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                     Autobiographies of HUMANISTs
 
The following is a collection of brief biographies written by
members of HUMANIST. Many of these are spontaneous statements
originally included in notes requesting membership in HUMANIST,
and for this reason they share no common format, style, or scope.
I have edited them only slightly. I am circulating the collection
so that we can get an idea of who we are professionally and what
range of interests and talents we possess. Later a more detailed
and systematic questionnaire will be circulated.
 
Additions, corrections, and updates are welcome, to MCCARTY at
UTOREPAS.BITNET. W.M. 4 July 1987
=========================================================================
*Baldini, Pier (ATPMB@ASUACAD)
 
Department of Foreign Languages, Arizona State University, Tempe
AZ. Supporting applications in foreign languages.
=========================================================================
*Balestri, Diane <BALESTRI@PUCC>
 
I am an Assistant Dean of the (undergraduate) College at
Princeton University. The office is responsible for the
undergraduate curriculum and life. So I do my share of advising
students, but half of my time is given to nurturing the
integration of computing into the curriculum. I work with faculty
in all departments to help acquire resources that will (in my
judgment) be put to the best possible educational use. I have
written successful grant proposals with faculty to the state of
NJ and to Apple. I also work very closely with the Office of
Computing and Information Technologies to see that their planning
is well coordinated with the educational goals of the university.
This, happily, is a very constructive working relationship. We
have been developing plans for student access to computing, for
instance, as well as for faculty support.
 
How I got to this position is odd, but not unusual. My PhD is in
English. I taught fulltime for several years, moved with my
husband, and ended up a part timer in composition at Bryn Mawr
College; from there to Assistant Dean; to a FIPSE grant for
coordinated teaching of writing and computer programming; to the
chair of the FIPSE Technology Study Group (70 FIPSE project
directors, FIPSE being a funding agency in the Dept. of Ed, who
all are working with technology in post secondary settings)--that
while at BMC--to Princeton. The Group is finishing a report
directed at Academic Deans and those who implement academic
decisions about computing, in which we lay out a series of
recommendations about powerful applications of computing to
learning along with some of the consequences for institutions
which get into the computing game. That should be available
sometime this fall, and coming from a set of innovative, mostly
faculty, types, will be interesting.
========================================================================
*Bjorndahl, Sterling - Claremont Grad. School <BJORNDAS@CLARGRAD>
 
Institute for Antiquity and Christianity, Claremont Graduate
School, Claremont, CA 91711 (714) 621-8066 (o) (714) 624-7110 (h)
 
I am a graduate student in the New Testament program. I am
resident computer consultant and programmer at the Institute for
Antiquity and Christianity. I work mostly in the MSDOS and Ibycus
microcomputer environments.
=========================================================================
*Borchardt, Frank L. <DUCALL@TUCCVM>
 
Department of German, Duke University, Durham, NC  27707
[919] 684-3836   [919] 489-5949
 
Principal Investigator, Duke University Computer Assisted
Language Learning (DUCALL) Project. Should like access to
HUMANIST. Have incipient interest in Neural Network Computing for
natural language applications.
=========================================================================
*Burkholder, Leslie <LB0Q AT TE.CC.CMU.EDU  (BITNET) or
                     LB0Q# AT ANDREW.CMU.EDU  (BITNET OR ARPA)>
 
Name: Leslie Burkholder Address: CDEC Bldg B CMU, Pittsburgh PA
15213, USA Phone: 412-268-8532
 
University affiliation: Carnegie Mellon University Description:
Editor, The Computers and Philosophy Newsletter; development of
instructional software in philosophy (in particular, logic); work
on bibliography of available instructional software in
PHILOSOPHY; INSTRUCTOR FOR COMPUTERS AND ETHICS COURSE.
=========================================================================
*Burnard, Lou <LOU%UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX1@AC.UK>
 
Educated mostly at Bristol Grammar School and Balliol College
(Oxford) during the 1960s, many of the attitudes of which remain
curiously entrenched. Graduated in English 1968; then took one
year off to research swinging London subculture before returning
to take BPhil in 19th c. English studies at Oxford 1969-71
(anywhere else it would be called a masters), specialising in
Dickens, 19th c. theatre, gutter press etc. Took up lectureship
in English at University of Malawi 1971-3 (essential 3rd World
life experience, but academically and politically depressing).
 
Gruelling apprenticeship at OUCS from 1974; involved learning
PLAN (ICL 1900 assembler), doing Programme Advisory, writing
GEORGE3 macros, installing and maintaining various odd software
packages, some of which are still with us (Famulus, Snobol, etc)
many of which are not. Software for which I can take some of the
credit includes:- Oxeye (EYEBALL stylistic analysis prog
rewritten in Snobol; now defunct); design of OCP command language
and structure; FAMULUS77 (complete rewrite of Famulus package,
now being distributed by U of Edinburgh).
 
