From:	CBS%UK.AC.EARN-RELAY::EARN.UTORONTO::LISTSERV 14-SEP-1989 15:31:15.02
To:	ARCHIVE
CC:	
Subj:	File: "BIOGRAFY 7" being sent to you

Via: UK.AC.EARN-RELAY; Thu, 14 Sep 89  15:30 BST
Received: from UKACRL by UK.AC.RL.IB (Mailer X1.25) with BSMTP id 2342; Thu, 14
          Sep 89 15:30:07 BS
Received: from vm.utcs.utoronto.ca by UKACRL.BITNET (Mailer X1.25) with BSMTP
          id 7687; Thu, 14 Sep 89 15:30:03 B
Received: by UTORONTO (Mailer R2.03A) id 8121; Thu, 14 Sep 89 10:22:00 EDT
Date:     Thu, 14 Sep 89 10:21:54 EDT
From:     Revised List Processor (1.6a) <LISTSERV@EARN.UTORONTO>
Subject:  File: "BIOGRAFY 7" being sent to you
To:       ARCHIVE@UK.AC.OXFORD.VAX

                   Autobiographies of HUMANISTs
                         Sixth Supplement
 
Following are 20 additional entries to the collection of
autobiographical statements by members of the HUMANIST discussion
group.
 
Further additions, corrections, and updates are welcome.
 
Willard McCarty
mccarty@utorepas.bitnet
24 January 1988
=================================================================
*Beeman, William O. <AN700001@BROWNVM>
 
Associate Director for Program Analysis, Institute for Research
in Information   and Scholarship (IRIS), Brown University
Providence, Rhode Island 02912 U.S.A.
 
I am a linguistic anthropologist at Brown University, and I also
direct the Office of Program Analysis of Brown's Institute for
Research in Information and Scholarship. Our office conducts
social science research on the effects of intensive computing on
academic life. We are interested in learning not only how
computers have changed various aspects of academic work for
students, teachers and administrators, but also how academic work
is conducted per se. We have recently completed a study in
conjunction with the Getty Art History Information Program
entitled: OBJECT, IMAGE AND INQUIRY: THE ART HISTORIAN AT WORK,
which explores the work and career patterns of researchers in art
history in advance of designing computer applications which might
apply to the field. We have also just finished a three year study
of the use of an experimental hypertext/hypermedia development
system: INTERMEDIA, developed at Brown and taught in an English
literature survey course, and a cell biology course. The project
was sponsored by the Annenberg/CPB Project of Washington, D.C..
The final report, INTERMEDIA: A CASE STUDY INNOVATION IN HIGHER
EDUCATION, a book-length monograph, will be released soon. We are
also studying the effects of the introduction of on-line
catalogues for library systems, the effects of computing on
scholarly writing, and a number of other projects. We have a
number of other papers and publications available at cost through
our office.
=================================================================
*Brunet, Jean <R31631@UQAM>
 
Professor; Communication, Psychosociology, Universite du Quebec a
Montreal, (514) 282-4897, 282-3620
 
University education: engineering and administration.
Orientation: system theory, cybernetics, social networks,
computing. Work in the area of computing: development of software
for the social sciences; Area: factorial analysis, clustering;
Computer: macintosh; Applications and documentation available in
French and English; this material has been tested in M.A. and
Ph.D. methodology courses
=================================================================
*DeRose, Steven J. <D106GFS@UTARLVM1>
                   <uucp: convex!txsil!steved>
 
Summer Institute of Linguistics, 7500 W. Camp Wisdom Rd., Dallas,
TX 75236.
 
I am a computational linguist, interested mainly in the
representation and analysis of text and discourse by computers. I
hold an Sc.B in Computer Science, A.B.s in Linguistics and New
Testament / Linguistics, and an A.M. in Computational
Linguistics. I am currently writing a dissertation in CL with
Henry Kucera at Brown University, concerning algorithmic
resolution of grammatical category ambiguity in English and Greek
prose.  A portion of it is forthcoming in Computational
Linguistics.
 
