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                   Autobiographies of HUMANISTs
                         Eighth 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; a copy
will be found on HUMANIST's file-server.
 
Further additions, corrections, and updates are welcome.
 
Willard McCarty
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, Univ. of Toronto
mccarty@utorepas.bitnet
13 March 1988
=================================================================
*Boggess, Julian Eugene (Gene) III <GBOGGESS@MSSTATE>
 
Mississippi State University Department of Computer Science P. O.
Drawer CS Mississippi State, MS  39762; (601) 325-2756 (main
office); (601) 325-2079 (local).
 
I am a humanities retread, with a B.A. in Philosophy and English,
an A.M. in Linguistics, and a Ph.D. in Communications
(Psycholinguistics) from the Univ. of Illinois.  I spent several
frustrating years trying to teach Speech and English, but job
opportunities looked much better in Computer Science, so I picked
up a Master's in CS recently and am currently back to teaching
(CS) full time after serving as the campus microcomputer
consultant for the Computing Center for several years.
 
Although my time has been dominated by my teaching and consulting
duties, I have been involved, to a small extent, with two
humanities- related projects: obtaining a computerized writing
lab for the English department, with the intent of eventually
using the lab for all writing courses here, and working on a
communication-facilitation computer system for communication-
impaired individuals.  In addition, next Fall I will be teaching
an honors seminar in Cognitive Science, in which I hope to tie
computer concepts back to some fundamental issues in Philosophy,
Psychology, and Linguistics.  Any suggestions with regard to what
textbook(s) I should use for the course, or what articles or
books I should be reading to prepare myself for the course, would
be welcome. I think that HUMANIST, or something like it, has been
needed for quite a while now.
=================================================================
*Brook, Andrew <ABROOK@CARLETON.BITNET>
 
I do very little to support computing in the humanities, though I
use my PC constantly. Basically, my use of the computer is
restricted to word-processing and Email. I use Wordperfect and
that is the only word-processing package I know. I have
discovered a couple of things about it that are not in the manual
but basically I am just a user. And my use of Email is similarly
unadventuresome -- I just use it. But I am interested in com-
puting in the humanities and I find the mail that rolls by on
HUMANIST very interesting.
=================================================================
*Cioran, Samuel D. <CIORAN@MCMASTER>
 
McMaster University, Department of Modern Languages; (416) 525-
9140 (x7012)
 
Activities: Director of Humanities Computing Centre
(responsibilities: administrative, instructional and
research computing in the Faculty of Humanities).
 
Interests: Analysis and development of multilingual authoring
language systems (Latin and Cyrillic languages);
natural language processing and parsing in languages other than
English;
 
Projects: mcDRILLmaster II, a text-based multilingual authoring
language system with multiple-windowing capability for
storage and retrieval of lexicons, reference files, hypertext
notation and orthographic parsing (spelling conventions,
punctuation, etc.)
=================================================================
*Clayton, Dave <LCO101@URIMVS>
 
University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI 02881 (401) 792-2501
 
I am Assistant Director of Academic Computing at the University
of Rhode Island.  My academic background is not particularly
applicable to my present activities since I am a "re-tooled"
biologist having done graduate research in plant physiology
before having grown tired of standing around up to my elbows in
chemical soup.  At present Academic Computing reports to the Vice
President for Academic Affairs although a reorganization is
planned in the next (???) year(s) and the reporting structure
will change.
 
Academic Computing is responsible for support of all educational
and research computing at the University, providing a variety of
services including centralized computing, planning, installation,
and facilities management for local (department/college)
computing sites, consultation and educational support, and
software review/installation/mainte- nance.  Specifically, as
Assistant Director, I have responsibility for long-range planning
and "outreach"--our efforts at contacting and assisting new and
different user communities within the University.
 