In 1976 formalised our ragbag of electronic texts into the Oxford
Text Archive and went around begging for more. Text Archive
gradually took over half of my life (see semi-official history of
same, available on request). Over last two years have been
tinkering with possibility of transforming suitable quantities of
texts into online database; to this end developed PQR software to
interface to ICL's CAFS (wizard hardware text searching engine;
see various papers), tried it out with some success on Oxford
Shakespeare texts, various bits of Thesaurus Linguae Graecae,
Bodleian pre-1920 catalogue.
 
In 1980 OUCS was one of first UK universities to dip a toe into
the world of database systems for other than "defense" projects,
cornershop accounting or comp sci fanatics. Design and
construction of weird and wonderful database systems is what
occupies the other half of my time. The first one was to do with
the wild bird population of Wytham Woods and its breeding habits;
the most recent with the Great Palace at Byzantium, in fact and
fiction. In between I've had to become quasi-expert on Attic Red
and Black Figure Vase Paintings, Greek Personal names, 17th c.
assize court records, 19th c Philadelphia business, museum
conservation and collection management etc etc. I'd really rather
be working with literature, but the literary scholars don't beat
on the door in the way the others do; I think humanities people
in general remain depressingly ignorant about what database
systems are and how they can be used. One day I hope to find time
to write a book to try to change that. Meanwhile I only get to
write the occasional book review, electronic mail message,
conference paper, lecture etc., which is not enough.
========================================================================
*Bush, Chuck <ECHUCK@BYUHRC>
 
Humanities Research Center Brigham Young University
(ECHUCK@BYUHRC)
 
Interests: Language Corpora, Concordances, Humanities Computing
Classes, Macintosh applications, Desktop Publishing.
=========================================================================
*Cameron, Keoth <CAMERON%UK.AC.EXETER@AC.UK>
 
DEPARTMENT OF FRENCH AND ITALIAN, UNIVERSITY OF EXETER, EXETER
EX4 4QH GB 392-264209
 
Have and am working of computer-assisted concordances and
research into development of expert system for
teaching/correction of French and French phonetics.
=========================================================================
*Camilleri, Lelio  <CONSERVA@IFIIDG>
 
Professor of Computer Music  at  the Conservatory of Music "L.
Cherubini", Florence and member of the research  unit of  the
Musicological  Division  of  CNUCE, Institute of the National
Research Council of Italy.  Research work  concerns with the
study of the cognitive processes  underlying the musical
knowledge by means of the automated tools; also on the
application of the computational methodologies to music theory,
analysis and composition.
 
Recent publications are: Music, Mind and Programs (DIOGENES, 133,
1986), The Current State of Computer Assisted Research In
Musicology in Italy (ACTA MUSICOLOGICA,  LVIII/2, 1986), A
Software Tool for Music Analysis (INTERFACE, XVI/1, 1987),
Towards a Computational Theory of Music (SEMIOTIC WEB, 1987). He
participates at the project Basic Concepts in the Study of
Musical Signification.
 
DIVISIONE MUSICOLOGICA DEL CNUCE/C.N.R. Conservatorio di Musica
L. Cherubini Piazza delle Belle Arti 2 50122 Firenze ITALIA
++39-55-282105.
=========================================================================
*Candlin, Francis E. <F.E.Candlin@UK.AC.Glasgow.Centre>
 
I am the programmer at the DISH History and Computing Laboratory
at Glasgow University, Scotland. DISH consists of a room of
micros, where various lecturers at the History Departments have
implemented teaching using machine readable sources such as the
Census, Valuation Roll, Shipping records, Company accounts. We
have a programme of software development, so far concentrating on
flexible data entry and tabulation of data.
 
Our address is: DISH History Computing Laboratory, University of
Glasgow, 2 University Gardens, Glasgow G12 8QQ.
========================================================================
*Cartwright, Dana E. 3rd <DECARTWR@SUVM>
 
Director of Academic Computing Services, Syracuse University,
Syracuse, NY, 13244-1260, 315-423-4504, DECARTWR@SUVM. Employed
at Syracuse University since 1971.
 
While my undergraduate degree is in Physics and my Master's is in
Computer Science, I have a strong interest in fine arts, music,
and the humanities, so when worrying about computing I pay
special attention to those areas.
 
I view my job as being a problem solver (in contrast with being a
supplier or controller of computing). I happen to use computing
to solve problems, but that is almost incidental. I am
particularly fascinated with the way artists, musicians, and
humanists interact with computing technology. A major thrust at
Syracuse University is bringing such people into close contact
with super- computers and advanced graphics devices (while not
neglecting the Macintosh!). For example, I have just hired (into
the Academic Computing Center!) an recent SU graduate with an MFA
in Computer Art, who will help scientists and engineers better
visualize the results of their research (and anyone else needing
such help--it's just that I think those two groups need SERIOUS
assistance).
 
