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                   Autobiographies of HUMANISTs
                         Seventh Supplement
 
Following are 21 additional entries to the collection of
autobiographical statements by members of the HUMANIST discussion
group.
 
HUMANISTs on IBM VM/CMS systems will want a copy of Jim Coombs'
exec for searching and retrieving biographical entries; for a
copy
send a note to the undersigned.
 
Further additions, corrections, and updates are welcome.
 
Willard McCarty
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, Univ. of Toronto
mccarty@utorepas.bitnet
18 February 1988
=================================================================
*Bornstein, Jeremy <JEREMY@BROWNVM>
 
I am an active member of CHUG, which is an acronym for Computing
in the Humanities Users' Group.  (This is an organization at
Brown U.)  I am also active in a CHUG subset called the Hypertext
Working Group.  In the H.W.G. we are attempting to design
interfaces & data structures for our ideal hypertext system, and
we've gotten pretty far and may be looking for funding soon.
 
Another of my interests involves what my friends jokingly call
'hypotext', which refers to my practice of using computer
programs to cut up and re-assemble compositions (which are later
edited).  Somewhat related to this, I am the moderator of a list,
'weird-l', which distributes pieces of strange creative writing,
poetry, etc. Of course, I am interested in the ways which
computers may aid people in non-scientific fields.
=================================================================
*Cardullo, Pamela <PAM@GUVAX>
 
I am a technical writer for the Academic Computer Center at
Georgetown University.  I write documentation for our computer
resources.  I hold a BA in History from St. Mary's College of
Maryland and an MA in Divinity from the University of Chicago.
=================================================================
*Charlan, Maurice <charlan@CONU1>
 
Communication, Concordia U.
 
I am an assistant professor of Communication Studies at Concordia
University. I have a PhD in Communication from the University of
Iowa where I studied   rhetoric and social theory with Michael
McGee and communication, technology   and culture with James
Carey.
 
Recent Publications: Technological Nationalism, Canad. J. pol.
Soc. Theory, vol 10 L'informatique et la culture de la raison,
Communication Information, vol 8 Constitutive Rhetoric:  The Case
of the Peuple Quebecois, Quart. J. Speech 73 On Rhetoric and
Cultural Theory, Communication, in press.
 
I am concerned with the relationship of discourse to social
theory.  This includes an interest in rhetorical theory,
hermeneutics, ideological critique, theories of rationality and
judgement.  I am also interested in the relation- ship between
technical or instrumental rationality  and social or value rat.
 
Next year, while on sabbatical, I intend to develop the concept
of "critical phronesis" (where phronesis is practical wisdom) to
develop a theory of judgement appropriate for social uses of
technology.
 
Finally, at Concordia, I am involved with our MA and PhD in
Communication, where I teach seminars on the above, as well as on
introductory theory.
 
Oh, finally, re. computing.  While I have written critically of
the computer as a manifestation of the "dark side of the
enlightenment" (cf. Adorno and Horkheimer), I also find it
fascinating.  I have a BA in mathematics and have a long
background of programming experience.  Consequently, I recognize
the dangers of computing--of being "seduced" by the apparatus.
In other words I am critical of computers because (1) they are
poor substitutes for humans, (2) their significance to the human
sciences can easily be exaggerated. There are those in
communication who think that a computer based content analysis of
a text constitutes an effective "reading" of its values or bias.
(3)I am aware that I am somewhat prone to hacking, which is
ultimately an obsessional waste of time.
=================================================================
*Cloutier, Andre <acloutier@LAKEHEAD.BITNET>
 
Telephone (807) 343 - 8620
 
Professor in Quebec literature and French as a second language.
Work in computers has been limited to the class environment: -
Use of Word Perfect to prepare documents and text indexing; -
Also am using SSI data, awaiting Data Perfect for sorting text
material. - Involving classes in using computers for class work
and assignments. - Research into Concordance programs hoping to
find way to sort large amounts of text data and put them into
practical use                 in the near future. - Hopefully in
the near future will be able to design computer assisted classes
in languages and literature. - Also a member of the University
Senate Computing Committee and since last September a
representative of Lakehead University on the OCCH [Ontario
Consortium for Computing in the Humanities.
=================================================================
*Cranton, Brian <BCRANTON@WPI>
 