With James Coombs and Allen Renear, and our colleagues Elli
Mylonas (Harvard Perseus Project) and David Durand (Brandeis), I
have been active in the Computing and the Humanities Users' Group
at Brown, and in advocating the use of descriptive markup systems
(see Coombs, Renear, and DeRose, "Markup Systems and the future
of scholarly Text Processing", in CACM 11/87). I have served as a
consultant to Language Systems, Inc., developing linguistically-
based spelling and grammar correction systems, large dictionary
databases, and other products.  I have been involved in hypertext
systems since 1979, when I became a director of the FRESS
hypertext system project at Brown.
 
Currently, I am working with the Summer Institute of Linguistics,
which carries out linguistic research, literacy work, and
translation with minority language groups.  Our research group at
SIL is developing hypertext systems for the management of
linguistic and literary research data, combining methods from
hypertext, knowledge representation, and information retrieval. I
am also a consultant to several other system development
projects, including the Brown- sponsored Document Interchange
Project.
=================================================================
*Di Lella, Alexander A., O.F.M. <DILELLA@CUA>
 
Catholic University of America, Washington, DC 20064 U.S.A.; 202-
635-5657.
 
I am professor of Biblical Studies at Catholic University.  I
used an IBM PC AT with two hard disks, 30 Mb and 60 Mb.  I do
research in the various texts of the Bible: the Massoretic Text,
the Septuagint, Vulgate, Peshitta, and the Greek New Testament.
I have Compucord and CompuBible on my 60 Mb hard disk; the former
is a highly sophisticated search and concordance program on the
Massoretic Text of the O.T.  I also have the R.S.V. Bible on the
30 Mb hard disk and the Greek N.T.  I use my AT in doing
concordance work and word studies that would otherwise take me
loads of time and effort.  I am awaiting the arrival of the
Septuagint and, I hope, the Peshitta.
=================================================================
*Faulhaber, Charles B. <ked@garnet.Berkeley.EDU>
 
Department of Spanish & Portuguese, University of California,
Berkeley, CA 94720 (415) 642-2107
 
My primary interests in humanities computing are in
bibliographical data bases for cataloguing rare books and MSS,
which I've been doing for about ten years. I am currently
designing a data base using Advanced Revelation to support my
ongoing Bibliography of Old Spanish Texts, a union catalogue of
medieval MSS and incunabula --the primary sources for the study
of medieval Spanish literature.
 
I have been heavily involved with computing at Berkeley (chair of
Academic Senate Computing Committee and of the UC system
committee), chair of faculty steering committee for our Advanced
Education Projects grant from IBM.  As a result of these
activities I have been recently exposed to the capabilities of
advanced function workstations (Microvax, Sun, RT/PC, etc.) and
am convinced that within three to five years they are going to be
as ubiquitous as PCs and Macs are today. I am extremely
interested in information about humanities programs for these
machines, especially those which have been designed with the ICEC
academic workstation environment in mind.
=================================================================
*Flaherty, Tom <FLAHERTY@CTSTATEU>
 
Academic Affairs and Research, Connecticut State University, New
Britain, Connecticut  06050 USA; (203) 827-7700
 
I am now serving as Acting Assistant Vice President for Academic
Affairs and Research for the Connecticut State University system
-- enrolling about 35,000 students.  When I am not so acting, I
am a Professor of Psychology at Central Connecticut State U.  In
both of these roles I have found myself increasingly enmeshed in
discussions/arguments regarding the role of the humanities.  But
let me back up a bit.
 
I have been a computer lover since just about the time computers
actually became available.  My first exposure was to the IBM 1620
in the early 60's.  Since that time, I have used computers
wherever possible: data collection, data analysis, simulation,
databases, word processing, etc.  I, along with many others would
find it hard to function if computerless.
 
My training was in Experimental Psychology.  No humanist stuff
there; just rat psychology and later psychophysics.  In the 60's,
it was not fashionable (at least in my kind of Psychology) to
talk about non-Behavioral things (note the "B", not "b").  More
recently, I have been interested in cognitive processes and AI;
decidedly non-Behavioral, but naturals for folks with my
predilections.
 
