronto has the distributed version too.  But is it worth the effort?
 
A digest, however well constructed, is never a substitute for the actual
conversation, and not often a perfect guide to it:  our individual
interests varying so much, a single digest might find it hard to serve
everyone's purposes.  Also, while I can usually find five minutes to
read one day's Humanist mail, I won't often find twenty minutes for a
week's worth.  And I at least find the development of discussion over
real time more interesting.  For context, I do save the mail up and
print it off periodically for review; as S.R. points out, that's not
hard to do.
 
Michael Sperberg-McQueen
=========================================================================
Date:         4-JUN-1987 16:33:32
Reply-To:     LOU%UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX1@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         LOU%UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX1@AC.UK
 
Concerning LISTSERVER and multiple copies flying (more like waddling)
across the Atlantic...
 
Which JANET IBM CMS site would like to volunteer to be a distributed LISTSERV
node? It should be one fairly near water [for walking on], with a local
committment to supporting arts computing in general and networking in
particular and of course a really uptodate mail server. Come to think of it
Sebastian ......
 
Meanwhile, I would still like to know where I should send the Text Archive
snapshot so that people can get it direct. And also how to get whatever's
there myself.
 
I agree with Michael SPMcQ that the only point of having Humanist is as a
continuous flow of information (or whatever it is).
Unfortunately, the JANET/EARN/BITNET  connexion is still plagued by machine
failures, inconsistent address tables, lost messages, inadequate messaging
protocols etc. So instead of a flow we tend to get nothing at all for a
few days and then 29 in a row, just like buses. This may also have something
to do with the astonishment with which I have been reading the discussion
about whether or not electronic publication "counts" in some sense. In my
book, this medium has a very long way to go indeed before it could
reasonably be called publication. For a start, it's not accessible to
everyone.
 
Lou
 
=========================================================================
Date:         4 June 1987, 23:40:39 EDT
Reply-To:     MCCARTY@UTOREPAS
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
Comments:     Re:   Electronic Publication
From:         MCCARTY@UTOREPAS
 
It seems obvious that electronic publication, like other activities
related to computing, seldom if ever counts professionally in the
humanities. For this reason, I'm told, much good courseware doesn't get
designed by those who are best qualified to design it, and even articles
and reviews printed in reputable journals rarely mean very much on a
c.v. In part, as a friend just pointed out to me, this is justified; the
integrity of the discipline is at stake. I wonder, however, how some of
the finer work in computing can be rigidly distinguished with respect to worth
from compilation of bibliographies or editing of texts, for example?
In any event, those of us who find ourselves supporers of computing in the
humanities can do something about defining our work academically and
raising its standards. We can also, together, lobby for its recognition,
and thus the SIG of which this discussion group is a product.
Take electronic publishing. Following the analogy nearest at hand, we
could form an electronic journal, with an editor, an editorial board,
and all the rest. What would the relationship be between this journal
and the printed variety? How would the medium influence the message? In
length of articles? In style? Alas, it would in language, but English is
the current lingua franca.
It seems to me that the sine qua non of worthwhile electronic
publication is quality of language and thought as well as accuracy of
information. This means good editing and demanding review. It could be
done (I think should be done), though at some risk to the first few
contributors. Any takers -- or givers?
Having completed two substantial academic papers for which neither the
research notes nor the written words touched paper until the very end, I
have some confidence that electronic publication in our sense need be
neither trivial nor slapdash. My faith in this is that if we do a
first-class job in our common profession, it will begin to be properly
recognized.
To be practical: we could form a separate ListServ for this journal;
contributions to it would be mailed to the editor; he or she would mail
these to the editorial board for consideration, or to readers;
rejection, revision, publication would ensue; the readership would
consist of the members of the discussion group. Some subjects come
immediately to mind: computing activities at university X; reviews of
software and hardware; proposals for design and implementation of
software; computational methodologies; administrative structures for
support of computing in the humanities; and so forth. In some cases,
articles could be "reprinted" from newsletters or small journals, whose
circulation is unfortunately restricted; in other cases articles might
anticipate publications in print.
No doubt there are many problems with such a proposal. If they seem
worthy, please point them out.
=========================================================================
Date:         Fri,  5 Jun 87 14:06:31 GMT
Reply-To:     CMI011%UK.AC.SOUTHAMPTON.IBM@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         CMI011%UK.AC.SOUTHAMPTON.IBM@AC.UK
 
 
re: humanist publication
 
a) OK, so other people prefer their meat daily. I ride a bike, so I am not used
to Lou Burnard's buses, but I dont actually find that the HUMANIST messages
are backing up like that. My site gets them via a UUCP link to a proper
JANET site, so maybe that reshuffles them. Anyway, daily or weekly meat is
relatively trivial - what about size of contributions?
 
b) Willard's note about an electronic journal is attractive, but I do not
see it working for the simple reason that the technology isnt up to it (nor
looks like being). All the paraphernalia of a typeset book isnt there just
as a nicety, it all serves a purpose, and the e-mail environment that
most of us live in (I think I am well off in a Unix world, if I had
to read Humanist on this IBM  I use for sending, I would give up!) does not
have the facilities to convey thoughts as we are used to do on paper.
 
That said, there is no reason why a conventional journal should not operate
as Willard suggests (I presume some do) - why not do all that he suggests but
just print it at the end (which is all most of us would do anyway!). Now if
you suggest distributing papers in TeX format for us to print locally... but
there would be howls of protest about that.
 
Does one NEED a new journal? all the problems (who are the editors? how does
it get credibility? build up a circulation? etc etc) would be there for the
E-Journal as for the paper one (save ONLY for printing costs, and you would
simply be asking people to pay for that on the fly instead of as a subscription
).
 
I think Willard's most interesting point is when he suggests that computer work
be given as much credence as, say, editing a text. That I must agree with -
but I dont think an E-Journal would help.
 
What do punters think of the floppy disc SCOPE? in many ways, thats an
 
attractive option, as  the PC environment is much more civilised than the
e-mail one. What about all Willard's ideas going toward something like
that?
 
Sebastian Rahtz
P.S. sorry, Lou, I dont think we have LISTSERV here. Computers are for
FORTRAN in Southampton! but I am pursuing the matter.
=========================================================================
Date:         05 Jun 87  17:10:18 bst
Reply-To:     R.J.HARE%UK.AC.EDINBURGH@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         R.J.HARE%UK.AC.EDINBURGH@AC.UK
Subject:      Electronic Publishing
 
Picking up only one of Sebastian Rahtz's points, I think its true to say that
(though there are other reasons), 'humanists' here at Edinburgh are reluctant
to do a lot of work on the computer (any computer!) because such work is not
visible to the people who assess (dangerous term at the moment!) their work.
An electronic journal would be similarly invisible to such people, and
therefore not much better from that point of view than any other work on the
computer. It's interesting to realise that this may well be a general problem.
 
This is a subjective opinion, formed as a result of casual conversations with
various people around here, but I think that this situation might be changing
(locally!) - the sooner the better I feel.
 
Roger Hare.
PS. What's a bus?
=========================================================================
Date:         5 June 1987, 15:33:00 EDT
Reply-To:     MCCARTY@UTOREPAS
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         MCCARTY@UTOREPAS
 
Received: by ASUACAD (Mailer X1.23b) id 5924; Thu, 04 Jun 87 19:13:15 MST
Date:         Thu, 04 Jun 87 19:12:36 MST
From:         Dan Brink <ATDXB@ASUACAD>
Subject:      credit
To:           Willard <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
 
 
In a HUMANIST note dated May 31, Jeff Gillette addresses the
issue of academic "credit" for computer activity: Do tenure and
promotion committees value programming, software reviewing, and
other of the activities so typical of HUMANIST addressees?
 
(A recent issue of the Chronicle covered this matter in some
detail; I would recommend it to anyone interested in such
matters.)
 
The Chronicle of Higher Education (3/18/87: XXXIII, #27, p. 1:
"Software for teaching given little credit in Tenure Reviews"
 
I do think that computing activity is little valued by colleagues
(unless their printers won't work).  In my department, for
example, writing software ranked dead last in a list of 35
activities considered worthy for English faculty.  And, in fact,
I have dropped the MLJ column because the activity is so little
valued.  Further, we all know of cases in which well known and
respected humanists have been forced out of the profession.
 
At the same time, I was not hired to work with computers.  (The
micro didn't exist when I was hired!)  So, it is to some degree
my own doing.  And I have not really used the computer as a tool
in my own research; I have worked on the improvement of the tool
itself.
 
