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                   Autobiographies of HUMANISTs
                         Ninth Supplement
 
Following are 27 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
can be found on the file-server; see the Guide to HUMANIST for
more information.
 
Further additions, corrections, and updates are welcome.
 
Willard McCarty
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, Univ. of Toronto
mccarty@utorepas.bitnet
31 March 1988
=================================================================
*Adman, Peter <P.Adman@VME.CC.HULL.AC.UK>
 
I am the Assistant Director at Hull University Computer Centre,
responsible mainly for User Services.  The University has strong
departments in humanities, two thirds of the students being in
non-science subjects.  Although I am a graduate in Mathematics my
main interests have been in humanities, having got involved in
using computers on historical data consisting of poll-books (18th
and 19th century) and census schedules (1851, 1861).  To
manipulate such data without having to use standard, general
purpose database systems I implemented MIST (Manipulative
Interactive Software Tools) which runs on mainframe and minis,
and subsequently on micros.
 
Recently most of my work concentrated on intelligent user-
interfaces (PROFILE - A Humanities Computing Workbench) and some
linguistic applications.
 
I would be happy to receive mail from people with similar
interests.
=================================================================
*Anderson, Troy <T.TROG@LEAR.STANFORD.EDU>
 
I am currently doing work at Stanford University on the extinct
langauge of my ancestors the Lower Coquille Indians of the
Central Oregon Coast.
 
My method for going about reconstructing a dead language is as
follows. I originally did a whole lot of bibliographic work
trying to gather as much info on the language as I could. I ended
up with about 300 pages of texts and about 10 hours of tapes. The
textual material is half published and the other half
unpublished. The published material was gathered by Melville
Jacobs in his 1932 vol.8 University of Washington Coos Myth Texts
and Narrative and Ethnologic texts. The unpublished material is
from J.P. Harrington's collection ( I question it's validity).
 
The computer has played a big part of my research. I sent the
texts in published form to BYU to get optically scanned on to DOS
text files which I have modified on to Word Perfect. I am now
trying to reformat the texts so that the line up phrase by
phrase. Let me back up. The texts I have for Mel are translated
clause by clause, and I would like to make a dictionary and a
list of morphemes. The way I am going about running through all
these texts is by sending the formatted texts through a program
called Word Cruncher. This used to be called the BYU concordance
program (?). So it will make a concordance, clause by clause of
the texts picking out the words so that I can analyze the texts
morpheme by morpheme. Once again I must back up ... the texts are
transcribed morpheme by morpheme but the translation is free. I
need to find out how the translation works literally.
 
From there all my problems should be solved, and it will be just
a matter of picking up a totally foreign language and then trying
to make a grammar book out of it.
 
I am currently in the formatting of texts to Word Cruncher format
stage. My technical expertise prevents me from making a program
to merge the English and the Miluk files ( two seperate files )
which are lined up perfectly by number of clauses but not by
number of pages.
=================================================================
*Bernhardson, Steven <MARTINA@SASK>
 
Department of Physical Education, University of Saskatchewan
(306) 374-6472
 
Officially, my background is more in the computer side of things
as opposed to the humanities side of things.  I have a B.Sc. High
Honors in Computational Science and am working now as a computer
resource person;  however, my electives were all in English and I
almost have enough for a degree there too.  Maybe next year!
 
My interest right now is in using computers to a) teach writing
skills to weak/struggling/beginning writers and b) using
computers to automate the editting process.  I have been tutoring
English for about a year now. One of the things that I do is read
over student essays and give evaluation.  I have developed a set
of tools that allow me to quickly generate comment sheets that
target a specific students problems. For instance, typing in
mixed metaphor, cliches, and split infinitives generates the
standard spiel about these common problems.  Then I can drop in
examples from the students paper to make my comments more
relevant.
 
Ideally, this would all be built into the word processing system
that the student is writing his or her essay on.  Then when they
type "Everyone take their seats." a pop-up window would appear,
letting the student know that *everyone* is singular.  Of course,
I am also interested in how this tutoring can be done most
effectively:  do you interupt the writing process, to you wait
until a later analyze stage, do you do some things right away and
wait with others?
 