I am a dedicated Macintosh user (SE at the office, Plus at home).
I primarily use WriteNow, PageMaker, SuperPaint, and FullPaint
(this should give you some insight into my philosophy about
computing). Professionally I am a programmer (Every nickel earned
since 1969 has come from computing, first as a systems programmer
on large IBM mainframes, then as a network software creator from
1977 through 1983), but inside of me lurks a writer, singer, and
illustrator who justs happens to like computers.
=========================================================================
*Evra, James W. van (PHILOSOPHY DEPT.) <VANEVRA@WATDCS>
 
My primary interest is in the teaching of formal logic by
computer.  The information you requested is as follows: Name:
James Van Evra Address:  VANEVRA@WATDCS.BITNET Telephone: (519)
8851211x2449 Affiliation: Dept. of Philosophy, Univ. of Waterloo
=========================================================================
*Gillette, Jeffrey William (DYBBUK at TUCCVM.BITNET or ducall!jeff
                           at duke.edu)
 
Humanities Computing Facility, 104 Languages Building, Duke University
Durham, NC  27706; phone: 919/684-3637
 
As Associate in Research for the Humanities Computing
Facility, I am responsible for all software development in the
Duke project.  The largest share of this consists of Calis,
the "Computer Assisted Language Instruction System" which many
universities and publishers use to provide supplemental
computer exercises to foreign language students, and the Duke
Language Toolkit - a package which allows IBM PCs to work with
text in Russian, Greek, Hebrew, Coptic, and various other non-
Roman languages.
 
My academic work lies principally in the study of Christian
Origins.  I am interested in the use of computer assisted text
research tools, particularly those which give access to
antique and medieval documents in Greek, Latin, Coptic, and
other relevant languages.  The most interesting technologies
for this include CD-ROMs, graphics packages, "electronic
concordance" tools, and statistical applications
 
My professional work focuses on the task of using computers in
the acquisition of a second language.  Here my interests
center on the use of technology for second language
learning, the implementation of language acquisition
strategies in a computer medium, and the validation of
computer assisted language learning applications.
=========================================================================
*Griffin, Catherine <CATHERINE%UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX2@AC.UK>
 
I work at the Oxford University Computing Service in the
Computing in the Arts section. While I help all arts users, my
specialty is typesetting, and most of my time is spent helping
users typeset a wide variety of languages and alphabets (from
English and the european languages to Syriac and Hieroglyphs).
My main duty at Oxford is to run the Oxford end of our national
academic typesetting service (although for the 6 months and for
the foreseeable future, d to lack of staff I have been running
both the local and the national ends). I have taken part in
broader-based computing in the arts seminars and conferences here
and abroad, and have helped Susan for many years with her SNOBOL
course and with her other courses.
=========================================================================
*Hare, Roger <R.J.HARE%UK.AC.EDINBURGH@AC.UK>
 
I am involved in training here at the University of Edinburgh,
and have a particular interest in Humanities Computing.
 
(Training Group Computing Service University of Edinburgh 59
George Square Edinburgh Scotland
=========================================================================
*Henry, Chuck <CUL.HENRY@CU20B.COLUMBIA.EDU>
 
I am the person in charge of the humanities and history division
of the Columbia Libraries.
=========================================================================
*Hockey, Susan (SUSAN%VAX2.OXFORD.AC.UK@UK.AC)
 
After taking a degree in Oriental Studies (Egyptian with Akaadian)
at Oxford University I worked as a programmer/advisor at the Atlas
Computer Laboratory which at that time was providing large scale
computing facilities for British Universities. There in the
early 1970's I wrote programs to generate non-standard characters on
a graph-plotter and was involved with the development of version
2 of the COCOA concordance program.
 
In 1975 I moved to Oxford which now supports various services for
computing in the humanities which are used by other universities.
I am in charge of these facilities and also teach courses on literary
and linguistic computing and on SNOBOL. Both of these courses have been
turned into books.
 
I have been a Fellow of St Cross College, Oxford since 1979 and I
now look after the computing interests in college.
 
I have lectured on various aspects of humanities computing in various
corners of the globe, more recently on current issues and future
developments for humanities computing, Micro-OCP and its uses and on
computers in language and literature for a more general audience.
 
My recent activities have been concerned with
 
(1) Version 2 of the Oxford Concordance Program and Micro-OCP. Both are
being tested now and are in the final stages of documentation.
 
(2) The Association for Literary and Linguistic Computing of which I
am currently Chairman and am on the editorial committee of Literary and
Linguistic Computing.
 
My next project will be concerned with the introduction of computers
in undergraduate courses at Oxford. These courses consist almost
entirely of the detailed study of set texts, and this project, which
is funded under the UK government Computers and Teaching Initiative,
will set up a University-wide system for analysis of these texts
via IBM-PC workstations linked to a large VAX cluster at the central
service.
 
Susan Hockey, Oxford University Computing Service
              13 Banbury Road
              Oxford OX2 6NN
              England
 
Telephone: +44 865 273226
 
Arpa:  Susan%vax2.oxford@cs.ucl.ac.uk  /
Susan%oxford.vax2@arpa.ucl-cs EARN/BITNET:
Susan@vax2.oxford.ac.uk         /  Susan%oxford.vax2@ac.uk
=========================================================================
*Ide, Nancy M. <IDE@VASSAR>
 
President of the Association for Computers and the Humanities.
She holds a Ph.D. in English Literature with a Ph.D. minor (M.S.
equivalent) in Computer Science from The Pennsylvania State
University.
 