In my administrative role, I have seen students use computers in
ways that convince me that their role in non-technical education
can and will be much greater.  For instance, in watching a
student use a cd-rom-equipped pc to do a search using the
Psychological Abstracts, it became apparent to me that this was
more than a souped-up way to accomplish the same old literature
search.  The student was actually forming and refining concepts
and research questions based upon the feedback from queries.  A
far different phenomenon than could ever take place through page
flipping.
 
The short version is that I am interested in the applications of
computing to the study of any discipline, and I believe that
important and exciting advances in such applications in the
humanities (research and teaching thereof) are upon us.
=================================================================
*Flikeid, Karin <FLIKEID@STMARYS>
 
Dept. of Modern Languages and Classics, Saint Mary's University,
Halifax, N.S.   B3H 3C3 (902) 420-5813
 
To sum up my computer-related interests: I use a number of
computer applications primarily  for my research on Acadian
spoken language texts.  These form a database of 800,000  words,
presently on our VAX mainframe, where I do searches using the
Oxford Concordance Program.  I am however now in the process of
downloading these texts to an IBM-AT and have started using
WordCruncher.  Most of my research is in sociolinguistics, where
I use several statistics and graphics applications. These I do on
the Macintosh Plus, as well as most of my word-processing. I use
S.P.S.S.-X and Varbrul-2S on the VAX as well. Current
preoccupations include using phonetic transcriptions in the IBM
environment and streamlining the IBM/Macintosh/VAX linkups. I am
also exploring ways to link the computerized database to the
original voice recordings.    Like  most of us, my "support" of
Humanities computing takes place within the informal network of
exchange among colleagues.  I have introduced a number of
colleagues to humanities computing, in particular helping with
the  choice of computer environments.  I also tend to be
consulted on down- and up-loading and transfers between IBM and
Mac. Within the framework of my French classes, I do 3-4 week
introductory sessions in our IBM and Mac labs.   I am a member of
the Association for Literary and Linguistic Computing and the
Association for Computers in the Humanities.  Last spring I
attended the Computers and the Humanities Conference in Toronto,
which I found extremely stimulating. I am Associate Professor of
French (Linguistics) at Saint Mary's University in Halifax.
=================================================================
*Goerwitz, Richard III <goer@sophist.uchicago.edu>
                       <ihnp4!gargoyle!sophist!goer>
 
Graduate Student, University of Chicago, Near Eastern Languages &
Civilizations, 5410 S. Ridgewood Ct., 2E Chicago, IL  60615; 312-
643-4377
 
Undergraduate degree - Linguistics Master's - Bible Ph.D. (in
process) - Comparative Semitics; Computer languages: C, Icon,
BASIC, some Pascal (mostly Icon right now) Natural languages:
Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Aramaic (old to middle), German, French,
Akkadian, a little Dutch; more to come.
 
Interests:  Natural language processing in all its shapes and
sizes; Semitic             languages & historical linguistics in
general.
 
I'm interested in the HUMANIST group because I'm a little
isolated right now.  Computer-oriented scholars in the humanities
are spread quite thinly over the face of academia.  I guess I'm
hoping to find some kindred spirits.
=================================================================
*Lambert, Ian Mitchell <iwml@UKC.AC.UK>
 
Tangnefedd, Windmill Road, Weald, Sevenoaks, Kent TN14 6PJ U.K.;
+44 (0)732 463460
 
I am a fulltime mature MA research student in Theology at the
University of Kent at Canterbury. My thesis is entitled
"Structuralist modeling and computer modeling of the biblical
text". It thus covers (a) structuralism (b) computerising
structuralism and (c) structuralism as an exegetical method. My
interest derives from noting the closeness of structuralism's
binary opposition concepts with computer modeling, and I
therefore seek to see whether there is common ground in reality.
If so, what are the implications for biblical exegesis?
 