On the editing side of things, I have some crude tools that allow
me to check up stylistic concerns.  (I have edited a book as well
as some articles.)  As I type in the text, I might want to pop-up
a window showing what the *New York Times* policy is on the word
*soviet*.  Or I might what to block off a paragraph in a
sociology article and make sure all the numbers are treated the
same--e.g. 30%, 50 per cent, and eighty-two percent are all
different and should be brought to some common standard.  I am
interested in putting several sourcebooks on line--Chicago Manual
of Style, New York Times Style Book etc. etc.--and improving my
access to relevant sections.
=================================================================
*Conner, Patrick W. <VM47C2@WVNVM>
 
Associate Professor of English, West Virginia University,
Morgantown, WV. 26506, (304) 293-3100.
 
I am the founder of ANSAXNET, a group of scholars interested in
Anglo-Saxon studies and Old English language and literature with
members in the US, Canada (incl. Old English Dictionary Project
at Toronto), UK, the Netherlands, and Australia.
=================================================================
*Eisinger, Marc <EISINGER@FRPOI11>
 
IBM France, 68-76 Quai de la Rapee, 75592 Paris Cedex 12, France
 
I'm a system engineer in the branch office dealing with
Universities and public research centers in and around Paris
area. Although most of my customers are "Hard Science"
specialists, more and more are in the Humanities: linguistics,
sociology, geography, history and so on. They badly need
information on what is done in foreign countries and I do think
that the kind of tool you propose with HUMANIST is a need for
them. As most of them are on EARN/BITNET I will suggest them to
join HUMANIST.
 
On the other hand, I'm working myself on precolumbian Mexico and
specialy on the aztec language, the nahuatl. For the time beeing
my main subject is to implement a lexicographic data base to deal
with this agglutinative language. I'm working to in a team from
the CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique) on the
description of precolumbian Codices.
=================================================================
*Falsetti, Julie <JEFHC@CUNYVM>
 
Hunter College/IELI, 695 Park Ave., New York, NY 10021, (212)
772-4297; P.O. Box 801, New York, NY 10021, (212) 628-3641
 
I am the Testing Coordinator at the International English
Language Institute of Hunter College in New York City.  The IELI
is a non-credit program that teaches English as a second
language.  We have about 800 students every eight weeks.  At
present, we are just beginning to use computer assisted learning
in the classroom.  I teach word processing as part of a writing
course.  We have the use of the college computer lab on a limited
basis. I am interested in what software is available for ESL and
how it is used in other programs.
 
For testing, I use SPSS PC to evaluate the students progress on
placement and exit tests.
=================================================================
*Gasque, Tom <UGTJ08@SDNET>
 
I am Prof. of English at Univ. of South Dakota in Vermillion, SD
57069 (605) 677-5229.  Also am the new editor of NAMES, journal
devoted to study of onomatics--personal, place, literary.  This
is only my third week with BITNET, but so far have received two
journal submissions this way.  I have done writing on placenames
and personal names and on medieval literature.  Next year,
beginning in July, will be spent in Germany on exchange.  I will
continue to edit NAMES and am looking for a way to keep in touch
via BITNET.  I know that the place I will be is on the system,
Univ. of Oldenburg (DOLUNI1), but I don't know anyone's ID there.
I look forward to staying in touch with you and others who may
share my interest in names and the use of computers in the
humanties.
=================================================================
*Gillison, David <DAGLC@CUNYVM>
 
Associate Prof, Department of Art, Lehman College, CUNY. Bronx
New York 10468. phone 212) 960-8356.
 
I am an instructor in photography and art and am presently
exploring ways of using micro and mini computers for computer
assisted instruction, and also for image enhancement in graphic
art and photography.
=================================================================
*Gorodetsky, Gabriel <GABRIEL@TAUNIVM>
 
Russian and East European Research Center, Tel Aviv University,
Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv, Israel, Tel: 03 5459608 (office); 13
Mordechai St., Jerusalem, Israel, Tel: 02 719831 (hone).
 