A number of people, like Jones, Oakman, Smith, Abercrombie, etc.
have dealt with the problem by moving to computer science
departments or by receiving an administrative assignment
officially condoning their humanities computing activities.
 
That, I think, is the key.  Those entering the field now would be
well advised to be sure that their computer activity officially
be made part of their job description.  Computer familiarity will
probably be a real plus for humanists entering the job market in
the next few years; they should be sure that they will be given
full credit for their activity down the road.
 
But programming, running computer centers, etc., is not, and
probably should not be, valued as research.
 
Enough of this; back to FLEXTEX . . .
=========================================================================
Date:         Sat, 06 Jun 87 13:55:30 BST
Reply-To:     CAMERON%UK.AC.EXETER@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         CAMERON%UK.AC.EXETER@AC.UK
Subject:      Phonetics/Publications
 
This week I have been absent from Exeter for
three days - on my return I found a dozen communications
from the Remote Grey Book.  The subject under discussion
is obviously an interesting one but I found wading through
my electronic mail and following the discussion on the
print out a very tiresome process.  I do not think that I
should welcome a plethora of articles in this form. Abstracts,
bibliographies, yes.  The danger of ready availibility is
ready forgetability or ignorability.
As for assessing 'status' of electronic articles, we obviously
have to ask the inevitable question of why an article is
written.  If its aim is uniquely to gain promotion, then electronic diffusion wi
have very little status, or one comparable to that of
home-produced material at present.
 
A student here has produced an elementary program for automatic
correction of French phonetic transciption.  Who else is working in this field?
Who has perfected the process?  Who would be prepared to cooperate?
Keith Cameron
=========================================================================
Date:         7 June 1987, 16:59:11 EDT
Reply-To:     MCCARTY@UTOREPAS
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         MCCARTY@UTOREPAS
 
Although it is barely more than a week old, our talk about
electronic publication has already taken on an interesting shape.
The following is an elaborated summary. It is not intended to
conclude our discussion but to alert you to it directions.
 
The discussion began with the possibility that HUMANIST could be
used to distribute files centrally and with the recognition that
printed journals do certain things rather poorly. A proposal for
an electronic journal, however, provoked significant criticism on
two grounds: (1) that it would give its contributors little or no
professional recognition, and (2) that the electronic medium is
at present incapable of representing typographic effects (such as
italics) and the characters of many languages other than English.
 
It seems highly unlikely that as humanists we can correct the
almost universal disregard for work in computing among the
committees that govern hiring, tenure, and promotion. There seem
to be two reasons for this disregard. The major one is that
academic "job descriptions" seldom if ever recognize this
kind of work. One of us suggested that when individuals are hired
for academic jobs they should attempt to get computing activities
explicitly mentioned among their duties. First, however, we need
to understand the appropriate analogies. What sorts of work are
we talking about? Is some of it equivalent to committee work? to
compilation of bibliographies and other duties of running a
journal? to editing of texts? What kind of involvement with
computing in the humanities (if any) should be recognized as
genuine research? We could ask, for example, what a specialist in
literary criticism or theory does that in principle is more
research-like than the designer of software for sophisticated
textual analysis.
 
The second reason for the disregard from our academic masters and
colleagues may be the often poor quality of the writing (and
sometimes thinking) associated with computing. The informality of
the medium may have quite a bit to do with this. Mainframe
editors are in general so primitive and screen images so
difficult to proofread that we are tempted to slap something down
and dash it off without much thought. We can do something about
this, it has been suggested, by peer-review and editorial
intervention.
 
Nevertheless, informality in an electronic discussion allows for
the communal development of ideas. Some of us have suggested that
in cooperation with one or more established journals we distill
from our discussions items to be printed in those journals, on
the analogy of Bix in Byte magazine, though not in the same
format. (The president of the ACH has mentioned the possibility
of such publication in the quarterly newsletter of that
organization.) It has also been pointed out that in computer
science, articles can be circulated as "technical reports"
without any perceived conflict with later publication in refereed
journals -- and without the "brownie points."
 
Our discussion seems to have converged on an understanding of
what the electronic medium is and is not suitable for. Thus to
attempt a close analogue of the refereed journal would be a
mistake; at the same time, there is a need for a means of
publication that takes advantage of the informality and rapidity
of electronic mail. To allow for this almost conversational
informality, editorial intervention needs to be kept at a
minimum. Editing is required in the transition into print,
however.
 
Perhaps, as an affiliated activity of the ACH and ALLC, we should
ask for the help of these two organizations in publishing
summaries of our discussions here and various newsworthy items. I
would also like to suggest that we talk with the editors of such
journals as CHum about circulating versions of articles to be
published there. Reviews of software are particularly crucial.
 
Please let us all know what you think. (The length of this note
is 73 lines & about 4000 characters long.)
=========================================================================
Date:         Mon, 08 Jun 87 10:57:39 BST
Reply-To:     CAMERON%UK.AC.EXETER@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         CAMERON%UK.AC.EXETER@AC.UK
Subject:      Electronic Publication
 
As intimated in last communication about HUMANIST
publication, in favour of SHORT notices, abstracts,
reviews. bibliographies, publicity, etc.
New methods demand new styles and it should be
possible to develop a new style of writing for
electronic publication - universal system of
truncation, abbreviation, notation which would be
interpreted and formatted by universally
distributed local programs etc.
KCC.
=========================================================================
Date:         11-JUN-1987 10:37:30
Reply-To:     GW2%UK.AC.YORK.VAXA@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         GW2%UK.AC.YORK.VAXA@AC.UK
Subject:      MILTON PROJECT PROPOSAL
 
First thoughts prompted by reading the discussion about electronic
publishing:
 
The new medium makes possible new forms of intellectual work, forms of
collective research and collaborative writing that have not yet been defined,
professionally or institutionally.
 
In a spirit or experiment, i want to propose a collaboration, to any and all
who are interested.
 
The focus will be John Milton. The substantial example & inspiration might
be Christopher Hill's MILTON AND THE ENGLISH REVOLUTION, together with
Stephen Greenblatt's RENAISSANCE SELF-FASHIONING. They suggest a form of
cultural history which could be refined and extended by collaboration.
 
Anybody there??
=========================================================================
Date:         11 June 1987, 22:07:54 EDT
Reply-To:     Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
 
A fellow HUMANIST here mentioned to me over dinner (very good it was,
too) his frustration with notes that don't contain the name of the
sender. On some systems one can easily guess at least the first or last
name, but if your userid is "43256_XRRG," for example, it's not so easy.
A human name gives the imagination something to work with. On a VM/CMS
system a user gets his or her full name included by putting it in the
NAMES file and then opting for the "long" option when sending a note. I
don't know what one does on other systems. Alternatively, you can just
sign your name to the bottom of your notes to HUMANIST. So, I propose
that henceforth we submit only signed notes.
If for some reason you want to send an anonymous message, send it to me
and I'll pass it on to HUMANIST without your name or userid attached.
Thanks for your patience.
=========================================================================
Date:         Fri, 12 Jun 87 09:47:59 BST
Reply-To:     CAMERON%UK.AC.EXETER@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         CAMERON%UK.AC.EXETER@AC.UK
Subject:      CALL CONF/EXETER
 