I am the only research student in both Theology and Computing
Departments at the moment, and would welcome dialogue with others
in similar fields and/or research. My supervisor is Dr John
Court, Keynes College, University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent, CT2
7NL, Tel: +44 (0)227 764000
=================================================================
*Lang, Francois-Michel <lang@PRC.Unisys.COM>
 
230 South 21st Street Philadelphia PA 19103 (215) 665-1849
(hone); Paoli Research Center P.O. Box 517 Paoli, PA  19301 (215)
648-7469 (work).
 
BA with High Honors in Classics, 1981, Princeton University.
Senior thesis topic:  Homeric Speech Formulae MS in Computer and
Information Science, 1986, University of Pennsylvania. Major
areas:  Computational Linguistics and Artificial Intelligence.
 
Currently enrolled in PhD program in Computer and Information
Science, University of Pennsylvania, and full-time employee as
Research Scientist, Paoli Research Center, Unisys, Paoli PA.
 
My work with Unisys deals with maintainability and portability of
large natural-language understanding systems. While working on my
master's degree at Penn, I was employed for two years by Jack
Abercrombie of the University of Pennsylvania, and helped develop
CAI software and word processors for non-Roman alphabets.
=================================================================
*Marker, Hans Joergen <DDAHM@NEUVM1>
 
Danish Data Archives, Odense University, Campusvej 55, 5230
Odense M, Denmark
 
I am a historian of background and employed as associate
professor at the Danish Data Archives, Odense University.
 
My job consists among other things in advising users in the field
of history on the choice of methods and software in research
projects that involve the usage of EDP. My own research centres
on the prices and wages of Denmark in the first half of the 17th
Century, and on historical informatics, methodology of computer
programming and usage for the historical sciences. In the later
research area I am working in close cooperation with people from
other European countries, such as for instance Manfred Thaller
from Goettingen, FRG and Kevin Schurer from the Cambridge Group,
UK.
 
In the field of computer programming I am currently working on
some pieces to the Kleio project, which is centered at the MPIG
in Goettingen and involves historians from a great number of
European countries.
=================================================================
*McDonald, J. K. <MCDOJK@QUCDN>
 
An Darach RR#1 Hartington, Ontario K0M 1W0; (613) 372-2071.
 
B.A. (UBC), A.M. (Oregon), Ph.D. (Berkeley)   Canadian.  1951-
1987: Department of Spanish and Italian, Queen's University,
Kingston, Ontario K7L 3N6
 
Current Status: Early Retirement; ongoing activity in CALL and
text management.  Co-founder of Italian Q'VINCI system (1981-  ).
Visiting scholar, Summer 1987, at Linguistic Institute, Stanford
University, CA. Participant: 1986-, in multi-lingual funded VINCI
research in CALL at Queen's University (with LESSARDG@QUCDN,
BASTIANU@QUCDN, LEVISON@QUCIS, et al).  Interested in mutual
benefits of literary stylistics (Mexican, Italian) and
linguistics.  Languages, in descending order: English, Spanish,
Italian, French, Latin, German, Greek, Esperanto, Celtic
(smatterings).  Member of the Association for Computers in the
Humanities.
=================================================================
*Mylonas, Elli <elli@husc6.BITNET>
               <ELLI@HARVUNXW.BITNET or ELLI@WJH12.HARVARD.EDU>
 
Department of the Classics 319 Boylston Hall, Harvard University
Cambridge, MA  02138
 
I am currently a research associate in the Classics Department at
Harvard, working on the Perseus Project. I am at the same time a
graduate student at Brown University, finishing a dissertation in
Classics on the structure of the prologues in Ovid's Fasti.  My
interest in computing began at Brown, about 5 years ago.  It
arose out of personal fascination, and continued because of the
serendipitous coming together of a group of humanists and
computer people.  I passed through the usual phases of preparing
electronic manuscripts for publication, and of being the resident
"computer person" for the Brown Classics Department. (On that see
my article in Scope, March 1987.)  While I was at Brown, I also
worked for the Computer Center, developing and teaching
minicourses on using the mainframe and as a user services
specialist my last year at Brown.
 