I am a Professor of History at the Department of History at Tel
Aviv University and a Senior Research Fellow of the Russian and
East European Center of that University.        My major
interests (in broad lines) are the history of Soviet foreign
policy, British modern history, and the history of the Second
World War. Two of my books have been published by Cambridge
University Press: The Precarious Truce: Anglo-Soviet Relations,
1924-27 (1976), and Sir Stafford Cripps' Mission to Moscow, 1940-
1942 (1984), and various articles in scholar journals.
 
I am involved with the people developing the Hebrew version of
NotaBene, and a keen user of ASKSAM (Seaside Software) -- A text
based management system which I use to compile a bibliography of
the Second World War and various guides to archival sources
relating to the Grand Alliance in the Second World War.  At
present I am writing a book on Politics and Strategy: The
Formation of the Grand Alliance in the Second World War.
=================================================================
*Harder, Raymond G. <HARDERR@CLARGRAD>
 
Dept. of Computer Science, Azusa Pacific University, POB APU,
Azusa, CA 91702, USA; 818-969-3434, ext 3556;
 
ICAI, MRT, Hypermedia, AI, Microcomputer text tools,
Computational Linguistics. B.A. Bible, M.A. ANE Languages and
Cultures (UCLA), Ph.D in progress UCLA ANELC. Diss: Translation
Technique in the Syriac of John (NT).
 
I have written programs for the contextual formatting of RTL lang
(eg Arabic & Syriac), CAI and text study of minor languages (MAC
only). Prefer Macintosh but own IBM xt clone too.  Have HP-3000
and MicroVaxII at school.  Pascal & Hypertalk programming.
Extensive MAC font develpmt - bitmap and postscript
 
I will be reading a paper at the AIBI/ALLC meetngs in Jerusalem
in June. I hope to meet you there.  I have just finished a
mmicrocomputer version of the Syriac NT.  I will be transfering
the COPTIC Nag Hammadi texts to MAC format for D Parrot at UC
Riverside tomorrow.  My main interests are in making this stuff
widely available for individual study on Microcomputers. My
background is mainly humanities - the computers are just to pay
the bills, it's nice to combine the two!
=================================================================
*Harrison, Terri <HARRISON@RPICICGE>
 
Department of Language, Literature, & Communication, Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute Troy, NY  12180  USA (518) 276-8261
 
I co-edit "Comserve", an electronic information and discussion
service, available through Bitnet, for individuals in the
humanities and social sciences who are interested in human
communication.  My responsibilities involve maintaining and
developing a data base of information relevant to the activities
of students, faculty, and professionals in communication.  The
data base consists of bibliographies; other research and
instructional materials; announcements of conferences, grant
opportunities, calls for papers, etc.; and descriptions of
graduate programs in communication. Comserve users also have the
opportunity to participate in discussion groups relating to
various themes within the field.  We currently offer 15
discussion groups on topics such as rhetoric, philosophy of
communication, ethnomethodology, communication education, mass
communication, and intercultural communication.
 
I teach undergrad and grad courses in Communication at RPI,
specializing in organizational communication and communication
theory. My research has little to do with computing;  I am
interested in organization as a form of social structure and its
implications for communication processes. My particular focus is
on the possibilities for, and fate of, strategies for extending
democratic practices to the workplace.
=================================================================
*Hayward, Malcolm <MHAYWARD@IUP>
 
I teach in the English Department at Indiana University of
Pennsylvania.  I use computers quite a bit in my composition
courses.  I also edit a journal, Studies in the Humanities; most
phases of our operations are computerized.  I am particularly
interested in contacting other journal editors for exchanging
information.
=================================================================
*Hibler, David <ENGL0006@UNLVM>
 
I've been teaching English for over twenty years, specializing
the past twelve in composition and computers.  I am particularly
interested in linking with anyone sharing an interest in the
areas of composition, grammar, and/or the general impact of
machines upon the development of thought and our perceptions of
ourselves.
=================================================================
*Hopkins, John D. <HOPKINS@FINFUN>
 
American Studies, University of Tampere, Box 607, SF-33101
Tampere, FINLAND; telephone: 011- 358-31-156116 office direct [+2
hours GMT].
 