29 Hadwen Road, Worcester, Ma  01602; (617) 753-0235
 
I am currently a sophomore at Worcester Polytechnic Institute in
Worcester, Ma and I am majoring in Mechanical Engineering.  My
background with computers in the humanities is fairly broad.  I
was a computer consultant for Rockingham County Child and Welfare
Office for approximately one year helping to integrate their
filing system into a computer database.  Also, I worked for
several months at the Harvard Graduate School of Education
(Regional MATH Network) under a government grant.  The project
being a supplementary math workbook for elementary school
children written by math teachers in the Boston area.  My job was
to convert their notes to a desktop publishing program.  In
addition to those two formal jobs, I have acted as a consultant
for several people attempting to integrate computers into their
small businesses and have helped teach young children the basics
of operating home computers.  I do not belong to any formal
organizations related to education or computing at the moment,
but I do have a strong interest in the field.  I look forward to
being able to contribute to your group.
=================================================================
*Durand, David <DURAND@BRANDEIS>
 
My name is David Durand, and my current job is system
programmer/system manager here at Brandeis. I have done a fair
amount of work that could be considered ``applied humanities
computing'', linguistically based work in English spelling
correction and Spanish spelling correction (including a
morphological parser for spanish that works from a 50,000 word
dictionary). I was also involved in the design and implementation
of a text-layout package based on SGML in 1983 for a company
whose management was worse than its technical staff.
 
I have been heavily involved with CHUG (the Computing and
Humanities User Group) at Brown during the last year. My current
interest is in hypertext systems to support scholarly research in
the humanities. In particular I am trying to integrate
descriptive markup, multiple-version handling, cross-linking and
parallel texts into a single framework. Steve DeRose and I have
solved many of the technical problems with implementing such
facilities and are currently implementing the data- handling
functions and starting to design the proper sorts of interface.
 
My non-computer but relevant interests are analytic philosophy
and early Maya Civilization. I'm looking forward to joining the
discussion, as the samples that I've seen look very interesting.
=================================================================
*Fortesque, Susan Joan <sue@CS.HW.AC.UK>
 
I have a BA Honours degree in Italian and French from the
University of Reading and an MA in Linguistics and English
Language Teaching from the University of Leeds. I worked in
Teaching English as a Foreign Language for 16 years, in Italy,
Nepal and Britain, ending up at Eurocentre, Bournemouth, UK,
where I was the teacher trainer. While there I set up a computer
room and software library. My experiences are described in the
book I co-authored with Christopher Jones - Using Computers in
the Language Classroom (Longman 1987). While at Eurocentre, I
also helped to design an interactive videodisc for learners of
English as a foreign language.
 
In January 1986 I accepted a post with Barclays Bank and worked
for them as a course designer, interactive videodisc, until
October 1987. The team of which I was a member was responsible
for the design of interactive videodisc training materials for
bank staff.
 
In October 1987 I came to Heriot-Watt University where I am
studying for an MSc by research in the Department of Computer
Science. My research area is the application of AI techniques,
particularly expert systems, intelligent tutoring systems and
natural language interfaces, to the design of interactive
videodisc training programmes. At the moment I am carrying out a
review of the literature.
=================================================================
*Germain, Ellen <EJGCU@CUVMA>
 
I'm a VM systems programmer in the Academic Systems group at
Columbia University; I am also a graduate student in the English
department, specializing in medieval literature.
=================================================================
*Giampapa, Joe <GIAMPAPA@BRANDEIS>
 
I am an undergraduate at Brandeis University ('89), studying
Computer Science, with interests in: AI, NLP, Linguistics,
educational and responsible computing, and Italian cultural
studies.  Presently, I am working on a Lisp structure ==> LaTeX
formatter of Walpiri-English dictionary entries, as part of the
Warlpiri Project at MIT's Center for Cognitive Science.  Future
plans involve writing a Lisp structure <==> SGML format
generator/parser for the dictionary.
 