For all HUMANIST readers - accommodation still available if required.
                                 UNIVERSITY OF EXETER
                                   PROGRAM STRUCTURE
                                          and
                                      PRINCIPLES
                                          in
                                         CALL
                          Lopes Hall, September 21 -23 1987.
                 COST 50 pounds all inclusive - pro rata rates available
                                   (Draft programme)
                                  MONDAY September 21
       16.30 -
       18.00    Registration
       18.00    Reception
       19.00    Dinner
       20.15    S.Dodd (Exeter) CALL and the chalkface.
                D.F.Clarke, (U.E.A.) Design considerations in the production of
                extended computer assisted reading materials
                                 TUESDAY September 22
       08.00    Breakfast
       09.30    P.Hickman, (La Ste Union)  Structuring interactive grammar
                practice programs.
                D.Ferney, (Wolverhampton Poly.) A computer model of the French
                native speaker's skill with grammatical gender.
       10.45    Coffee
       11.15    O.Durrani, (Durham) Designer Labyrinths: Text mazes for language
                learners.
                A.Benwell, (Lanchester Poly.) How we use HELP facilities.
       13.00    Lunch
       14.30    A.Kukulska-Hulme, (Aston) Liberation or constraint : the useful-
                ness of a program interface to a vocabulary database.
                G.A.Inkster, (Lancaster) Databases as a learning activity.
       15.45    Tea
       16.15    Workshop : Reading Programs - D.F.Clarke (U.E.A.); I.Morris (Man
                chester Poly.). Language Programs - D.Ashead (B'ham); O.Durrani
                (Durham).
       18.30    Wine reception
       19.00    Dinner
       20.15    J.D.Fox, (U.E.A.) Can CAL aid vocabulary acquisition?
                L.M.Wright, (UC, Bangor) Aspects of text storage and text
                compression in CALL.
                                WEDNESDAY September 23
       08.00    Breakfast
       09.30    D.Scarborough (City London Poly.) The computer as a teaching
                resource on a Commercial French course.
                J.E.Galletly (Buckingham) Elementary verbal phrase syntax-
                checker for French sentences.
       10.45    Coffee
       11.15    Workshop: Language programs : M.Blondel (City London Poly.);
                B.Farrington (Aberdeen); P.Hickman (La Ste Union); D.Ferney
                (B'ham); M.L'Huillier (Brunel).
       13.00    Lunch
       14.15    B.Farrington, (Aberdeen) A.I. Grandeur et servitude
                M.Yazdani, (Exeter) Tools for second language teaching.
 
                Future projects.
       15.45    Tea
KCC/EXETER
=========================================================================
Date:         12-JUN-1987 14:55:09
Reply-To:     GW2%UK.AC.YORK.VAXA@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         GW2%UK.AC.YORK.VAXA@AC.UK
Subject:      MORE ABOUT PROPOSED MILTON PROJECT close
 
MILTON PROJECT : SECOND PROPOSAL
--------------------------------
 
A
=========================================================================
Date:         12-JUN-1987 16:49:44
Reply-To:     GW2%UK.AC.YORK.VAXA@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         GW2%UK.AC.YORK.VAXA@AC.UK
Subject:      MILTON PROJECT: A SECOND PROPOSAL
 
I want to offer some more details about the proposed collaborative project
on Milton. Don't let the initial reference to Hill & Greenblatt put you off
...my interest in Milton begins from an encounter with that body of work, but
is not circumscribed by it.
 
I would like to invite collaboration on a close linguistic study of the early
poetry, exploring Milton's affinities with Spenser and Shakespeare, within the
historical framework of the development of Early Modern English.
 
Obviously this kind of inquiry lends itself, in its initial phase at least, to
the use of a computer to compile the data. Once the OED is available on-line
it will be possible to ask complex questions about the history of the language
with a new precision. I'm not sure how to formulate the question of 'affinity'
in a fashion appropriate to a package like the Oxford Concordance Program.
 
The question that 'really' interests me comes after this preliminary work. I
want to test my merely speculative sense that Milton stands (ever-belated) at
the close of a period of intense linguistic innovation; that his freedom (at
the level of word-formation and syntactical experiment) is significantly diminis
inhibition, anxiety and self-censorship are the shaping ideological conditions
of Milton's writing.
 
This would lead into an investigation of the paternal metaphor in Milton, the
successive inscriptions of the father in his texts. (The scrivener-musician
fascinates me...)
 
One escape from this intimate tyranny seems to have been the theory and practice
promising a vision of a redeemed sexuality.
 
These are, for me, the issues that reading Milton suggests most insistently. I
would be delighted to hear from anyone who finds them interesting enough to
merit some systematic collective investigation.
 
Geoff Wall
===============================================================================
=========================================================================
Date:         15-JUN-1987 11:43:09
Reply-To:     GW2%UK.AC.YORK.VAXA@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         GW2%UK.AC.YORK.VAXA@AC.UK
Subject:      TO USERS OF NOTA BENE
 
I'd be very interested to hear from anyone with experience of
using the NOTA BENE WP program, to help me decide whether to acquire
it for our deptartment's IBM PC.
 
Thanks
 
Geoff Wall
York
=========================================================================
Date:         Mon, 15 Jun 87  20:05 EDT
Reply-To:     JMBHC@CUNYVM
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         JMBHC@CUNYVM
Subject:      TO USERS OF NOTA BENE
In-Reply-To:  HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO> -- 15-JUN-1987 11:43:09
 
Hi. We have/use nota bene with our faculty.  They love it.  I've just gotten
my own copy (haven't even opened it yet), but I'm sure that I'll make it
an often used package.   I plan to use it for manuscripts, mainly.  At any
rate, I'll ask Bob Tannenbaum to reply to you since he know more about it.
 
Joanne Badagliacco, Hunter College
=========================================================================
Date:         15 June 1987, 21:07:32 EDT
Reply-To:     "Bill Winder               (416) 960-9793" <WINDER@UTOREPAS>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         "Bill Winder               (416) 960-9793" <WINDER@UTOREPAS>
 
I was interested to see that prolog is offered as a humanist programming
language. I have used Turbo Prolog for about a year and I'm now
considering proposing it for applications in the context of a French
lexicography course. Before doing so I would like to have an opinion on
a few questions from the forerunners in this area (L. Burkholder et S.
Ratz seem to have had such experience -- hopefully there are others).
 
The first question, which has plagued me since I adopted Turbo Prolog as
a programming environment, is whether it is sufficiently powerful for
large scale (micro) applications. Would not other prologs be better,
such as Logicware's, or Marseilles's Prolog II? There have been several
criticisms levelled at Turbo Prolog, most of which seem trivial (such as
the fact that it is not interpreted, but rather compiled prolog). The
criticism that it is a  typed prolog might be important -- I have
already run into situations where domain typing has forced me to
multiply predicates for each argument type.
 
A case in point: to do a sort on a large file (over 64 K) some rather
tricky programming techniques are required. The innovation of prolog as
a programming language is that it "de- algorithmatises" programming, at
least to some degree. But in Turbo Prolog, where large applications
require baroque, stack- and heap-sparing procedures, the otherwise
logical development of a prolog programme is lost.
 
In short, could anyone suggest reasons for preferring  another prolog to
Turbo Prolog, or for preferring another language  (such as Snobol or Icon)?
Does anyone use Turbo Prolog at all? All remarks in this vein would be
appreciated.
 
Bill Winder (Winder @ UTOREPAS)
=========================================================================
Date:         16 June 1987, 00:36:52 EDT
Reply-To:     "Stephen R. Reimer         (416) 585-4576" <REIMER@UTOREPAS>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         "Stephen R. Reimer         (416) 585-4576" <REIMER@UTOREPAS>
 
Re: Nota Bene
 
  Our esteemed sysop, Willard McCarty, has been a regular user of Nota Bene
since sometime shortly before or after the birth of Steve Siebert; indeed, I
am sure that Willard has published a review of NB somewhere, but I've
forgotten the reference.  Perhaps he could be persuaded to say a few words?
or, at least, to remind us of where his review appeared?
=========================================================================
Date:         16-JUN-1987 09:00:06
Reply-To:     SUSAN%UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX2@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         SUSAN%UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX2@AC.UK
 
For reviews of Nota Bene, see
 
(1) Willard McCarty, Computers and the Humanities 20 (1986), 62-71.
(2) D.H.A Kaferly, Literary and Linguistic Computing 2 (1987), 37-39.
 
Susan Hockey
=========================================================================
Date:         16-JUN-1987 10:26:52
Reply-To:     LOU%UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX1@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         LOU%UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX1@AC.UK
 
Re Geoff Wall's request for comments on ways of mechanising the search for
affinities (if that is what he meant), I thought of quite a neat way of
doing this in SQL in the shower this morning.
 
If you have a table A containing columns WD and REF where WD is any feature
of potential interest and REF is where it occurs in text A; and likewise a table
B with cols WD and REF for text B, then the SQL statement
 
select A.REF AREF, B.REF BREF, COUNT(*) ECHOES
from A,B
where A.WD = B.WD
group by A.REF,B.REF
having count(*) > 5
order by echoes desc
 
will produce a list of the places in A and B where the same features
are to be found in descending order of the number of such features shared
at each place. The 'having' bit rules out places where there are fewer
than 5 shared features - obviously this can be tweaked. I've left it
deliberately vague what 'features' and 'places' mean - but if you thought of
them as 'interesting word stems' and 'sentence' I wouldnt quarrel with you.
 