I am a U.S. citizen resident in Finland for 18 years, a tenured
Senior Lecturer in English Translation at the University of
Tampere, Finland.  I serve as Coordinator of the American Studies
Program, and Director of the Office For U.S. Exchange Programs at
the University of Tampere, and have been past Chair of the
English Division of the Department of Translation Studies.  I
have also served on the Board of Directors of the Fulbright
Commission in Finland for nine years.
 
My computer background includes the directorship of our 1984-87
"CompTrans" project, which established a coordinated
microcomputer and mainframe curriculum within the Department of
Translation Studies which now serves nearly 100% of our students
and staff.  In 1984, our 12-unit Kaypro CP/M lab -- in addition
to our DEC 2060 mainframe resources -- was the first department-
wide Humanities microcomputer facility in Finland, and received
considerable attention on the national level.  From 1985-87 we
added MS/DOS micros, and included a Senior Fulbright Professor in
Computational Linguistics and Computer Assistance in Translation
Work with whom we expanded our curriculum considerably.  A
summary of the CompTrans project is available via Bitnet.
 
I also was co-organizer of the First and Second Tampere CAI/CALL
Conferences in 1983 and 1985, among the speakers of which were
David Wyatt and Graham Davies, known to Scope readers.  I have
spoken on microcomputer usages in Translation and general
Humanities work in Finland, the U.S. and Canada, and served as a
consultant.
 
I have also organized three international American Studies
Conferences in Tampere in 1983/85/87, the most recent of which
was the largest American Studies conference in Europe in 1987
with over 300 participants from 17 countries.  I have written or
edited a number of textbooks and conference proceedings within
the field of American Studies, upper-secondary EFL texts, and
guide/Orientation booklets in the field of Educational Exchange.
 
The organizational work for these conferences, and for our
American Studies Resource Center, Center For American Studies,
and Office For U.S. Exchange Programs, has involved considerable
computer work, notably in mass mailing, databasing, and
printing/publishing.  Primary software is WordPerfect 4.2,
Reflex, Ventura Publisher, Softcraft Fancy/Laser Fonts, and a
host of utilities.  I currently use Kaypro and Unisys AT-
compatibles connected via modem using Kermit onto the DEC2060 or
VAX711 with the Ministry of Education VAX as the Bitnet server.
=================================================================
*Johnson, Joanna <JOHNSON@MCMASTER>
 
Computing Services Co-ordinator (Humanities), McMaster
University; Humanities Computing Centre, CNH-428, (416) 525-9140,
ext. 4155, 1280 Main Street West           Hamilton, Ontario,
Canada  L8S 4L9
 
I am the contact person for Humanities faculty and staff members
regarding any computing questions or problems.  If I am unable to
answer the question or deal with the problem myself, I try to
help the user find a solution within the available resources
(including personnel, time and facilities).  I am involved in
software development (currently in Computer Aided Instruction in
second languages) and in the assessment of new hardware and
software packages of potential benefit within the Faculty.
 
BACKGROUND:  B. Sc. (Applied Mathematics and Computer Science),
McMaster University.  I have worked in academic computing user
services at McMaster for the past 10 years.
=================================================================
*Kiener, Ronald C. <RKIENER@TRINCC>
 
Trinity College, Department of Religion, 70 Vernon Street,
Hartford, CT 06106, (203) 527-3151 ext. 519
 
I am an Assistant Professor in the Department of Religion,
concentrating in Judaic and Islamic Studies. My particular area
of specialization is the history of Jewish Mysticism.  My
computer work involves Hebrew text editing, and I am currently
producing on my microcomputer (an AT clone) a critical edition of
a medieval philosophical text that bears on the development of
early Kabbalah. Thus, I am particularly interested in Hebrew-
based computer applications. I also use e-mail extensively to
stay in touch with colleagues and Hebrew-based computer
consulatants. I am interested in working towards a North
American-based database of post-Biblical Jewish texts.
=================================================================
*Kirkham, Victoria <KIRKHAM@PENNDRLN>
 
I am in the Dept. of Romance Langs. at Penn and principal
investigator for Penn Boccaccio, a project to convert the works
of Boccaccio and their Renaissance illustrations to machine-
readable form. I am new to computing and particularly interested
in learning about digitizing images and interactive text-image
programs by getting in touch with others working along similar
lines.
=================================================================
*MacNeil, Heather <ARCHIVES@UTORONTO>
 
Heather MacNeil c/o University of Toronto Archives, (416) 978-
5344.
 