I have been forwarded some mail messages from the Humanist
network about SGML, and feel I could benefit and possibly
contribute by direct contact with the network.
=================================================================
*Guedon, Jean-Claude <GUEDON@UMTLVR>
 
Institut d'histoire et de sociopolitique des sciences, Detache en
Litterature comparee, Universite de Montreal, CP 6128, Succursale
"A", Montreal, QC H3C 3J7; (514)-343-6208 (office), 343-6609
(secretary).
 
By training, I am a historian and sociologist of science, but I
also dabble in questions like science and literature, or utopias.
My interest for computing, however, stems more from my
sociological leanings. For example, I am presently undertaking a
large socio-historical research project funded by SSHRC to study
on a comparative basis career trajectories of French- and
English-speaking engineers in Quebec since about 1800 until about
1965-70. A population of several thousand engineers such as the
one that I am facing requires the use of a well thought-out
database and I am presently investigating the possibilities of
using 4th Dimension with a Macintosh II. Otherwise, I am
interested by new communications technologies such as the Minitel
in France and what social effects it will have in the near
future.
 
I am a full professor at the University of Montreal and I share
my work between history and sociology of technology on the one
hand, and the programme in comparative literature on the other.
=================================================================
*Krovetz, Robert <krovetz@UMass>
 
I'm a doctoral candidate at UMASS at Amherst in Computer Science.
I'm working on how the use of natural language techniques can be
used to improve the indexing of large text databases.  I'm still
in very early stages (literature review), but I hope to get a
proposal done sometime this summer.  I received my Master's
degree at the University of Maryland in 1979 and then worked for
several years at the National Library of Medicine.
=================================================================
*Marcos-Marin, Francisco <MARCOS@EMDCCI11>
 
Ap. 46348, E-28080 Madrid, Spain.; Phone: (34)(1)3974529
 
Professor of General Linguistics, Doctor en Filosofia y Letras
(Filologia Romanica), Universidad Autonoma de Madrid; Director of
the Madrid team of EUROTRA (Machine Translation, European
Communities); Developer of UNITE, a package for computer aided
philological editing.
=================================================================
*Neuman, Michael <NEUMAN@GUVAX>
 
Academic Computer Center, Reiss Science Building, Room 238,
Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.  20057; (202) 687-6096
 
After earning a Ph.D. in English and working my way through the
labyrinth of tenure and promotion, I became the Director of
Academic Computing at my institution (Capital University in
Columbus, OH).  My "conversion experience" was occasioned by a
review of Writer's Workbench with a friend who worked at Bell
Labs; I discovered then that computers could provide my students
with services beyond what I was capable of as an individual
professor.
 
Currently, as an Assistant Director of the Academic Computer
Center at Georgetown University, I am exploring the ways that
computers can help colleagues teach writing and do research in
literary analysis.  Kurzweil, WordCruncher, programs for
stylistic analysis -- these are becoming a part of my
professional life, though some day I am sure to return to the my
own classroom with a storehouse of tales of my adventures with
computers.
=================================================================
*Nye, E.W. <AEN01NY@WYOCDC1>
 
Assistant Professor Dept. of English, Box 3353 University of
Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071, U.S.A.; 307-766-3244
 
I have been a visiting fellow at University of Edinburgh. I'm now
in the English department at the University of Wyoming.
 
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.
 
Since reaching Edinburgh on a visiting fellowship, e-mail and
bulletin boards have become for me a vital connection with people
and projects left behind.  I'm now at work 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?
=================================================================
*Paramskas, Dana <LNGDANAP@UOGUELPH>
 
Professor of French and Director of French Studies, University of
Guelph, Guelph, Ont. N1G 2W1 (519) 824-4120 x 3164
 
BSL and MSL (Georgetown) in Applied Linguistics/French and Ph.D.
(Laval) in 20th century French Drama.
 