I haven't tried it, but it ought to work! Joe Raben's work on Miltonic echoes
in Shelley (written long before the invention of SQL)
is what put the idea into my head. That, and dropping the soap.
 
Lou Burnard
 
=========================================================================
Date:         16 June 1987, 08:13:39 EDT
Reply-To:     Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
Subject:      Who Speaks to Whom, and Who Cares
 
Some time ago, prompted by complaints about too much from HUMANIST, I
suggested that replies to questions, such as the most recent one about
Nota Bene, should go directly to the questioner, and that the questioner
might then gather up the interesting replies after some interval and
publish them on HUMANIST. Could we come to an agreement about whether we
adopt this scheme or not? Please send your preference to me directly
(MCCARTY at UTOREPAS.BITNET), and when I get a sufficient number of
replies, I'll publish them here. Any other scheme to regulate the flow
of conversation is also welcome.
Yours, W.M.
=========================================================================
Date:         16 June 1987, 07:53:14 EDT
Reply-To:     Dr Abigail Ann Young      1-416-585-4504 <YOUNG@UTOREPAS>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         Dr Abigail Ann Young      1-416-585-4504 <YOUNG@UTOREPAS>
 
  I wonder if anyone else in the T.O. area saw the article/opinion
piece in the Toronto Globe and Mail over the weekend bemoaning
the degenerative effect which desktop publishing was already
having on book publishing, standards of typography and editing,
quality of finished book, etc.  It did not go quite as far as
saying that DTP is responsible for the Decline of Western Civilisation
As We Know It, but the author did definitely foresee the end of The
Book in the near future.  Now obviously this is to say the least
grossly exaggerated.  I've been hearing these mournful plaints about
the decline of typography and editing ever since paperback novels
cost 50 cents.....  But it is clear that the phenomena observed
are real -- that is, standards of typography and editing have declined,
the quality of many printed books is very poor (I don't mean the
quality of their content, but their "production values"!), etc --
however faulty the reasoning which lays this all at the foot of DTP
may be.
 
  My perspective on this is as someone very much involved in
a scholarly publishing operation.  REED, where I've worked
one way or another since 1976, sees its volumes of edited texts
straight through from transcription of MSS to camera-ready final
proof in-house.  One of the reasons is, of course, the need to
maintain control over the scholarly quality of the edition and
its apparatus, but another chief reason is a deep concern over the
quality of the final book from the point of view of design and
production.  Happily, this concern is shared by our publisher,
the University of Toronto Press, and its design department.
 
  But it seems to me that DTP is far from a force working against
quality in production and design: until reading this article it
wouldn't have occurred to me that someone could cast recent improve-
ments in computer-based typesetting and pseudo-typesetting as the
villain of the piece.  In fact, I'd always thought that the great
advantage of DTP for the scholarly community is that it places the
ability to maintain that kind of control over both aspects of the
final book, which we have been able to enjoy at REED because we are
a large project with a major university press behind us, within the
grasp of most academics working on a university campus.  I think that
more and more university computer centres and departments are likely
to make available the equipment and expertise needed to allow
individual editors of journals or authors able to control and
produce their own work up at least the first proof stage, if they
wish.  Surely the DTP can be used to reverse a trend toward poor
quality in book production, rather than increase it, at least among
those groups to whom high-quality book production would be important.
 
   I don't really think very much of electronic publication for a lot
of reasons, and especially one which Lou mentioned, and no-one else
really seems to have picked up in subsequent discussion, that is, that
it is accessible to such a small audience of users/readers.  But using
electronic means to improve the quality of conventional scholarly
publishing really seems to me an exciting possibility.  As the quality
output devices like laser printers improve, it seems likely that DTP
may make scholarly books less expensive to produce.
 
  What do people think?  Is anyone else interested?
 
Abigail Ann Young
YOUNG at UTOREPAS
=========================================================================
Date:         Tue, 16 Jun 87 11:33:10 EDT
Reply-To:     John Bradley <BRADLEY@UTORONTO>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         John Bradley <BRADLEY@UTORONTO>
Subject:      DTP Discussion
 
Abigail Young's comments on DTP, and the effect on the quality of
today's publications strikes a responsive chord in me -- DTP is
an area I have been looking at quite closely for some time.
 
I think a certain amount of the negative comment in the Toronto
Globe and Mail article can be easily explained: the natural human
trait to emphasize the negative side of change.  Of course, DTP
is, unfortunately, often used in such a way that it degrades
quality, and, indeed, such an article can be useful in that it
points these problems out.  However, I think it is foolish to
ONLY look at the negative side.
 
It seems to me that there are two reasons why DTP might reduce
the quality of output:
 
(1) The technology cannot do as good a job as traditional
methods.
(2) The control over the technology is put in the hands of people
without the required skills.
 
Item (1) is, I think, gradually fading as an issue.  For example,
it's true that Laser printer output is not as good quality as a
true typesetter, however, PostScript typesetters such as the
Linotronic 100 or 300 also make it possible to use DTP software
and equipment to produce typeset quality images.  Another
example: hyphenation in some DTP software is not as well done as
it should be, however, the pressure of the marketplace is already
forcing developers to make improvements in this and other areas.
Indeed, TeX already makes very high quality work available to
anyone with a micro computer -- although at the steep cost of
learning how to use this complex and often subtle package.
 
Point 2 is, I think, really the central issue, and is likely to
remain so.  Really good work in this area cannot be done by
amateurs.  In the interest of reducing costs, "camera ready" copy
is being produced by people without the ability to judge the
quality of what they are producing.  Almost every day I see
people who have no understanding of what they can reasonably
expect from software and hardware: for example, I still talk to
at least 1 person a week who is planning to produce camera ready
copy for a book by connecting a laser printer or our typesetter
to WordPerfect.  Each time I explain that WordPerfect CAN drive
our PostScript typesetter or laser printer -- but does far too
inadequate a job in many ways (for example, of hyphenation and
justification) to meet the standards that one would expect for a
scholarly work.  Clearly, the decision to use WordPerfect for
this purpose was made by a person who is ill equipped to decide!
 
I guess the issue is one of education.  I believe that high
quality work can come out of DTP, and that DTP permits new
publishing ventures to be considered and tried.  However, the
quality issue needs to be better understood in the community.  At
U of T I am currently attempting to put together a brief seminar
to introduce some of these issues to the university community.
Perhaps this type of thing is needed at other places.  I'd
certainly appreciate comments from anyone who might be
interested.  Please contact me directly at the following address.
I'd be glad to produce a summary of comments, and circulate via
HUMANIST.
 
                             .... John Bradley
                                  BRADLEY at UTORONTO
=========================================================================
Date:         16 June 1987, 11:32:35 EDT
Reply-To:     Dr Abigail Ann Young      1-416-585-4504 <YOUNG@UTOREPAS>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         Dr Abigail Ann Young      1-416-585-4504 <YOUNG@UTOREPAS>
 
Is anyone on this list working with English renaissance poetry,
eg Spenser?  I need to consult such a person about a possible
classical/humanistic (in its more traditional historical meaning)
literary allusion, but don't want to take up everyone's time.
Thank you!
 
Abigail Ann Young
Records of Early English Drama
University of Toronto
YOUNG at UTOREPAS
=========================================================================
Date:         17 June 1987, 22:53:28 EDT
Reply-To:     Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
Subject:      Autobiographies
 
As most of you will know, I have asked anyone interested in becoming a
member of HUMANIST to send me a brief description of what he or she does
to support computing in the humanities. Little did I suspect when I
first asked for these descriptions that I would get so many interesting
autobiographical statements. As these have accumulated, I have become
more and more convinced that they should be shared with everyone so that
we can all get to know each other and see what it is that we do as a
professional group. What I propose, then, is to edit what I have into a
convenient form and distribute it to all HUMANISTs. Some of you may wish
to send me a revised version of what you sent previously (given that you
could not have guessed what might be done with those words eventually),
and some may not. So, at the risk of angering those who may be away from
their e-mail for the next two weeks, let's say that I will wait until
July 1 (Canada Day) before I act on this idea to allow anyone who wants
to revise his or her life-story to send the improved version to me.
Please do not ask me to send you your contribution so that you can
decide whether or not to revise it. If in doubt, write out a new one. Be
as brief as you can, but try to cover all of what you do and wish to do
in this area; specify your institional status; your academic or
non-academic background; and anything else you think would be of
interest to the rest.
You may recall a plan to circulate a detailed questionnaire that would
ask for some of this information and other things in a much more detailed
form. That questionnaire is still in the works. Meanwhile, as an interim
and exploratory measure, the brief autobiographies will help us
understand what needs to be asked.
Thanks for your cooperation. I think you'll agree that the result will
be more than worth the effort.
Yours, W.M.
=========================================================================
Date:         18 June 1987, 15:35:18 EDT
Reply-To:     ZACOUR@UTOREPAS
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         ZACOUR@UTOREPAS
 