My educational background is an M.A. in English and an M.A.S.
(Master of Archival Studies).  My interest in computing in the
humanities is both personal and professional. I want to know the
kinds of conversations the humanities community is engaged in and
I want to know, as someone whose occupational focus is ways and
means for supporting research in a wide variety of areas, what
models are emerging and what questions are being asked.
=================================================================
*Maynor, Natalie <MAYNOR@MSSTATE>
 
Mississippi State University, MS 39762, USA, (601)323-8384 (home)
or (601)325-3644 (office).
 
Although I am still a computer novice, I am making rapid progress
(i.e., I'm becoming a computer addict).  My educational
background is in English literature (Ph.D., University of
Tennessee, 1978).  My research and publications during the past
eight or nine years have been in linguistics.
 
I am Associate Professor of English at Mississippi State
University.  I have had a computer for about three months and a
modem for about three weeks.  Because of my fascination with the
world of computing, I am now a member of the English Department
Computer Use Committee, a committee that was formed last fall to
make plans for the computer-assisted writing lab that we hope to
have in place within the next six months.
 
As a linguist, I am looking forward to learning enough to be able
to use my computer for compiling and analyzing linguistic data.
In addition, I hope to be able to exchange data with colleagues
via Bitnet.
=================================================================
*Morgan, Martha <HI.MORGAN@MCC.COM>
 
Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corporation, 3500 W.
Balcones Center Dr., Austin, Texas 78705 USA Telephone   (512)
338-3431
 
During this decade, I have worked in computational lexicography:
originally, with Siemens' German/English machine translation
project, METAL, at the University of Texas, and presently with
the natural language project at MCC.  My research interests
revolve around robust, re-usable, and extensible lexicography for
artificial intelligence applications, including knowledge
representation.
=================================================================
*Newman, Judith <NEWMANJ@MSVU>
 
I teach in education at MSVU.  Work with teachers helping them
learn about reading and writing and we use computers for doing
that.  Mostly I don't teach about the computer but USE it.  The
students (all active teachers) write to one another, to me, to
people in places like Calgary, Bloomington Indiana, McGill using
email. The focus of what we do is reading and writing but in the
process we use the technology to let us do both of those
activities in new ways.
 
I have even taught a distance education course with nine teachers
in two locations: Charlottetown and Amherst using Netnorth. I
corresponded with the students, both individually and as a group.
The exprience was most astonishing as the quantity of writing
both they and I found ourselves doing.
 
So yes, I'm a humanities teacher, teaching, reviewing software,
answering questions, giving advice, supporting research and
teaching using computers and would like to have contact with
others doing some of the same.
=================================================================
*Schostak, John <M090@cpc865.uea.ac.uk>
 
Lecturer in Education, School of Education, University of East
Anglia, Norwich NR4 7TJ. Tel - 0603 -56161. Ext 2643
 
Interests.   Generally, the impact of computers on schooling.
The potential for changing relationships in education,
particularly the potential offered by electronic mail.   I have
also done research on violence, disaffected youth.  Recently I've
edited a book on information technology and its impact on
schooling, its potential for liberating the individual as well as
its more sinister potential for controling the individual.
=================================================================
*Schuette, Wade <WADE@CRNLGSM>
 
1581 Slaterville Rd., Ithaca, NY 14850 (607) 277-0132 (home);
Computing Services, Johnson Graduate School of Management, 102
Malott Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4201, (607)
255-9426 (office).
 
AB (Physics), 1968, Cornell U. College of Arts & Sciences; MBA
(Quantitative Analysis), 1976, Cornell U.; 1976-present, various
analysis/computing positions at Cornell, including Co-Director,
Dept. of Institutional Planning and Analysis (1980). Presently
Database Administrator/Research Support Specialist
at Johnson Graduate School of Management (Cornell).
 