Currently, she is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science and
a member of the Cognitive Science faculty at Vassar College,
where she teaches courses in programming language theory,
compiler design, natural language processing, data structures,
and computer architecture in addition to introductory
programming. She also teaches courses in computing for students
of literature and language as has written a textbook for use in
such courses, entitled Pascal for the Humanities.
 
Her research includes computer-assisted analyses of structure and
theme in William Blake's The Four Zoas; her primary area of
research interest is developing formal models and methods for
analysis of meaning in literary texts. She has given numerous
papers and lectures on her research as well as other aspects of
humanities computing, and she organized and led a workshop on
Teaching Computers and the Humanities Courses in summer, 1986.
She is also active in the area of computer science education and
is developing guidelines for the design of joint majors involving
computer science and a second discipline.
========================================================================
*Jones, Sarah Rees (Bitnet: SRRJ1 at VAXB.YORK.AC.UK
                   Janet:  SRRJ1%UK.AC.YORK.VAXB@AC.UK)
 
History Department, Vanbrugh College, University of York, Heslington,
York, YO1 5DD U.K 	Tel. York (0904) 430000 ext. 5893
 
I am in the History Department of the University
of York, U.K. For a while now I have been engaged in creating a data-base
of medieval title deeds for the city of York for research purposes, and
with 3 other colleagues am now planning ways of introducing data-processing
techniques to undergraduates in our teaching next academic year. Humanist
seems to be producing a lot of discussion which would be of great use
to us as we "learn how to use the wheel".
=========================================================================
*Katzen, May <MAY%UK.AC.LEICESTER.VAX@AC.UK>
 
I am Project Manager of the Office for Humanities Communication.
The Office is funded by the British Library, specifically to
encourage the use of computers in the humanities. To this end we
run HUMBUL, an online bulletin board for computing in the
humanities, which is available on JANET, as well as a printed
Newsletter, the Humanities Communication Newsletter which appears
quarterly. We also arrange a series of conferences, workshops,
and specialist meetings. Among our recent efforts have been an
Anglo-French colloquium on the use of expert systems in research
in the humanities, CATH87, a conference on computers and teaching
in the humanities, a series of specialist meetings on computer
applications in fields such as medieval studies, music, and so
on, as well as demonstrations to alert potential users to the
wide range of applications of computerised systems and services.
In addition, the Office conducts research in these fields.
 
Office for Humanities Communication,University of
Leicester, Leicester LE1 7RH; phone: (Leicester) 522598
=========================================================================
*Kaufman, Steve, Hebrew Union College account <VSSVHUC at UCCCVM1>
 
I am editor of the new project: the Comprehensive Aramaic
Lexicon, centered at Johns Hopkins (CAL@JHUNIX). Steve Kaufman
(BITNET address VSSVHUC@UCCCVM1) Hebrew Union College 3101
Clifton ave. Cincinnati, OH 45220 USA (phone #513-221-1875).
========================================================================
*Kennedy, Mark T. <mark@cucca-wp.columbia.edu>
 
815 Watson Labs, 612 W. 115th Street, Columbia University, New
York, N.Y. 10025; phone:  (212) 280-3259.
 
affiliation:  computer center staff.
my internet email address is:  mark@cucca-wp.columbia.edu.
my bitnet email address (which you may use if your mailer doesn't
reach the internet) is:  mtkus@cuvma.
 
what i do to support computing in the humanities: i'm the manager
of what was the computer center's user services group (12
consultants, 1 technical writer, 4 administrative staff, 40
part-time student consultants).  however, in an attempt to meet
the growing needs of the entire university research community,
the computing center and the university libraries have merged
into one organization at columbia known as the 'S.I.C.', the
Scholarly Information Center).  my group works closely with
reference librarians, faculty, and staff from the humanities in
order to help them use computers and communications facilities to
further their work.  we also administer an IBM grant which has
placed a large number of microcomputers in the hands of
humanities faculty on campus.  i will send you the latest copy of
our SIC journal which contains a number of articles about
computing in the Humanities.
========================================================================
*Kruse, Susan <UDAA270%UK.AC.KCL.CC.VAXA@AC.UK>
 
I am a Computer Advisor within the Humanities Division of the
Computer Centre at King's College London. Although many
Universities in Britain increasingly have a person within the
Computer Centre who deals with humanities' enquiries, King's
College is unique in having a Humanities Division. There are
eight of us within the division, some with specific areas of
expertise (e.g. databases, declarative languages) and others
(like myself) who deal with general issues. Some of us are from
computer backgrounds; others, like myself, are from a humanities
background (in my case, archaeology). We cater to all users
within the College but specialise in providing a service for
staff and students in the arts and humanities. This involves
advising, teaching, and writing documentation. The aims and
activities of HUMANIST are therefore of some interest to me, and
I would very much like to be placed on your list:
 
Computer Centre King's College London
Strand London WC2R 2LS England
========================================================================
*Lancashire, Anne (ANNE at UTOREPAS)
 