At Willard McCarty's suggestion, a brief baring...
Norman Zacour
Professor of Medieval History at the University of Toronto (just
 
retired); interested especially in the history of the papacy of Avignon;
just finished writing about the treatment of Jews and Muslims in 14th century l
egal works; now working on the history of the college of cardinals in the Middl
e Ages; has written a short manual on WordPerfect to get students of the
Centre for Medieval Studies up and running on the IBM; and some quick
programming for a blind friend who is a writer and a professor of
English, to simplify his Life with DOS and Company, word processing in
general, and keeping data about his students in particular.
Interested in hearing about any software that will handle multiple
variants of medieval mss., to produce notes giving the lemma, the line
number, the variant(s) and their witnesses, etc.
=========================================================================
Date:         Thu, 18 Jun 87 12:48:46 EDT
Reply-To:     "Grace Logan (Arts Computing Office)" <LOGAN@WATDCS>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
Comments:     Warning -- RSCS tag indicates an origin of DCSMAIL@WATDCS
From:         "Grace Logan (Arts Computing Office)" <LOGAN@WATDCS>
 
Does anyone out there have a good, concise, clear  introduction to
Artificial Intelligence and/or  Expert Systems?  Articles,short
books, references of any kind would be much appreciated. I would  like
to include something about these  matters in a brief introduction for
first year students and I find my own knowledge rather  patchy, dis-
jointed and impressionistic.
I'd be grateful for even a reasonable definition.
 
                          cheers,,
                                  Grace Logan,  Arts Computing,
                                                U.of Waterloo
                                                Waterloo, Ont.
=========================================================================
Date:         Fri, 19-JUN-1987 13:35 EST
Reply-To:     IDE@VASSAR
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         IDE@VASSAR
Subject:      nota bene
 
I am just now reading the comments concerning nota bene and wonder if anyone
is aware of the lengthy and very good review of it in the first issue of
Bits & Bytes Newsletter?
=========================================================================
Date:         19 Jun 87  11:54:48 bst
Reply-To:     R.J.HARE%UK.AC.EDINBURGH@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         R.J.HARE%UK.AC.EDINBURGH@AC.UK
Subject:      LISTSERVFILELIST
 
--- Forwarded message:
 
Subject:  LISTSERVFILELIST
From:     R.J.HARE <ERCY02@uk.ac.edinburgh.emas-a>
Date:     05 Jun 87  14:04:10 bst
To:       listserv%toronto.bitnet@uk.ac.rl.earn
Msg ID:   <05 Jun 87  14:04:10 bst  030961@EMAS-A>
 
SENDME LISTSERV FILELIST
 
--- End of forwarded message
=========================================================================
Date:         19 Jun 87  11:55:52 bst
Reply-To:     R.J.HARE%UK.AC.EDINBURGH@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         R.J.HARE%UK.AC.EDINBURGH@AC.UK
Subject:      Electronic Publishing
 
--- Forwarded message:
 
Subject:  Electronic Publishing
From:     R.J.HARE <ERCY02@uk.ac.edinburgh.emas-a>
Date:     05 Jun 87  17:10:18 bst
To:       humanist%utoronto.bitnet@uk.ac.rl.earn
Msg ID:   <05 Jun 87  17:10:18 bst  030065@EMAS-A>
 
Picking up only one of Sebastian Rahtz's points, I think its true to say that
(though there are other reasons), 'humanists' here at Edinburgh are reluctant
to do a lot of work on the computer (any computer!) because such work is not
visible to the people who assess (dangerous term at the moment!) their work.
An electronic journal would be similarly invisible to such people, and
therefore not much better from that point of view than any other work on the
computer. It's interesting to realise that this may well be a general problem.
 
This is a subjective opinion, formed as a result of casual conversations with
various people around here, but I think that this situation might be changing
(locally!) - the sooner the better I feel.
 
Roger Hare.
PS. What's a bus?
 
--- End of forwarded message
=========================================================================
Date:         19 Jun 87  11:53:42 bst
Reply-To:     MCCARTY%UTOREPAS@UK.AC.RL.EARN
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         R.J.HARE%UK.AC.EDINBURGH@AC.UK
Subject:      Forwarded message
 
--- Forwarded message:
 
From:     MCCARTY%UTOREPAS@UK.AC.RL.EARN
Date:     4 June 1987, 07:18:59 EDT
To:       R.J.HARE@UK.AC.EDINBURGH
Via:      UK.AC.RUTHERFORD.EARN  ; (to uk.ac.edinburgh.emas-a) 04 Jun 87  12:39:
Via:      UK.AC.RL.EARN; Thu, 04 Jun 87 12:36:39 BST
Msg ID:   <sent 07:18:59 EDT via RL.EARN>
Received: From UTORONTO (MAILER) By UK.AC.RL.IB (MAILER) ;
           Thu, 04 Jun 87 12:36:38 BST
Received: from UTOREPAS(MCCARTY) by UTORONTO (Mailer X1.23b) id 2528;
           Thu, 04 Jun 87 07:22:47 EDT
 
=================================================================
                        Welcome to HUMANIST
=================================================================
 
HUMANIST is a Bitnet/NetNorth/EARN electronic discussion group
for people who support computing in the humanities. Those who
teach, review software, answer questions, give advice, program,
write documentation, or otherwise support research and teaching
in this area are included. Although HUMANIST is intended to help
these people exchange all kinds of information, it is primarily
meant for discussion rather than publication or advertisement.
 
In general, members of the network are encouraged to ask
questions and offer answers, to begin and contribute to
discussions, to suggest problems for research, and so forth. One
of the specific motivations for establishing HUMANIST was to
allow people involved in this area to form a common idea of the
nature of their work, its requirements, and its standards.
Institutional recognition is not infrequently inadequate, at
least partly because computing in the humanities is an emerging
and highly cross-disciplinary field. Its support is significantly
different from the support of other kinds of computing, with
which it may be confused. Perhaps you don't think so. In any
case, let us know what you do think, about this or any other
relevant subject.
 
HUMANIST is one of the inaugural projects of a new special
interest group for the support of computing in the humanities,
which is currently applying for joint affiliation with the
Association for Computing in the Humanities (ACH) and the
Association for Literary and Linguistic Computing (ALLC).
Information about this SIG may be obtained by sending a message
to George Brett (ECSGHB@TUCC.BITNET).
 
New members are welcome, provided that they fit the broad
guidelines described above. Please tell anyone who might be
interested to send a note to me, giving his or her name, address,
telephone number, university affiliation, and a short description
of what he or she does to support computing in the humanities. I
will then add that person to the list. If anyone should wish to
be dropped from the list, please send a note to that effect.
 
===================================================================
                     How to Use HUMANIST
===================================================================
Sending messages
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Currently anyone given access to HUMANIST can communicate with
all other members without restriction. A member need not be on
Bitnet but can use any comparable network with access to Bitnet.
Thus, to send mail to everyone simultaneously, use whatever
command your system provides (e.g., NOTE or MAIL) addressed to
HUMANIST at UTORONTO. Your message is then sent by your local
software to the UTORONTO node of Bitnet, where the "Revised List
Processor" (or ListServ) automatically redirects it to everyone
currently on the list of members.
[Please note that in the following description, commands will be
given in the form acceptable on a VM/CMS system. If your system
is different, you will have to make the appropriate translation.]
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Conventions and Etiquette
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Restricted conversations or asides can, of course, develop from
the unrestricted discussions on HUMANIST by members communicating
directly with each other. This is particularly recommended for
replies to general queries, so that HUMANIST and its members are
not burdened with messages of interest only to the person who
asked the question and, perhaps, a few others. If, for example,
one of us asks the rest about the availability of software for
keeping notes in Devanagari, suggestions should be sent directly
to the questioner's e-mail address, not to HUMANIST. A questioner
who receives one or more generally interesting and useful replies
might consider gathering them together with the original question
and submitting the collection to HUMANIST.
 