Taught: Microcomputers for Business (1985); Database Management
(1987); Member: Institute on Religion in an Age of Science;
Hobbies: Private pilot; avid GO player (Japanese board game)
 
Specialization:   Management Information Systems, distributed
relational database/decision systems, small group cooperative
computing; graphics                   and AI-assisted user
interfaces. Experienced with IBM/370; VAX 8530; PC's; Macintosh;
MARK IV, ADABAS, Rdb, dBase-III, OPS5, M1, Oracle.
 
Wife, Judy S. Ogden, (AB (Cornell) English/Psychology '70,
MPS/Health & Hospital Service Administration '76, JD '77) teaches
"Legal Aspects of Health Care                   Delivery" in
Cornell's Dept. of Human Service Studies, and is a Partner with
local law firm True, Walsh, & Miller.
 
Neither of us is officially in a "research" role; however, we are
interested in any work related to making large, complex
organizations better capable of making rational decisions with a
long-term focus.  This includes uses of (and limits of) computing
related to making "hard choices" in government, health care,
defense, etc; design of truly useful Information/Command and
Control Systems that do a good job of perception-fusion instead
of insulating and blinding the people at the top;  organizational
change and behavioral decision theory; leadership; role of
ethics/theology in making an organization with power to build and
grow without becoming corrupt;  self-organizing systems; cross-
fertilization between Computer Science, AI, and Management
science in knowledge-representation and design of robust,
reliable control systems that evolve well; qualitative physics
and graphical (analog) statistical techniques, including multi-
dimensional scaling in non-Euclidean perception space; and
definitions of "health" and "quality" that can assist in making
social resource allocation decisions and tradeoffs between cost-
containment and "quality of health care."
=================================================================
*Slattery, Susan <ELIS@YALEVM>
 
Yale University, Project Eli, 175 Whitney Ave., Yale Station
2112, New Haven, CT 06520, (203) 432-6680
 
I am a user support specialist at Project Eli, which is in charge
of instructional computing on campus.  I am also a poet (MFA from
UMass).  I help support hardware and software problems from
faculty who are working on instructional software.
=================================================================
*Willee, Gerd <UPK000@DBNRHRZ1>
 
Institute for Communications Research and Phonetics, University
of Bonn, Poppelsdorfer Allee 47, D-5300 Bonn 1, Tel. W-Germany-
0228 - 73 56 20
 
I'm working as a scientific associate in the fields of
computational linguistics, with stress on morphology (especially
of German); I'm teaching students (as well form comp.linguistics
as from other domains from the humanities, say philologies and
linguistics); I give computer courses mainly in PL/I; I'm working
as a consultant for the use of computers in the philologies and
linguistics.
=================================================================
*Wolper, Harlan <CXR101@URIMVS>
 
170C Old North Road Kingston, RI  02881 (401) 782-8693 .
 
I am currently a 2nd semester (graduating) senior at the
University of Rhode Island. As a Speech Communication Major and a
Sociology Minor, I have a background in the Humanities. Special
interests I have had include the use of electronic-mail and
teleconferencing. Our institution has its own teleconferencing
system called Participate. Currently, the system is expanding,
and I was part of a grant and a project to experiment with the
use of such a system in a variety of disciplines including
natural sciences, business fields, as well as others. I have
studied the effects of electronic "communication" vs. "face to
face" communication and have found some interesting results.  I
think that this discussion group would be of interest and value
to me.
=================================================================
*Zweig, Ron <H27@TAUNIVM>
 
I lecture in contemporary Jewish history, at Tel Aviv University.
Particular fields are the history of the British Mandate; and the
reconstruction of Jewish life in the immediate post-WW II years.
I edit a scholarly journal on the history of the Zionist movement
and the Arab-Israeli conflict. The journal has published an
annotated bibliography of articles and books in these fields
annually for the last eight years. I have just completed a
collated disk version of the bibliography, which includes a
software search engine (provided gratis by Seaside Software of
Florida, publishers of ASKSAM). The bibliography contains over
3150 items. I would be pleased to make it available (no charge)
to anyone with an interest in computerised bibliographies, or to
anyone interested in the contemporary Middle East and/or Jewish
history.
 
I am keenly interested in the use of databases in managing
historical research projects. I use a freetext database called
ASKSAM, and would be happy to swap notes on that or any other
freetext database.
=================================================================