Both these jobs  made clear to me the problems facing the
humanist who wants to use a computer in her daily work. While at
Brown I also worked briefly for IRIS, on the Isocrates Project.
My role was to write a user interface for the Harvard Search
Programs that search the TLG database, and to help the Classics
department to use the programs.  I am also one of the early (and
continuing) members of CHUG, the Computing in the Humanities
Users Group.
 
I am currently working on the textual side of the Perseus
Project.  Funded by Annenberg/CPB, this is a project based at
Harvard and Boston University. We are building a large database
of text and images from Classical Greece that will be linked
together and will be provided with various scholarly tools, such
as a morphological parser, an apparatus criticus, and spatial
browsers for images. The first version will primarily be useful
in teaching, but we think that later versions will have enough
information to support scholarly research.  At the moment we are
prototyping in Hypercard on Macintoshes.
 
My interests in humanities computing lie in both teaching and
research. Key interests are Hypertext--Perseus is essentially a
Hypertext/media project--SGML--all our texts will exist in tagged
SGML compatible form--and the role  of the humanist in
originating and creating the software they need.
=================================================================
*Neu, Joyce <JN0@PSUVM>
 
Department of Speech Communication 305 Sparks Penn State
University, University Park, PA 16802 (814) 863-3361
 
I am an Assistant Professor of Speech Communication at Penn State
University where I specialize in cross-cultural communication and
second language research and teaching. I received my doctorate in
linguistics from the University of Southern California. Since
1983, I have used personal computers for instructional purposes,
innovating the use of the PC in the ESL (English as a second
language) classroom for teaching writing. Currently, I am
attempting to establish an international intercultural
newsletter. This newsletter will be sent to people around the
world who have volunteered to participate in this exchange, and
the newsletter will be written by students enrolled in my cross-
cultural communication course around issues that we discuss in
class.
NOTE:  If anyone is interested in more information about this
newsletter, or in participating, please send me an e- mail note.
=================================================================
*Nye, E.W. <AEN01NY@WYOCDC1>
 
Assistant Professor, Dept. of English, Box 3353 University of
Wyoming, Laramie, WY  USA 82071; (307) 766-3244
 
My experience with mainframe computers began with the text
editors at the University of Chicago (Amdahl) where I keyed my
own doctoral thesis on Coleridge a few years ago, and at
Cambridge University where I keyed my wife's doctoral thesis in
geology.  Admittedly this didn't take me very far into computer
science, but the merits of the keyboard were confirmed, and I
have since devoted some time and money to the use and study of
micros, PCs. This interest has earned me a spot as unofficial
computer consultant in the humanities building at the University
of Wyoming, recommending hardware and software, installing the
same, and working in conjunction with our computer services who
are networking (Ethernet) the campus.  I have an active interest
in telecommunications and digital switching, though only a
smattering of the theory.
 
After my recent visiting fellowship at Edinburgh, I have returned
to Wyoming where work continues on my several jobs of editing,
foremost among which is the Collected Letters of John Sterling
(1806-1844) which I hope to publish from electronic manuscript in
two volumes within a few years.  Could any of your readers share
with me stories about major university presses and their success
or failure setting e-mss?
=================================================================
*Parker, Randolph <PARKER@IUBACS>
 
College of Arts and Sciences, Kirkwood Hall 104, Indiana
University, Bloomington, IN 47405; (812) 335-1646
 
Dipl. in English Linguistics, Edinburgh Univ (Scotland), MA, PhD
(English Lang and Lit), Cornell Univ; faculty member or
administrator, Indiana Univ, since 1972; present position: Asst
Dean, College of Arts and Sciences, Indiana University.
 
Research interests:  Stylistic analysis of texts (especially
dramatic texts), Linguistic and discourse theory; Administrative
responsibility relative to computing: Coordinating the
development of academic computing in the humanities area of the
College of Arts and Sciences. Specific areas of concern: Computer
techniques for textual analysis, Development of CAI for foreign
languages and ESL, Innovative uses of database systems for
research/teaching in humanities fields.
 