Please use your judgment about what the whole group should
receive. We could easily overwhelm each other and so defeat the
purpose of HUMANIST. Strong methods are available for controlling
a discussion group, but self-control seems preferable. This is
not to discourage controversy -- quite the contrary -- but only
what could become tiresome junk-mail.
 
Please make it an invariable practice to help the recipients of
your messages scan them by including a SUBJECT line in your note.
Be aware, however, that some people will read no more than the
SUBJECT line, so you should take care that it is accurate and
comprehensive as well as brief.
 
Use your judgment about the length of your notes as well. If you
find yourself writing an essay or have a substantial amount of
information to offer, it might be better to follow on of the two
methods outlined in the next section.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Distributing files
-----------------------------------------------------------------
HUMANIST offers us an excellent means of distributing written
material of many kinds, e.g., reviews of software or hardware.
Although conventional journals remain the means of professional
recognition, they are often too slow to keep up with changes in
computing. With some care, HUMANIST could provide a supplementary
venue of immediate benefit to our colleagues.
 
There are two methods of distributing such material. The more
specialized reports should probably be reduced to abstracts and
posted in this form to HUMANISTs at large, then sent by the
originators directly to those who request them. Reports of
general interest, however, can be kept centrally, on the UTORONTO
node, and fetched by individuals when required.
 
To find out what is available centrally, send the following
command:
     TELL LISTSERV AT UTORONTO SENDME LISTSERV FILELIST
If you see something you want, then use the following to fetch
it:
     TELL LISTSERV AT UTORONTO GET <filename> <filetype>
If you have something that you think worth posting, please send
it to me, and we can then discuss its fate. Storage space on the
UTORONTO node is not infinite nor ultimately free, so we need to
be careful about how much we put there.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
ListServ's Commands and Facilities
-----------------------------------------------------------------
New members will be interested to know that one of the files
centrally maintained by ListServ at UTORONTO is an archive of
messages for the past month. If you have just joined and want to
know the recent history of discussions, enter the following
command (or its equivalent on non-VM/CMS systems):
     TELL LISTSERV AT UTORONTO GET HUMANIST LOG8705
ListServ will then send you the contents of the monthly archive.
 
ListServ accepts several other commands, for example to retrieve
a list of the current members or to set various options. These
are described in a document named LISTSERV MEMO. This and other
documentation will normally be available to you from your nearest
ListServ node and is best fetched from there, since in that way
the network is least burdened. You should consult with your local
experts to discover the nearest ListServ; they will also be able
to help you with whatever problems in the use of ListServ you may
encounter.
 
Once you have found the nearest node, type the following:
     TELL LISTSERV AT XXXXXX INFO ?
The various documents available to you will then be listed.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Suggestions and Complaints
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Suggestions about the running of HUMANIST or its possible
relation to other means of communication are very welcome. So are
complaints, particularly if they are constructive. Experience has
shown that an electronic discussion group can be either
beneficial or burdensome to its members. Much depends on what the
group as a whole wants and does not want. Please make your views
known, to everyone or to me directly, as appropriate.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Willard McCarty                                      31 May 1987
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, University of Toronto
(MCCARTY@UTOREPAS.BITNET)
 
 
--- End of forwarded message
=========================================================================
Date:         19 Jun 87  12:02:52 bst
Reply-To:     R.J.HARE%UK.AC.EDINBURGH@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
Comments: cc: MCCARTY@UTOREPAS, Humanist <>
From:         R.J.HARE%UK.AC.EDINBURGH@AC.UK
Subject:      Accidental messages.
 
You probably just got a series of your own messages blown back at you. These sho
be deleted, not sent to the HUMANIST bulletin Board. This happened accidentally
while we were setting up our own
local bulletin board.
 
Sorry about that - hope it don't cause too many problems!
 
Roger Hare.
=========================================================================
Date:         Sat, 20 Jun 87 11:38:51 BST
Reply-To:     CAMERON%UK.AC.EXETER@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         CAMERON%UK.AC.EXETER@AC.UK
Subject:      LISTSERV
 
TELL LISTSERV AT UTORONTO SENDME LISTSERV FILELIST
=========================================================================
Date:         20 June 1987, 17:46:27 EDT
Reply-To:     Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
Subject:      An accident and a misunderstanding
 
Recently an accident of some sort in Edinburgh resulted in a very large
number of old HUMANIST notes being sent to everyone on the list. This
certainly demonstrates that the power of electronic mail, like a loosely
held firehose, can turn against the user! Please be aware that anything
sent to HUMANIST at UTORONTO is immediately and automatically propagated
to everyone; no one here decides whether a note should be passed on or
not. Once something starts to go wrong we here may be able to stop it,
but only if we notice it in time. So be careful, please.
We are still working on a facility for centralized storage of files here
but have not yet figured out how to provide it. Until then it is useless
to ask for LISTSERV FILELIST, since nothing is there except for the
monthly log of past messages. In any event, once something is put there,
you should fetch this FILELIST by sending the appropriate command
directly to LISTSERV at UTORONTO and not -- please note -- by sending
the command inside a note to HUMANIST at UTORONTO, as some of you have
been doing.
Thanks for your continued patience with this adolescent service.
Yours, W.M.
=========================================================================
Date:         21 June 1987, 23:58:31 EDT
Reply-To:     Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
 
The following is a slightly edited collection of all the responses I
received to my question about how conversations on HUMANIST should be
regulated. As you will see, the preference seems to be for freely
ranging discussions with a good measure of self-control. This is just
what I'd hoped for -- the best form of government for free people, if I
may say so.
Please note the point about using a "reply" in response number 7.
1=========================================================================
Date: 16-JUN-1987 14:54:15
From: UDAA270%UK.AC.KCL.CC.VAXA@AC.UK
 
In the first days it's quite nice to get the daily messages,
proof that one is indeed involved in an international network.
But it does get out of hand, and I agree totally that the recent
discussions of Nota Bene would have been best addressed to the
originator of the query. However, to define and regulate where
the fine line should be drawn between universal and personal
interest seems an impossible task.  As long as originators of
general queries are prepared to send out summaries after a
certain period, and as long as everyone else realises that a
summary is forthcoming, the e-mail shouldn't be so clogged with
preliminary remarks.  Furthermore, it is easy enough to send a
message direct to any originator and ask for a summary to be sent
to Everyone if none appears.
2========================================================================
Date: 16 June 1987, 08:35:33 EDT
From: Dr Abigail Ann Young    YOUNG    at UTOREPAS
 
It seems to me that the flow of conversation on HUMANIST is just
fine as it is: I think it's rather fun to have the sense of
participation in an actual conversation.  Still, I do realise
that you may have to impose some kind of restraints on replies:
but don't edit out the spontaneity of it!
3=========================================================================
Date:     Tue, 16 Jun 87 09:10 PST
From:     Sterling Bjorndahl - Claremont Grad. School <BJORNDAS@CLARGRAD>
 
I agree that replies should go to the questioner and not the whole group.
I don't know about other mail systems, but on Vax/VMS mail, when I use
the "reply" command, the reply gets sent to the questioner, not the list.
I think I have heard "somewhere" that this may not be true for all mailers,
such as do not read the "reply-to:" line.
4=========================================================================
From: Michael Sperberg-McQueen <U18189@UICVM>
 
We can have completely public discussion (everyone replies via
the list to any query), with the result that the conference
begins to resemble the transcripts one reads in accounts of CB
radio conversations (or their simulations on Compuserve).  Or we
can have tightly controlled discussion (everyone replies to the
querier, not to the list), in which case the conference typically
resembles the transcript of a Mayday frequency:  one call for
help after another, and nothing much in between.  The people who
initiate the queries often fail to report back to the list on
what they were told, and the result is in general a very boring
conversation.  Or we can attempt a middle ground: queries of
limited general interest should be answered privately -- or
rather I should say answers of limited general interest should be
sent privately -- and those who initiate the query should ALWAYS
report back to the list anything of general interest.
 
I vote for the middle ground, with a strong leaning toward erring
on the side of public conversation.  For example, some of the
remarks on Nota Bene lately have been probably better sent
privately... and some are, I think, of public interest.  But I'd
rather that the whole be public than that the whole be
private....
 