As first Acting Chairman of the English dept. and now Vice-Provost (Arts &
Science, Univ. of Toronto), I have been attemping to encourage use, by
humanists, of computing technology in research and in teaching:
though  my personal use of computing has so far been pretty
mundane--word-processing, indexing, electronic mail. I am now
beginning to store on the computer the transcriptions from my
current medieval and Renaissance theatre records project, with a
view eventually to manipulating the data in various ways (e.g.,
sorting records by date, by type, etc.).
=========================================================================
*Lowry, Anita <CUL.LOWRY@CU20B.COLUMBIA.EDU>
 
I am a Reference Librarian in the Humanities and History Division
of the Columbia University Libraries, with special
responsibilities for providing information, training, resource
development, etc. relating to computer applications in the
humanities; areas of particular interest and expertise include
information retrieval, bibliographic data base creation and
management, and text analysis.  I consult with faculty and
students on projects, teach classes, write articles and training
materials, and build collections of print and machine-readable
resources to support computing in the humanities.  I look forward
to exchanging information and views with other HUMANISTs.
 
Anita Lowry Reference Department Butler Library 325 Columbia
University New York, NY 10027 (212)280-2242
(cul.lowry@cu20b.columbia.edu)
=========================================================================
*Makkuni, Ranjit <Makkuni.pa@Xerox.COM>
 
System Concepts Laboratory, Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, 3333
Coyote hill road, Palo Alto CA 94304. (415) 494-4387.
 
My research explores the potential of electronic technologies --
computers and video -- towards preserving and disseminating
traditional crafts. As a first experiment, I am setting up a
project that will apply electronic technologies to the practice
of Tibetan Thangka painting, which is endangered by external
forces. My research explorations seek to demonstrate the
relationship of electronic technologies towards preserving
traditional values while, at the same time, illustrate the
changes brought by electronic media to Thangka painting.
=========================================================================
*McCarthy, William J. <MCCARTHY@CUA>
 
Dept. of Greek and Latin, Catholic University of America, Wash., D.C. 20064
(202) 635-5216/7
 
In our department I am the party responsible for acquiring and
maintaining hard- and software. Although I have no training or
particular interest in programming, I am interested in HUMANIST.
=================================================================
*McCarty, Willard <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
 
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, University of Toronto
14th floor, Robarts Library, 130 St. George Street, Toronto,
Canada M5S 1A5 (416) 978-3974.
 
I am an editor, researcher, academic consultant, and
administrator in the Centre for Computing in the Humanities
(CCH), and a Miltonist with strong interests in classical and
biblical literature.
 
In the former role I edit _Ontario Humanities Computing_, the
newsletter of the provincial Ontario Consortium for Computing in
the Humanities; with Ian Lancashire, _The Humanities Computing
Yearbook_ (Oxford Univ. Press); HUMANIST; and occasional
guidebooks. My research interests in computing centre on personal
information systems, i.e., database software useful in an
academic setting chiefly for management of source material and
notes. On the basis of the experience with a prototype I wrote
some time ago, I've designed a more adequate system and given
papers on it. This design is currently being implemented
commercially. Within the CCH I also supervise a couple of people,
help organize conferences, and assist in other local work. Most
recently I have completed a lecture tour of several European
countries both preceding and following the ALLC/AIBI conference
in Jerusalem (June 1988).
 
In my latter role, as Miltonist, I have written an essay on the
classical motif of descent into the underworld in relation to
Satan's journey in Paradise Lost (UTQ 56.2) and, in support of
research on Satan's narcissism, another on metaphorical mirroring
in classical literature (Arethusa, forthcoming). At the moment I
am finishing a chapter on Ovid's Narcissus for a book of
collected essays. This recent writing is part of a larger
investigation of the pragmatic and theoretical issues raised by
Milton's use of biblical and classical sources. (Tracing and
managing the evidence of such sources and discovering the
patterns in them is work for which a computer is an admirable
assistant.) Once the current project is out of the way, I plan to
do work on the theory of allusion itself and to return to the
focus of my Ph.D. thesis, the relation between Paradise Lost and
the Bible.
 
I am a founding member of the ACH/ALLC Special Interest Group on
Humanities Computing Resources, of which HUMANIST is an
expression, and an enthusiastic though critical proponent of e-
mail.
=========================================================================
*McCutchan, Walter
 
Works for DCS, but he has a long history of interest in computing
in the humanities and he does much of the humanities consulting
over in DCS. Also has worked on projects at the Centre for the
NOED. Particular responsibility at DCS is as the SPIRES expert.
 
User Services Department of Computer Services, Math and Computer
Building, University of Waterloo (519)-885-1211 x.6447
 
=========================================================================
*Mitchell, David (D.MITCHELL at QMC.AC.UK)
 
Department of Geography and Earth Science, Queen Mary College
University of London, Mile End Road, London E1 4NS England
Tel. 01 980 4811 ext. 3631
 
I am a post-graduate researcher in human geography in the Department of
Geography, Queen Mary College, University of London. I am part of
the team who teach computing to the first year human geography under-
graduates.  I will also be involved in the instalation of software on
the new departmental micro-Vax, and for general upkeep of the same system.
Thus issues relating to teaching computing skills to humanities students
are of great interest to me; as is any discussion on the specific problems
faced in the implementation phase.  My views on the general teaching of
computing skills to non-computer science based and non-science based students
will shortly be appearing in the Journal of Geography and Higher Education.
Humanities consulting for Dept. of Computing Services. SPIRES; NOED
=========================================================================
*Mok, Shu-Yan <YFPL0004@YORKVM1>
 
I am a Ph.D. student in the philosophy department of York
University. Among my interests is formal philosophy. Recently I
learnt PROLOG.
 