At present use of computing in the humanities is very basic at
URI.  The primary application is word processing though recently
interest has been increasing.  A MacIntosh
teaching/research/study lab is currently being developed designed
specifically for use by faculty and students in the humanities.
Faculty from Art, Languages, and English have all been active
participants in design and hardware/ software selection for this
facility.   A microcomputer-based writing laboratory was opened
in September, 1987, and has been very actively used this year.  A
few faculty members, primarily in English, are using computing
applications for analytical work and there is increasing interest
in such projects.  I expect my participation in HUMANIST will
provide me with ideas and material which will prove beneficial in
assisting humanities faculty in applying computing to their class
and research activities.
=================================================================
*Coombs, Norman R. <NRCGSH@RITVAX>
 
Professor of History, Rochester Institute of Technology, College
of Liberal Arts, 1 Lomb Memorial Dr., Rochester Ny 17623
 
I have been teaching at RIT since 1961.  My original doctoral
research was in the history of Christian Socialism in the Church
of England.  Gradually, I moved into American history.  With the
aid of an NEH grant, I researched and wrote _Black Experience in
America_ published 1972.  During recent years I have become a
computer enthusiast.  I am totally blind, and a PC with speech
synthesizer has taken over much of my reading needs.  Students
now submit all papers and essay take-home exams on electronic
mail.  Also, during recent years I have been using computer
conferencing to reach distance learners.  I have written 3
articles describing this work, one published and 2 forthcoming.
I was a co-presenter of papers at the Second Guelph symposium on
Electronic Conferences and at the Third Conference on Computers
and the Handicapped at Cal. State Northridge.  I am planning to
assist in a communications course on computer and audio
conferencing next year which will mainly be taught through
conference systems.  I also have 6 articles on Black history
being published in an encyclopedia on American Immigration.
 
Presently, the courses I teach are freshman level American
history, (one version through the College of Continuing Education
combining telecourse materials and a computer conference.)  Also,
I teach upper level courses in Black history and the history of
Christianity.
=================================================================
*Corbett, John <CORBETT@UTOREPAS>
 
My scholarly background is in Classics (Roman History); and my
undergraduate teaching at Scarborough College in the University
of Toronto is also for the most part concerned with Classics (
history, literature, civilization). I have graduate cross
appointments to the Centre for Religious Studies and the Centre
for Medieval Studies, where I teach various courses on religion
and religious literature in Late Antiquity and the early Middle
Ages. Within this broad area my own research  is unified by its
focus on religion and social change; in the course of this study
I have had occasion to add the semitic languages to the Latin and
Greek of my original Classics training: here my work is for the
most part concerned with biblical and rabbinic Hebrew (Aramaic)
and Syriac (on the early Christian side).
 
A current major research interest is the comparative study of
biblically based liturgical poetry (hymns) in Jewish and early
Christian traditions (with emphasis on Hebrew Syriac and Greek).
 
As for humanistic computing I am interested in word processing
and text analysis in non-Roman character fonts; as yet I have
encountered much frustration and made little progress (though I
am hopeful for Nota Bene). My work at the Centre for Computing in
the Humanities has involved chairing the Electronic Text Archive
Committee and bringing to Toronto on-line access to the Global
Jewish Database from Bar-Ilan in Israel. The Univ. of Toronto is
the first university outside Israel to have access to this most
imortant research tool. I would be pleased to cooperate with
anyone working with biblical Jewish or early Christian texts,
especially those  who know something about computer applications.
=================================================================
*Davis, Douglas A. <D_DAVIS@HVRFORD>
 
Department of Psychology, Haverford College, Haverford, PA 19041
(215)649-7717
 
I am a psychologist working on Freud biography. I teach a
humanities-oriented personality course and am eager to stimulate
more Haverford interest in humanities computing and networking.
=================================================================
*Delaney, Paul <USERAARY@SFU>
 
I'm a Professor of English at SFU, particularly interested in
Macintosh applications.  Am working with George Landow at
Brown/IRIS on some Hypercard units to integrate with his
Context32 English course--at present, a unit based on the full
text of *Joseph Andrews*, later, perhaps, one on Joyce's
*Ulysses*.
=================================================================
*Even-Zohar, Itamar (B10@TAUNIVM)
 
Porter Institute School of Cultural Studies, Tel Aviv University,
Tel Aviv, 69978 Israel Tel. +972-(0)3-427233 or 5459-420.
 