It seems to me to be a choice between a rather free, often
unstructured and frustrating, but sometimes enlightening and
exciting discussion, and a much more controlled but much less
exciting or interesting discussion.  From time to time, if
the course of the conversation warrants it, you (or someone
else) can issue a plea that purely private concerns be
handled off the list, in direct notes.  Or the query's originator
(like Dr Young) can request private responses because of a
conviction that the matter is not of public interest.  But
so far I haven't found myself regretting the volume of the
conference.  Quite the opposite, I am looking forward to a
fairly vigorous discussion of the merits of Turbo and other
Prologs.
5=========================================================================
From:  Jeffrey William Gillette <DYBBUK@TUCCVM>
 
Count my vote for your scheme.  The Usenet system, which functions by
broadcast, in a fashion very similar to your List Server, there is a
continuing temptation to respond publically to specific questions of
limited interest.  The younger (and often imature) members of the Usenet
community often respond to such abuses by inundating the offending party
with unfriendly "flame" mail.  I should hope that Humanist participants
would possess sufficient professional courtesy and/or conscience to
regulate themselves.  If not, however, I might arrange to put some Usenet
people onto the Humanist mailing list!!!
6=========================================================================
Date:     Wed, 17 Jun 87 01:32:56 EDT
From:     DD ROBERTS (PHILOSOPHY) <DDROB@WATDCS>
 
I still am enjoying seeing responses to questions of others, and
would like that to continue at least for a while.  It is not
difficult for me to dash through even large quantities of mail,
now that I have decided to be quite hard nosed about it (if I'm
not now able to use a thing, even if it sounds interesting, I
delete it-- confident that if I should need it in the future,
somebody out there would help).
7=========================================================================
Date: Wed, 17 Jun 87 10:06:15 -0800
From: mbb@portia.Stanford.EDU
 
I most definitely agree with you: if person A asks "anyone know
something about foo", then person B, in responding, should mail
directly to A.  Person A may want to synthesize the responses
he/she gets and then send the synthesis to the general list.
 
I have been the moderator for the TeX digest (TeXhax) for over
six months, and this very thing can be a real pain.  All it takes
is for a few people to do the wrong thing to create a big mess. I
imagine that most people use a mailing program and simply give
some kind of "REPLY" command.  The mailing program may grab the
wrong address as the address to reply to.  If there's one thing
I've learned doing TeXhax, it's that mailer programs are really
stupid, fussy and eccentric!!
8=========================================================================
Date:     17-JUN-1987 11:45:43
From:     GW2%UK.AC.YORK.VAXA@AC.UK
 
Never too much for me...I really do prefer to have access to all
the open conversations in progress. Then I can choose which items
to read and which to ignore. But it would help if everyone were
more conscientious in their use of subject-headings.
==========================================================================
[This message is 129 lines long.]
=========================================================================
Date:         22-JUN-1987 09:37:59
Reply-To:     LOU%UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX1@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         LOU%UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX1@AC.UK
 
Does any Humanist have experience of using any of the various mainframe
free text searching systems (e.g. Basis, Cairs, Stairs, Status, Assassin, 3IP,
BRS/Search ...) on anything other than straightforward library catalogue type
data? I'm on a UK interuniversity working party which is currently assessing
the usefulness or otherwise of such packages and would be glad to hear from
anyone (especially from outside the library/info science world) who's had
hands on experience of such systems (and lived to tell the tale). I should
add that we're considering buying such a system at Oxford t make some of the
Text Archive materials more widely available, so any comments on how humanists
would like to access e.g. the complete works of Shakespeare, Milton et al
from online terminals would also be interesting
 
Lou Burnard
 
PS In line with Willard Directive #918365 this is a Public Communication,
but replies to it should be Personal; I hereby undertake to recirculare
such of them as seem generally interesting
 
=========================================================================
Date:         Mon, 22 Jun 87 07:49 PST
Reply-To:     "Sterling Bjorndahl - Claremont Grad. School" <BJORNDAS@CLARGRAD>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         "Sterling Bjorndahl - Claremont Grad. School" <BJORNDAS@CLARGRAD>
Subject:      "close" pattern matching
 
Dear HUMANIST readers:
 
I would like to hear from those who know about "close" pattern
matching algorithms, such as are used in microcomputer spelling
checkers to suggest the word you *meant* instead of the non-word you
*typed*.  Is there a bibliography of published materials on how such
algorithms are constructed?  Do they use frequency tables, or hashing?
 
Please reply to: BJORNDAS @ CLARGRAD on Bitnet.  As a responsible
electronic citizen, I promise to digest and report on replies (if any).
 
 
Sterling Bjorndahl
Institite for Antiquity and Christianity
Claremont Graduate School
Claremont, CA 91711
USA
=========================================================================
Date:         22-JUN-1987 12:55:57
Reply-To:     CATHERINE%UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX2@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         CATHERINE%UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX2@AC.UK
Subject:      typography standards
 
     I am writing to add to the discussions about the decline in typesetting
standards caused by desktop publishing.
     For some years now we at Oxford University Computing Service have supplied
typesetting facilities to all British universities and polytechnics, as well as
to several foreign universities.  We have a Monotype Lasercomp for a typesetter,
(and we hope in the fairly near future to have a PostScript typesetter). All we
provide are the facilities (that is, the typesetter itself and a front end
system in the form of a program called Laserset, which somewhat simplifies the
commands and does syntax checking). Each user typesets his own document.  By now
around two hundred books have been typeset in this way.  For the most part, the
standard has been high, although there have of course been some notable
exceptions.  We ALWAYS strongly  advise users to go to their publisher at the
earliest stage possible, and have the typography department of the publisher
design the book. When this is possible, the book should look exactly as good as
any other book designed by that publisher.
     Problems arise, however, when the user does not yet have a publisher, or
when the publisher does not have a typography department (this, unfortunately,
is becoming more common).  Our advice is then for the user to spend some time in
libraries and bookshops looking for a suitable book whose format the user
admires.  It is then quite easy to use this as a model. We try to stress the
importance of the look of the book, as it is easy with the Lasercomp to achieve
high quality results if the design is good.
     It should be said that we are not engaged in desktop publishing; more in
do-it-yourself publishing.  Our system is probably at once easier and more
difficult to abuse.  We can achieve very fine control over the look of a page;
finer than is possible with most desk-top publishing programs.  However, no
basic structure or design is imposed or even suggested, and there is nothing to
stop an innocent user from producing a horrendous page.  On the whole, however,
our users have been quite conscientious and have made considerable efforts to
produce texts which have a pleasing appearance.  Perhaps this is in part because
our system is a bit more difficult to use than a real desk top publishing
system.  The user must learn 'foreign' terms, such as pointsize, leading,
hanging indents, kerning, film feeds and set feeds, all of which remind him that
he is dabbling in an area of considerable tradition and expertise and art, and
encourage him to walk with caution, possible even respect. Most of our users
seem to feel that since they are taking the trouble to typeset their own work,
they would like it to look good.
 
=========================================================================
Date:         22 June 1987, 15:13:47 EDT
Reply-To:     Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
Subject:      ICON and Prolog; UNIX for humanists
 
The following is from Joel Goldfield, with whom HUMANIST is having some
trouble communicating. Please send all replies to the following network
address:
jdg at psc90.uucp
========================================================================
 
 ICON programming language vs. Prolog
 Dear Colleagues,
     Those of you interested in options to Prolog might like reading
 Mark Olsen's article on the ICON programming language in CHum, Jan.-March
 issue.  He also discusses ICON in relation to SNOBOL.
     I would be interested in hearing from anyone also working with
 stylostatistical applications of UNIX and on friendly interfaces of the
 UNIX system for humanists.
 
                 --Joel D. Goldfield
=========================================================================
Date:         Fri, 26 Jun 87 17:22:29 GMT
Reply-To:     CMI011%UK.AC.SOUTHAMPTON.IBM@AC.UK
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         CMI011%UK.AC.SOUTHAMPTON.IBM@AC.UK
 
 
I have got so desperate (sorry, gotten, for you people over the sea) that
I have printed out two weeks worth of Humanist and am reading it through
for things I forgot - so much for electronic browsing! Hands up all those
who never do this.
 