Department of Philosophy, York University, North York, Ontario
M3J 1P3 Telephone numbers: 736-5113(office); 736-1162(home).
=========================================================================
*Nardocchio, Elaine
 
Computer address: ELAINE AT MCMASTER or CJONES at UTOREPAS
Affiliation: Dept of French, McMaster University, Hamilton,
Ontario L8S 4M4
 
Interests: Computer aided analysis of dramatic texts
Other info: President of Ontario Consortium for Computers and the
humanities.
=========================================================================
*Ore, Espen <FAFEO at NOBERGEN>
 
I am working at The Norwegian Computing Centre for the Humanities
(there is a note about us on HUMBUL). Since we are a national
service centre for computers in the humanities in general, our
work is fairly varied. My field of interest is processing of
non-English texts, with a bias towards papyrology, but I'm also
working with different technologies for optical storage.
=========================================================================
*Owen, David -UA CCIT Academic Computing <OWEN@ARIZRVAX>
 
Academic Computing, Center for Computing and Information
Technology, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721.
[602] 621-2835 or 2915
 
I am currently in Academic Computing at the University of
Arizona, and have close links with the Language Research Center
here. It is the closest thing we have to a Humanities Research
Center. Next year I shall be joining the Philosophy Department
and hope to introduce them to n e use of Computer Conferencing as
a supplementary teaching tool. I will retain my links with the
Language Research Center and hope to start some projects there.
=========================================================================
*Page, Stephen <sdpage@uk.ac.oxford.prg>
 
I am completing a D.Phil. at Oxford on uses of computers in music
research and music analysis, my main area of interest being
database query systems for music. I also act as moderator for the
music-research mailing list, which has a couple of hundred
recipients interested in uses of computers in music research,
music education, and other areas (although our scope normally
excludes sound generation and music composition).
 
Programming Research Group, Advanced Information Technology Group
University of Oxford, Arthur Andersen & Co, Management
Consultants, 11 Keble Road, 1 Surrey Street Oxford  OX1 3QD
London  WC2R 2PS U.K.
=========================================================================
*Rahtz, Sebastian (Bitnet: CMI011 at IBM.SOTON.AC.UK
                  Janet:  CMI011@uk.ac.soton.ibm)
                  OR: spqr@uk.ac.soton.cm
                      spqr@sot-cm.uucp    (Internet)
                      ...!ukc!sot-cm!spqr (old-style uucp)
 
Computer Science, University, SOUTHAMPTON S09 5NH, UK
44 703 559122 ext 2435 (international)
 
Sebastian Rahtz is a Lecturer in the Department of Electronics and
Computer Science at the University of Southampton, UK, with responsibility
for teaching courses for the Faculty of Arts. These courses are all examined,
and count towards student degrees; they include an introductory course
(3 terms) and several 1 term courses for the Archaeology Department.
 
Research includes two joint projects with Archaeology (a graphical database,
and excavation simulation for teaching), the Protestant Cemetery in Rome and
various issues in electronic publishing.
 
Prior to this appointment in 1985, worked for Project Pallas at the University
of Exeter; previous incarnation were as a field archaeologist (from 1977
to 1984), as editorial assistant on the _Lexicon_of_Greek_Personal_Names_
(typesetting, mainly) and as a Classics and Modern Greek undergraduate.
 
I teach courses for the Faculty of Arts here:
    - Introduction to Computing
    - Literary Computing
    - Archaeological Computing
    - Advanced Archaeological Computing
    - (from 1987) new MSc in Archaeological Computing (I am
co-organiser, and teach part of one unit)
All these courses are examined and form part of undergraduate degree.
========================================================================
*Richmond, S. <S_RICHMOND@UTOROISE>
 
(416)224-3180  (416)889-3558 17 Jonathan Gate Thornhill, ON L4J 3T9 Canada
 
Presently I am attempting to develop socratic teaching computer
systems. I am in the MA program at OISE in the department of
Computer Applications to Education.  I earn my living as a
technical writer and technical support person in a Federal
Government Department.  Previously I taught philosophy and have a
Ph.D from Boston University.
 
What I am seeking to find how far one can go with simulating
socratic teaching on the computer.  I have written a socratic
guided text storage system in dBASE.  Now I am looking into the
suitability of PROLOG systems for writing more advanced
systems--such as a system that simulates "baby" learning as a
subset of socratic learning.  I would be interested in contacting
humanists interested in the theory of learning, computer
simulations of learning, computer simulations in general, PROLOG,
or other AI-type languages available on PC's.
=========================================================================
*Roberts, D. D. (PHILOSOPHY) <DDROB@WATDCS>
 
Department of Philosophy, University of Waterloo, N2L 3G
(519) 885 1211 x2638; res:  (519) 885 0315
 
I do all my writing (early drafts, the whole bit) on the
computer, using the UW 4341's, usually from a terminal at home
(with a sytek connection on a dedicated phone line).  All course
descriptions, handouts, exams, etc. are also done on computer.
 