Professor of Poetics and Comparative Literature and Artzt Chair
Professor of History of Literature, Tel Aviv University. I am
Director of The Porter Institute for Poetics and Semiotics and
previously (1973-1982) also Bernstein Chair Professor of
Translation Theory. I have studied at the Universities of Tel
Aviv, Jerusalem, Oslo and Copenhagen and have been research
fellow in many European and American universities and institutes.
I am also editor-in-chief of *Poetics Today*, an international
journal for the science of literature and adjacent fields.
 
Main fields: theory of literature, semiotics of culture,
historical poetics, transfer studies (interference and
translation). Main work since 1970 has been developing polysystem
theory, designed to deal with dynamics and heterogeneity in
culture. My research has been based on a vast field work on cases
as Hebrew (especially in its relations with Old Mesopotamian and
Middle Eastern cultures, Arabic, Russian and Yiddish), French,
Russian, Old Icelandic and Italian. I have published mainly in
Hebrew, English and French. My enlarged collection of papers,
entitled *Polysystem Studies* (after my *Papers in Historical
Poetics*, 1978) is now in preparation for the press.
 
I have been relatively active in introducing the use of computers
and more sophisticated softwares to my department. We currently
work chiefly with Nota Bene, which also has developed the best
software for Hebrew. I have actually introduced Nota Bene to Tel
Aviv University, where it gradually becomes a popular software
even among non-academic staff. I have developed enhancements for
Nota Bene by writing some 80 programs with its unique programming
language. Many of these programs are not just utilities but
research-oriented routines. The capacity of Nota Bene to store
information and the variety of ways material can be organized for
retrievals also has encouraged some of my younger colleagues and
students to find ways of exploiting to the utmost the incredible
potentialities of NB. I have just established, together with
Davis Sitman from Tel Aviv Computers Centre, a Nota Bene list
(NOTABENE@TAUNIVM), as well as put all my programs (both actual
programs and documentation) at LISTSERV@TAUNIVM.
 
Among my other computer-orineted activities I have encouraged our
faculty to work increasingly with BITNET and its electronic
bulletins, have opened a direct channel at our institute for
DIALOG and am now a member of Tel Aviv University Computer Users'
Committee.
=================================================================
*Haberland, Hartmut <RUCHH@NEUVM1>
                    <ruchh@vm.uni-c.dk>
 
Roskilde University Center, POB 260, 4000 Roskilde, Denmark
 
Academic background: Studied in Stuttgart and West Berlin
(Germany). M.A. with a thesis on automatic syntax analysis in
1971. Since 1974, associate professor of German linguistics at
Roskilde University Center, Denmark, with brief stints at
Duesseldorf University (Germany, 1980/1) and Copenhagen
University (1983-6 part time).
 
Publications: a book on sociolinguistics (in German), and several
articles (in English, Danish and German) mostly on semantics and
pragmatics of natural languages. Since 1977, co-editor (with
Jacob Mey, and now Jan-Ola Oestman) of Journal of Pragmatics
(North-Holland Publishers, Amsterdam).
 
My active interest in computers is (apart from word processing,
of course) at the moment limited to using electronic mail, mostly
in connection with my editorial work with the Journal of
Pragmatics. But I am also interested in cognitive science/AI,
although more on the basis of a general interest in the field,
not as an active researcher.
=================================================================
*Haviland, John B. <johnh%reed%tektronix.tek.com@RELAY.CS.NET>
 
Reed College, Portland, Oregon 97202 U.S.A.
 