Points
   1. yes, please sign notes. and say WHERE you are! i exchanged many notes
      with someone from bbn.alexander.com earlier this year without
      the faintest idea of where he physically was. (I know now, I asked him).
  2. in re the note from Bill Winder about Prolog, can I reply here? i
  think it is an interesting issue. I have taught 4 languages to Arts students
in the last few years (Prolog, Icon, Snobol and dBase command language) and
I am not happy with any of them. To summarize what was said at a session
at a conference in Southampton at Easter,
 a) the world doesnt want 3rd generation language programmers - it wants
arts graduates with some experience in 4th generation tools, or MAYBE
5th generation languages). Ergo, teach them to use an SQL-based relational
database system as the answer to almost everything (this view endorsed by
a nice man from IBM)
 
b) if you DO want a '5th gen.' language, then one tries Prolog. But its
awful for a beginners course, because a) they have to learn an OS at the
same time, b) the syntax is horrid, c) there is a lack of builtin functions
(to sort a list, for instance), so students (well, mine) get depressed at
lack of achievement. After all, all the beginning part of Prolog is much
easier in a modern database. Now Turbo Prolog may get over problems b) and
c) (especially if one installs the Toolbox which just came out), but a) remains
,
and you have the generic Prolog problems with large applications that
Winder notes. I would STRONGLY criticise Turbo anyway for not implementing
the pretty crucial feature of  being able to assert newly learnt ideas
during running. The reasons why you have to use the declaration section are
clear enough, but that doesnt excuse Borland saying it is more or less C &
S standard Prolog - it isnt. All that Turbo has is speed and the (wonderful)
environment. You can also get those in a Prolog like Prolog II from
Expert Systems International in Oxford, which provides a better growth
system. Or to solve the 'large applications' problem, I propose to try
next year teaching (aargh no keep away) IBM Prolog, with its interface
to SQL/DS, which would take care of the donkey work.
 
c) can I finally mention Icon? I tried this on 15 1st years, with
disastrous results (maybe it was my teaching). there was too much syntax,
to put it mildly (single and double quote mean different things, for
instance), and the environment was non-existent. Do not get me wrong, I
like Icon a lot and use it every day, but its for programmers who need it,
not for beginners. Anyone care to comment?
 
where does that leave Winder and his French lexicography? what about
the Lisp-based stuff from Montreal (deredec etc)? maybe a dedicated class
would like Icon. What are other peoples solutions? Question, why do
Winders students need to learn programming at all?
 
sebastian rahtz. computer science, southampton, uk
=========================================================================
Date:         28 June 1987, 23:36:54 EDT
Reply-To:     Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
Subject:      Reminder about the Biographies
 
I am preparing to send out or otherwise offer the slightly edited
collection of biographies of HUMANISTs to all of you, but I find that I
don't have biographical statements from about half of the membership. If
you want to have your background, interests, and professional activities
known to the rest of us, and so be able to help us define what support
of humanities computing means, please be sure that you have sent your
statement to me by the end of this coming week. I have statements from
the following people:
-----
Baldini, Pier (ATPMB@ASUACAD)
Balestri, Diane <BALESTRI@PUCC>
Bjorndahl, Sterling - Claremont Grad. School <BJORNDAS@CLARGRAD>
Borchardt, Frank L. <DUCALL@TUCCVM>
Burkholder, Leslie <GL250011@YUVULCAN.BITNET>
Burnard, Lou <LOU%UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX1@AC.UK>
Bush, Chuck <ECHUCK@BYUHRC>
Cameron, Keoth <CAMERON%UK.AC.EXETER@AC.UK>
Camilleri, Lelio  <CONSERVA@IFIIDG>
Candlin, Francis E. <F.E.Candlin@UK.AC.Glasgow.Centre>
Cartwright, Dana E. 3rd <DECARTWR@SUVM>
Evra, James W. van (PHILOSOPHY DEPT.) <VANEVRA@WATDCS>
Griffin, Catherine <CATHERINE%UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX2@AC.UK>
Hare, Roger <R.J.HARE%UK.AC.EDINBURGH@AC.UK>
Henry, Chuck <CUL.HENRY@CU20B.COLUMBIA.EDU>
Ide, Nancy M. <IDE@VASSAR>
Katzen, May <MAY%UK.AC.LEICESTER.VAX@AC.UK>
Kaufman, Steve, Hebrew Union College account <VSSVHUC at UCCCVM1>
Kennedy, Mark T. <mark@cucca-wp.columbia.edu>
Kruse, Susan <UDAA270%UK.AC.KCL.CC.VAXA@AC.UK>
Lowry, Anita <CUL.LOWRY@CU20B.COLUMBIA.EDU>
Makkuni, Ranjit <Makkuni.pa@Xerox.COM>
McCarty, Willard <MCCARTY at UTOREPAS.BITNET>
McCutchan, Walter
Mok, Shu-Yan <YFPL0004@YORKVM1>
Nardocchio, Elaine
Ore, Espen <FAFEO at NOBERGEN>
Owen, David -UA CCIT Academic Computing <OWEN@ARIZRVAX>
Page, Stephen <sdpage@uk.ac.oxford.prg>
Rahtz, Sebastian CMI011%UK.AC.SOTON.IBM@AC.UK
Richmond, S. <S_RICHMOND@UTOROISE>
ROBERTS, D. D. (PHILOSOPHY) <DDROB@WATDCS>
Sano, Haj <sano%Jpl-VLSI.ARPA@Hamlet.Bitnet>
Sousa, Ronald de <DESOUS@UTORONTO>
Swenson, Eva V.  <ESWENSON at UTORONTO>
Thornton, Dave <Dave_Thornton@UK.AC.DURHAM.MTS> or
Wall, Geoffrey <GW2%UK.AC.YORK.VAXA@AC.UK>
Weinshank, Don  <weinshan@mich-state.csnet>
Wiebe, M.G. <WIEBEM@QUCDN>
Young, Abigail Ann <YOUNG at UTOREPAS>
Zacour, Norman <ZACOUR@UTOREPAS>
-----
Thanks very much.
Yours, W.M.
=========================================================================
Date:         Fri, 26 Jun 87 14:43:52 EDT
Reply-To:     Scott Campbell <POSTMSTR@UTORONTO>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
Comments:     Resent-From: Scott Campbell <POSTMSTR@UTORONTO>
Comments: To: HUMANIST@UTOREPAS, HUMANIST@UTORONTO
Comments: cc: ENGHUNT@UOGUELPH
From:         "Stuart Hunter, University of Guelph" <ENGHUNT@UOGUELPH>
Subject:      PROLOG, LISP, AI, and all that stuff.
 
In response to Sebastian's recent comment, I have to ask who the "they" is
that wants Arts students exposed to 5th generation languages?   In the
long run, how many of our "run of the mill" undergraduates do we want to
expose to anything more that a "competent user" level of familiarity?
 
Don't get me wrong:  I'm all for training Humanities scholars in the use
of expert systems and 5th-generation languages to solve the basic problems
that we, as humanist, tackle.   On the other hand, I know that the majority
of the undergraduate I deal with couldn't formulate a statement about many
of those problems, let alone design an expert system to cope with the problems.
 
I think we have to distinguish between what we are teaching to -- or are
using to teach to -- undergraduates and what we need to know ourselves in
order to teach and do our research.   And that brings me back to Sebastian's
statement about "them".   Who is it that wants Arts Students who are
experts in Prolog?
=========================================================================
Date:         Tue, 30 Jun 87 12:27 PST
Reply-To:     "Sterling Bjorndahl - Claremont Grad. School" <BJORNDAS@CLARGRAD>
Sender:       HUMANIST Discussion <HUMANIST@UTORONTO>
From:         "Sterling Bjorndahl - Claremont Grad. School" <BJORNDAS@CLARGRAD>
Subject:      list of Biblical (and related) scholars on BITNET
 
For several months I have been compiling and distributing (on an
irregular basis) an "address book" of people reachable from BITNET who
are in the field of Biblical Studies, or related disciplines such as
Ancient Near Eastern archeology, Targumic studies, etc.  It is an
annotated list intended to promote use of the networks beyond narrow
computer concerns and to generate academic discussion which does not
necessarily centre around computers.
 
I am now preparing a new edition.  If you wish to be included, please
send me a few lines including your paper-mail address and telephone
number, your position and institution, and your fields of special
interest.  If you know of other people who may be interested in being
included, please pass this message on to them.  If you wish a sample
of a previous version of the list, feel free to request one from me.
 
A gratuitous aside to the people I correspond with: I will be in
Germany for August and September, 1987, and will probably not have
access to a connected computer during that time.  Paper mail sent to
me c/o the Institute for Antiquity and Christianity will be forwarded to me.
 
 
Sterling Bjorndahl
BJORNDAS@CLARGRAD.BITNET
Institute for Antiquity and Christianity
Claremont Graduate School
Claremont, CA  91711
USA