Training and experience in computing: Coursework in data
structures, theory of programming languages, and In AI (Indiana
Univ). Practical experience designing and writing programs for
linguistic analysis, bibliographical searches, and administrative
computing (using mainframes, minis, and micros), Use of
relational data-base, text processing, and concordance packages.
=================================================================
*Peterson, Mary <M_PETERSON@UNHH>
 
Computer Specialist/Communications, Stoke Hall, University of New
Hampshire Durham, NH 03824
 
I am a computer specialist for communications at the University
of New Hampshire, which means that I am responsible for
documentation, promotional and informative materials, brochures,
announcements, annual report, and proposals for University
Computing.
 
In my previous position I was a senior writer/editor with
University Communications.  I also taught basic composition and
fiction writing with UNH's English Department for several years.
 
This semester I will be helping the English Department set up a
Macintosh writing laboratory.  Next fall I may help an instructor
in basic composition team-teach a course in writing on the Macs.
I am very interested in the use of computers in teaching
composition.  In my own work, I have found the computer to be an
invaluable tool -- the only method of writing yet that is fast
enough for me.  I believe computers promote writing as a process,
which is exactly the attitude students need to have to write many
(improved) drafts of a paper on their way to polished, final
work.
 
I am also working on a basic composition textbook, now in
production with a publisher in Boston, together with two
colleagues.  Our book is called WRITING MATTERS:  FROM COMMITMENT
TO COMPOSITION.  I am interested in developing software that
could accompany this textbook (perhaps in a year or two).
 
I would appreciate and welcome correspondence regarding the use
of computers in teaching writing -- composition, journalism,
fiction, or poetry -- as well as correspondence regarding such
writers' aids as PROSE.  It would be nice to receive copies of
documents other teachers and researchers have used in writing
laboratories.  I would share the same, as we produce materials.
=================================================================
*Roper, John Paul Goy <S200@CPC865.UEA.AC.UK>
 
University of East Anglia, Computing Centre, NORWICH, NR4 7TJ, UK
Telephone 0603 592379 Telex 975197 FAX 0603 58553
 
Deputy Director of University Computing Centre Ex-Treasurer,
current committee member of ALLC SIG chairman for microcomputers.
 
General interest in use of computers for Literary and Linguistic
research, Currently special interest in use of optical disks for
storage and retrieval of images such as museum objects or
documents.
=================================================================
*Tosh, Wayne <WAYNE@MSUS1>
 
Director CAI Lab--English Dept. St. Cloud State University St.
Cloud, MN 56301; 612-255-3061.
 
Ph.D. in Germanic philology, University of Texas/Austin, 1962;
Special Research Associate, Linguistics Research Center, Austin,
TX, 1960-68.
 
Currently professor of linguistics, Dept. of English, St. Cloud
State University since 1969.  Chair of department's computer
committee, member and past chair of university computer
committee.  Use word-processing in freshman composition, various
language analysis programs in linguistics courses, computer-based
drills in teaching freshman German.  Self-taught programmer in
SNOBOL4, having learned via electronic conferencing with
colleagues at the University of Minnesota and elsewhere in the
state.  Teach an introductory course in SNOBOL4 to English and
computer science majors.  Direct operations and staff of a word-
processing and computer-based instructional lab, perform light
maintenance and repairs, prepare annual budget for department's
computer equipment, conduct workshops for faculty in the use of
word- processing, spreadsheets, and a variety of utility
software. Interested in computer applications to the analysis and
manipulation of language.
 
Member of ACH.
=================================================================
*Young, Charles M. <YOUNGC@CLARGRAD>
 
Department of Philosophy, The Claremont Graduate School,
Claremont, CA 91711, (714) 621-8082.
 
I am an associate professor of philosophy with a special interest
in ancient Greek phil-osophy.  In computing, I am mainly
concerned with finding ways to make machine-readable versions of
Greek texts more readily available to working scholars.  (My
department owns a baby IBYCUS system.)  Until July 1988, I am a
member of the American Philosophical Association's Committee on
Computer Use in Philosophy.
=================================================================