I am Associate Professor of Linguistics and Anthropology at Reed
College.  Before that I was at the CASBS in Stanford, the UNAM in
Mexico City, and the ANU in Canberra.  I work on Tzotzil (Mayan),
Guugu Yimidhirr (Paman), and Mixtec (Oto-manguean), doing
linguistic, sociolinguistic, and ethnographic work in both Mexico
and Australia.  My recent work has been on verbal fights,
evidentials, Aboriginal social history, and flower-selling among
Mayan peasants.
=================================================================
*Johnson, Eric <ERIC@SDNET>
 
Professor and Head, Division of Liberal Arts, 114 Beadle Hall,
Dakota State College, Madison, South Dakota 57042 USA; (605)
256-5270
 
I am a Ph.D. (Notre Dame, 1977) in English (specializations in
nineteenth-century literature and in literary criticism).  My
dissertation is on the novels of Dickens and the theory of the
novel.  I became interested in computing shortly after I received
my Ph.D.  I studied a series of languages and operating systems.
I am most interested in programming in SNOBOL4 and SPITBOL:
dangerously powerful languages for string manipulation and non-
numeric processing.
 
I am the Director of a conference called ICEBOL: the
International Conference on Symbolic and Logical Computing.
ICEBOL3 will feature a series of presentations about non-numeric
computing in SNOBOL4, SPITBOL, Icon, Prolog, and LISP on April
21-22, 1988 (contact me for additional information).
 
WACKFORD, STRONG, BLIMBER, and MICAWBER are production programs I
have written to help identify writing blunders and make
suggestions for revision (I name my programs after literary
characters, usually bunglers from Dickens novels).I have also
written programs for literary analysis.  They are written for MS-
DOS microcomputers and IBM mainframes using VM/CMS.
 
I have published articles and read conference papers about
programming in SNOBOL and about computing in the humanities.
=================================================================
*Kennedy, Alan KENNEDY@DALAC Subject: for HUMANIST To:
mccarty@UTOREPAS X-VMS-To: IN%"mccarty@utorepas"
 
During the past year the computing centre at Dal has installed a
small lab of Atari St1040's (six of them) in the English Dept,
with dedicated connections to the vax8800.  We use WordPerfect
primarily, but don't bother giving a lot of instruction in it.
We assume our students will pick it up as they need it and that
has been the case.  The lab is too small now for anything much
more than graduate student use, but it will expand to 12 stations
next year, and add a laser printer. That should allow us to run
some tutorials in composition for our undergrads.
 
One of my undergraduate classes, english 204: on The European
Novel, is making use of the CoSy facility this year. CoSy stands
for Conferencing System, and it is a kind of electronic message
center.  Students can enter their reactions to the books we are
discussing in class, they can argue with each other, they can ask
questions of me, and I can reply, intervene,keep silent, send
them mail messages, or post information that they can get back to
on numerous occasions.  I find it an exciting activity, and so do
some of the students.
=================================================================
*Labbett, Beverley. ( M110%UK.AC.UEA.CPC865 )
 
Lecturer in Education, School of Education, University of East
Anglia, Norwich NR4 7TJ. Tel - 0603 -56161. Ext 2640.
 
Interests. The use of data bases and interactive video in the
teaching and learning of "The Humanities."
=================================================================
*Massirer, Mary <MASSIRERM@BAYLOR>
 
English Department, Baylor University, Waco, Texas  76798 (817)
755-1768
 
I am teaching both technical writing and freshman comp. at Baylor
and have been for 20 years. Our university joined BITNET about 18
months ago, so we are comparatively new at it.  As far as I know,
I am the only person in the English Dept. who is using BITNET so
far.  We are using Macintosh computers in our composition courses
and are especially interested in new developments and methods in
composition teaching. I'll be eager to hear from all of you.
=================================================================
*Piovesan, Walter <USERVINO@SFU>
                  <Walter_Piovesan@cc.sfu.ca>
 
I am head of the Data Library at Simon Fraser  University. We
manage and provide access to textual and numeric data in  Machine
Readable form.
=================================================================
*Richmond, Ian M. <42100_1156@uwovax.UWO.CDN>
 
Department of French, University of Western Ontario, London,
Ontario, Canada N6A 3K7.  519-661-2163  Ext 5703 also
IMR@UWOVAX.BITNET
 
I have a Ph.D. in French literature with a specialization in the
seventeenth- century area.  In this field, I have published a
number of articles, a book (*Heroisme et galanterie*, Naaman:
Sherbrooke, 1977) and two collections of colloquium acts.  I have
also published articles and given papers on the question of
French immersion programs in Canada, and have given papers on
Esperanto literature.
 