Interests: pedagogy of second language teaching/learning,
audiovisual technology and methods.  In CAI: design of
instructional materials, templates and limited parsers.
 
Experience:  in CAI since 1979, part of the team which developed
CLEF (Computer-assisted Learning Exercises for French), a set of
62 lessons covering basic French grammar, for IBM and Commodore
machines.  With Donna Mydlarski, author of PROMPT, a template for
contextualized reading comprehension exercises for French,
English, Italian, German, Spanish and Latin. Currently
collaborating with Mydlarski on DICTATE, a template for dictation
exercises in same languages (except Latin, of course).  Own
project (now being programmed): GRAMMA, a pedagogical parser for
French as a second language.  In planning stages: a French
videodisc for aural comprehension (with Mydlarski) plus a variety
of oddball ideas....
 
Interested in hearing from anyone involved with courseware for
French, especially anyone working in the area of pedagogical
parsers (parsers limited to the analysis of surface grammar, of
the stylistic level typical of a second language learner at
beginning-intermediate stages, with ability to spot and identify
most morphological and basic syntactical deviations.
=================================================================
*PHI (The Packard Humanities Institute) <XB.M07@STANFORD.BITNET>
 
300 Second Street, Suite 201, Los Altos, California 94022 USA;
(415) 948-0150
 
All of our activity currently involves collecting and analyzing
bodies of text for eventual inclusion in a CD-ROM:
 
1.  We are collecting all Latin writings through some undecided
cutoff date.  We issued in December 1987 PHI Experimental CD-ROM
#1, which contained:
 
- 4 million Latin words processed by PHI.  These include most of
the authors of the Republic.  For example, Cicero is complete.
Several of these texts have not been available before in machine-
readable form, e.g. Quintilian, Celsus, Seneca the Elder.
 
- IG 1 and 2, produced at Cornell University under a grant from
The David and Lucile Packard Foundation.
 
- A number of miscellaneous texts produced by the Center for the
Computer Analysis of Texts at the University of Pennsylvania.
Many of these were previously included in the Pilot CD-ROM of the
Thesaurus Linguae Graecae.  Biblical texts include the
Septuagint, New Testament, Hebrew Old Testament, Authorized and
Revised Standard Versions.   Other texts include Arabic, Syriac,
Coptic, Aramaic, French, Danish and English.
 
- Experimental CD-ROM #1 will be ready for distribution by the
end of February 1988. The cost will be very low.
 
2.  PHI is working with outside scholars to produce complete
morphological analyses of the Hebrew Old Testament and the Greek
New Testament.
 
Various other projects are being considered and even dabbled at,
but the Latin CD-ROM should occupy us for quite a while.
 
Main PHI personnel:
 
Director: David W. Packard
Associate Directors:  Stephen V.F. Waite, John M. Gleason
=================================================================
*Radai, Yisrael <RADAI1@HBUNOS>
 
Computation Center, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Givat Ram,
Jerusalem 91904, Israel; telephone: +972-2-584536
 
I am a senior programmer at the Computation Center of the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem.  My major tasks are providing
consultation and preparing instructions on the use of
applications software on our mainframe (CDC Cyber 180-855
operating under NOS) and on IBM and similar personal computers.
 
[Since the campus where I am located is devoted to the natural
sciences, most of my consultation and writing is for the benefit
of natural science researchers, but humanities and social science
researchers are also served.]
 
My main interest outside of work is in various aspects of modern
philosophy (mainly analytic philosophy and the philosophy of
science) and at present I am preparing on a paper in this field.
[Here there is a more direct connection with the humanities, but
computers enter the picture only in that I use editors and word
processors to prepare the paper.]
=================================================================
*Rudman, Joseph <RUDMAN@CMPHYS>
 
Department of Physics (or) Department of English, Carnegie Mellon
University, Pittsburgh, PA  15213; (412) 243-7063 [home], (412)
268-2775 [work]
 
Doctor of Arts in English from Carnegie Mellon University.
Scientific Project Administrator in High Energy Physics and
Sometime Instructor in English at Carnegie Mellon University.
Treasurer of the ACH.
 