My start, in 1970, was in connection with the chronological
edition of the writings of Charles Peirce, which is centered at
Indianapolis (Indiana University-Purdue University at
Indianapolis, IUPUI). Starting then on the projected 4th volume
of the series (it is now at the printers, and is much changed
from what we "finished" with 4 years ago) we began typing in
previously unpublished manuscripts and we now have, in addition
to the volume 4 material, two future volumes' worth of material
in the computer--much of it proofread here (our "preliminary"
proofing) and some of it proofread at Harvard, where the original
mss are.  Waterloo is a modest sized contributing part of the
project, of which I am an associate editor.
 
I have also been our department's "computer advisory (?)
representative" and in that position have done a little
individualized tutoring of the very basic use of computers,
editors, formatters (though now many of our students know far
more than I do, just as it is in philosophy proper).
 
Just this past weekend I took part in a kind of brainstorming
session at IUPUI whose purpose was to begin to define a project
for computers in the humanities which would make use of such
recent computerized editions of writings as the Peirce and
Santayana editions, as well as other in the fields of literature
and history.  I was one of the novices in the group, which
included Joe Raben, Mike Preston (U. Colorado), Helen Schwartz
(Carnegie-Mellon and elsewhere, soon to be at IUPUI), and others.
=========================================================================
*Sano, Haj <sano%Jpl-VLSI.ARPA@Hamlet.Bitnet>
 
I have a BS in Computer Science and Engineering from MIT (1982),
am working on an MSEE in Digital Signal/Image Processing at USC,
and am thinking of studying with Bill Buxton at U of T in a few
years. My humanities interests are in music (I have been a
pianist for 24 years, guitarist for 4 years, and have played
brass and percussion instruments along the way), and psychology
(my humanities concentration at MIT). I have always tried to
balance my technical education with the humanities, and am
interested in hearing about application of computers in the
humanities. I may be reached at:
 
741 Mar Vista Avenue Pasadena, CA 91104 home: 818/797-5995 work:
818/354-0370 (JPL/Caltech) Email: sano@jpl-vlsi.arpa or
sano@vlsi.jpl.nasa.gov
=========================================================================
*Sousa, Ronald de <DESOUS@UTORONTO>
 
Phone: 978-6789   (923-6987 h)
 
Address/Affiliation: Philosophy Dept. U of T 215 Huron St. #907
 
How do I support the Aims and Aspirations of the group? Well, I
don't have that much to contribute, but I'm full of enthusiasm
and MORAL support and have a morbid interest in desktop
publishing, playing with fonts, etc. I've been waging for years a
now-no-longer-completely solitary campaign to get my colleagues
to get onto & use E-mail. I know quite a bit about Nota Bene.
=========================================================================
*Sperberg-McQueen, Michael <U18189@UICVM>
 
Visiting Research Programmer at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
 
I was trained in German and comparative literature at Stanford
University, and went to work at the Princeton University Computer
Center as the resident humanist about the time I finished my
dissertation and saw just how many job opportunities there really are
for Ph.D.'s in Middle High German and Old Norse philology.  Since
February 1987 I have been at the University of Illinois at Chicago,
where the user services and system programming groups are currently
trying to divide me between them.  For user services, I support
database work in Spires; for systems I work on CICS and
support the library automation system (Notis).
 
Personal interests include textual criticism, stylistics, metrics,
and semantic studies, and I want someday to develop tools for such
work.  Day to day, however, my tasks have been largely dictated
by my users, so my time has gone to less high-flown projects:  font
design for printers, PCs, and terminals; a Hebrew / Arabic / English
version of Kedit for the Near Eastern Studies department; an online
catalog database for the PUCC data library; a simple text collation
program for correcting texts read twice with a Kurzweil machine; and
so on.  When I can, I work on database designs for intensive
textual study, and am collaborating with Karen Kossuth of Pomona to
produce a Prolog parser for Middle High German syntactic studies.
 
I serve on the ACH executive council, the steering committee of this
incipient Special Interest Group for Humanities Computing Resources,
and on the ACH Working Committee on Text Encoding Practices, which is
endeavoring to formulate guidelines for the encoding of texts for
research and teaching, in collaboration with other interested groups.
an amateur.
=========================================================================
*Swenson, Eva V.  <ESWENSON at UTORONTO>
 
As a coordinator for computer matters for central administration
at the University of Toronto, it is my job to keep in touch with
computer- related activities on campus.  Personally, I am a
consumer of humanist's products. I have a continuing connection with the
Dept of Computer Science and teach the occasional course on Data Processing
or Economics of Computers.
 