In the area of computing, I have prepared an electronic,
bilingual lexicon of microcomputing terms, published in 1986 by
Linguatech as part of the Termex/Mercury series.  I have also
written and programmed *Teaching Assistant* a grade-book program
currently under consideration by Gessler Publishing, revised
(language content and program code) a series of CAI lessons in
Esperanto for the *Esperanto Press* (Bailieboro, Ontario), and am
currently working on CAMA (Correspondence des Affaires en Modules
Automatises), a CAI project in French business correspondence
funded by the Ministry of Colleges and Universities with funds
provided by the Secretary of State.
 
My present position is that of Chairman of the Department of
French at the University of Western Ontario.  In this capacity, I
use a microcomputer constantly for correspondence,
administration, preparation of teaching materials, grades
management (using *Teaching Assistant*), and research (storage
and retrieval of research notes, as well as word processing).
 
My primary computing interests lie in 1) the use and development
of applications to improve the efficiency of researchers in the
humanities and to ease the difficulties they encounter
(particularly in the foreign languages) in producing a hard copy
of their finished product;  2) CAI; and 3) programming.
=================================================================
*Rumery, Kenneth <CMSKRR01@NAUVM>
 
Music Department, box 6040, Northern Arizona University,
Flagstaff, Arizona  86011 (USA); (602) 523-3850
 
I teach advanced theory, analysis, and 20th century music.  I
supervise activities in music CAI and synthesis.  I have
conducted surveys and written articles on computer use in music.
I have written several music tutorials for the Macintosh using
Hypercard and CourseBuilder. I am working on the identification
and description of musical thought processes as these relate to
the music maker's use of pattern perception and memory.  Evidence
of musical thought is present in compositions, improvisation, and
all facets of performance.  Am interested in making a connections
between pattern of musical thought and patterns of thinking in
other arts.
=================================================================
*St. George Art <STGEORGE@UNMB>
 
University of New Mexico, CIRT, 2701 Campus Blvd., NE,
Albuquerque, NM 87131
(505) 27708046
 
I'm presently the Director of External Networking and
Supercomputing at the Computing Center and an Associate Professor
of Sociology. I received my Ph.D. from the University of
California in Sociology.  For a number of years I was the
Director of User Services at the Computing Center and in that
capacity provided all consultative services to users, including
those in the humanities.  I have retained a strong interest in
providing computing services to those users not in traditional
areas of computing: english, philosophy, history, and so on. My
research interests are eclectic and range from historical
research on trails to the social impact of computing.
=================================================================
*Sinclair, Gerri <USERSINC@SFU>
 
I run a Centre at Simon Fraser University called EXCITE
(EXemplary Centre for Interactive Technologies in Education) in
the Faculty of Education.
=================================================================
*Stampe, David <stampe@uhccux.BITNET>
FROM INTERNET: stampe@uhccux.uhcc.hawaii.edu
FROM UUCP: ihnp4,uunet,dcdwest,ucbvax}!ucsd!nosc!uhccux!stampe
LAST RESORT: stampe%uhccux.uhcc.hawaii.edu@rutgers.edu
 
Dept. of Linguistics, Univ. of Hawaii/Manoa, Honolulu HI 96822;
808-948-8602, 808-396-9354 (home).
 
I'm a linguistics professor at the University of Hawaii.  I was
at Ohio State University 1966-85.  I am best known as the founder
of the theory of natural phonology.  At UH I also teach
computational linguistics, the whole gamut, and support a number
of projects in computational support for linguistic research.
Most important of our projects, perhaps, is a network archive
file server we are constructing as a public repository for
Pacific and Asian language data of all sorts, and for supporting
software for text, lexicographic, and grammatical analysis.  I'm
also quite interested in verse and music analysis (not limited to
western styles) and software in support of that.
=================================================================