Researching and teaching computers and the humanities courses
since 1974.  Currently setting up a clearinghouse of information
on computers and the humanities courses.
 
Currently working on stylistic and authorship attribution
problems in the canon of Daniel Defoe.
=================================================================
*Smith, Randall M. <6500rms@????>
 
Department of Classics, University of California, Santa Barbara,
CA  93106 (805) 961-3556; 707 Bolton Walk, Apt. 202, Goleta, CA
93117, (805) 685-8078
 
I am a graduate student in Classics at the University of
California at Santa Barbara.  I am currently working on my PhD.,
and I intend to specialize in ancient philosophy, science and
mathematics.  For the past two years I have been working as a
research assistant to bring computer aided research to our
department.  The main project has been setting up an MS-DOS
system which uses the TLG CD-ROM #B.  I have been adapting Greg
Crane's UNIX software to run under MS-DOS, and I have also
written an interactive user interface to drive the modified
versions of his programs.  Once this software is running smoothly
I will probably start working with the new PHI CD-ROM and the new
TLG CD-ROM C.  I also do general computer consulting for the
Classics department whenever other questions arise.
=================================================================
*Spolsky, Bernard <F24030@BARILVM>
 
Department of English, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel
 
My introduction to computing in the humanities was a post-
doctoral seminar that Paul Garvin ran at the 1964 Linguistic
Institute; Paul and I co-edited the papers in what is one of the
earliest collections in the field.  While I was teaching at the
University of New Mexico, we did a good deal of work with Navajo
on the computer, the results of which have been published.  I now
teach linguistics in an English Department; I am now a user (of
word-processing, statistical packages and electronic mail) rather
than a researcher in the field, but like to keep in touch. My
main research interests now are sociolinguistics, applied and
educational linguistics, and language testing.
=================================================================
*Young, Nora Fleming (Stormwalker) <FTNFY@ALASKA>
 
P.O. Box 80866, Fairbanks, Alaska 99708; (907) 479-8160.
 
Born in Aberdeen, Scotland; presently residing in interior
Alaska. B.A. in Sociology B.S.; area of specialty, Social Work,
B.S. Human Resource Management, area of specialty, Counseling.
M.A. in Public Administration, area of specialty, the
administration of state-funded counselling programs. PhD in
Psychology, area of specialty, Applied Psychology.
 
I am interested in the interface between the scientific
application of computers and human beings, i.e. can computers
enhance or inhibit human creativity and learning? Can we use the
computer to enlarge the scope of human experience as opposed to
organizing and standardizing as much as some of my more technical
friends would like?
 
I became hooked on computers when I had to write a doctoral
thesis and did not know what a floppy disk was! I learned, I
really learned! I am not so much interested in technology as I am
in the effect of computers on creativity. I appreciate my friends
who write brilliant programs (actually I am thoroughly cowed by
them); however, are the programs easy to use? simple to learn?
will they enrich or simply occupy time and energy? how and why
does it apply and should it? When I write poetry on my computer
it gives me great freedom and I enjoy that. The tactile pleasure
of a big yellow pad and pencil still seems to be important. Can I
learn to use my computer in new ways? I am interested in what has
been done to date with computers. I am fascinated at what might
be done, could be done, undreamed of things that one day will
become reality.
 
From 124 miles south of the arctic circle, Nora F. Young
 
P.S. My job: I am in private practice. I do a great deal of
marriage and family therapy, work with drug and alcohol abuse, a
number of public offender type clients, human beings in the
process of change, and five computers. I also test psychological
software for others in the field of psychology. That is to say,
if it has bugs I find them, or my clients do, and we all learn.
=================================================================