=========================================================================
*Thornton, Dave <Dave_Thornton@UK.AC.DURHAM.MTS> or
<CL61@UK.AC.DURHAM.MTS
 
I am a computing adviser at the University of Durham (UK) with
special interest in Arts and Humanities Computing. I am also a
member of the NUMAC Arts Advisory Support Group (NUMAC stands for
the Northumbrian Universities Multiple Access Computers) and
consists of Durham University, University of Newcastle upon Tyne
and Newcastle Polytechnic. We share 2 Amdahl mainframes networked
together.
 
University of Durham Computer Centre, Science Laboratories, South
Road, Durham UK, DH1 3LE
 
Tel: 091-374-2876
=========================================================================
*Wall, Geoffrey <GW2%UK.AC.YORK.VAXA@AC.UK>
 
Department of English and Related Literature University of York
Heslington York Y01 5DD Great Britain
 
0904-430000 extension 5880
 
Apart from the routine use of wordprocessor and database in my
teaching and research, my special interests in computing related
to the humanities are -work on a program to teach translation
skills (French to English); establishing an email network between
people working in the same areas of inquiry; designing software
to teach the basic concepts and methods of science to
non-scientists and to children.
=========================================================================
*Weinshank, Don  <weinshan@mich-state.csnet>
 
Computer Science Department, Michigan State University, East
Lansing MI 48824        [517] 353-0831
 
Paul Barrett and I edit concordances to Charles Darwin's work. So
far, Cornell University Press has published three:
-- Origin of Species, First Edition
-- Expression of Emotions
-- Descent of Man (in press; will be published by early Fall)
Other concordances are in process or expected for the near
future:
-- notebooks: See Barrett et.al. edition of the Notebooks, which
Cornell lists in the Fall catalog.
-- Beagle
-- Origin of Species, Sixth Edition
 
We very much would like to be added to your list. We undertake to
provide computer-readable text either of the source text
themselves or of the  concordances to any legitimate researcher.
========================================================================
*Wiebe, M.G. <WIEBEM@QUCDN>
 
My main computer interest is through the Disraeli Project, of
which I am the head:  we use the computer to process our
materials all the way up to doing our own page-layouts and
typesetting, mostly on a system originally developed in
connection with the Project starting in the mid 70s.  We also use
the mainframe for running the indexing program CINDEX, for some
communication, and for archiving materials.
 
I am also the English Dept computing chairman, and have been
involved with George Logan in devising departmental policy and
installations for student and faculty computing.  I am one of the
Associates of the proposal submitted by Logan and David Barnard
for a Centre of Excellence grant (Ian Lancashire has a copy of
the application). My primary work however is in editing the
Letters of Benjamin Disraeli: see Volume III just published by U
of Toronto Press.
========================================================================
*Winder, Bill (WINDER at UTOREPAS)
 
As a doctoral candidate at the University of Toronto's French
Department, my activities -- computing and otherwise -- are
circumscribed by my thesis topic: "Maupassant: predictability in
narrative". One axis of research concerns automatic abstracting:
precisely why do automatic abstracting techniques fail with literary
texts? Maupassant's 310 short stories will be the literary corpus. The
other main axis of research concerns critical model building and the
semantic role of predictability in texts and in the critical model. More
generally, my interest in computing lies in translating semiotic
theories (particularly those of L. Hjelmslev and C. S. Peirce) into a
semblance of computational form.
 
This endeavour has led me to (Turbo) Prolog and Deredec. The use of the
latter is presented in CHum's recent issue on France, where J. M.
Marandin discusses "Segthem", a Deredec automatic abstracting procedure.
My interest in Prolog developed out of my studies in logic (particularly
combinatory logic and Peirce's existential graphs).
 
As a teaching assistant for one of the French Department's computer
application courses, my principal activities have been teaching Word
Perfect and demonstrating packages such as Deredec, BYU concordance, TAT
(my own French concordance package), COGS, and MTAS.
=========================================================================
*Young, Abigail Ann <YOUNG at UTOREPAS>
 
Presently, I am part of the editorial team at the Records of
Early English Drama (REED), doing checking of mediaeval and
Renaissance MS sources, translation of Latin texts, and the
compilation of Latin glossaries.  But for a variety of reasons
(primarily because the glossarial work rests on
computer-generated concordances of the primary texts in our
volumes) I have ended up co-ordinating computer work at REED.
Most importantly, I take charge of the actual production of
concordances, which includes transferring the text from a micro
to a mainframe, and writing JCL to run the concordance package.
I work with the typesetters to implement, maintain, and (when
necessary) upgrade our computer-typesetting system, hardware and
software; advise on the purchase of new hardware and software;
write some programs to pre-process text for various applications,
and generally troubleshoot computer problems at REED.
 
My formal background is in Classical Languages, especially Latin,
and Mediaeval Studies, especially the history of NT criticism in
the 12th and early 13th centuries.  I've learned what I know
about computers from reading manuals, asking bushels of silly
questions, and making lots of mistakes, especially when it came
to learning C.
=========================================================================
*Zacour, Norman <ZACOUR@UTOREPAS>
 
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 legal works; now working on the history
of the college of cardinals in the Middle 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.
=========================================================================
[49 entries, 958 lines, ca. 50K]
