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ID/BIOGRAFY 15       V 00142
73/1/=========================================================================
26/1/Date:     19 November 1988
55/1/From:     Willard McCarty <mccarty@vm.epas.utoronto.ca>
38/1/Subject:  14th supplement, biographies
1/1/
1/1/
47/1/                   Autobiographies of Humanists
44/1/                       Fourteenth Supplement
1/1/
55/1/Following are 24 additional entries and 1 revised entry
62/1/to the collection of autobiographical statements by members of
30/1/the Humanist discussion group.
1/1/
63/1/Humanists on IBM VM/CMS systems will want a copy of Jim Coombs'
142/2/exec for searching and retrieving biographical entries. It is kept on Huma
nist's file-server; for more information, see the Guide to Humanist.
1/1/
56/1/Further additions, corrections, and updates are welcome.
1/1/
15/1/Willard McCarty
56/1/Centre for Computing in the Humanities, Univ. of Toronto
23/1/mccarty@utorepas.bitnet
16/1/19 November 1988
65/1/=================================================================
33/1/*Chisholm, David <chish@arizrvax>
1/1/
61/1/Professor of German, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721,
30/1/Tel.(602)621-5924 or 621-7385.
1/1/
61/1/Member of ACH and ALLC, Computer-aided research on German and
55/1/English language and literature, concordances to German
38/1/literature; metrics and versification.
65/1/=================================================================
34/1/*Clausing, Stephen <SCLAUS@YALEVM>
1/1/
56/1/Assistant Professor, German Department, Yale University.
1/1/
62/1/I am also a computer programmer and the author of an authoring
64/1/system for the Macintosh called the Private Tutor System (not to
61/1/be confused with the IBM system of similar name). My research
60/1/interests include Germanic Philology and Linguistics and the
64/1/application of computers to pedagogical and linguistic problems.
57/1/I have published in the area of pedagogy,linguistics, and
17/1/computer science.
65/1/=================================================================
43/1/*Culy, Christopher <culy@csli.stanford.edu>
42/1/                   <psachs1@pomona.bitnet>
1/1/
63/1/Ph.D. Student in Linguistics, Stanford University, 438 W. Sixth
44/1/St., Claremont, CA 91711 USA; (714) 626-3392
1/1/
63/1/Even though my background in mathematics (B.S.) and linguistics
57/1/(M.A. and Ph.D. in progress), I have only recently become
59/1/interested in computing for the humanities. I am especially
64/1/interested in the inputting and use of dictionaries and texts in
64/1/various languages. I recently wrote an interface to a program to
60/1/search an on-line English dictionary, and I am exploring the
62/1/possibility of putting a Dogon-French dictionary on-line. I am
63/1/also interested in the possible uses of computers in connection
61/1/with literacy programs in developing countries. Finally, I am
57/1/interested in clear, relatively simple interfaces so that
37/1/computers are accessible as possible.
65/1/=================================================================
50/1/*Davies, Anna Morpurgo <MORPURGO@VAX.OXFORD.AC.UK>
1/1/
44/1/Somerville College, Oxford OX2 6HD, England.
1/1/
62/1/I am a professor of comparative philology at the University of
55/1/Oxford (England) and am interested in computers and the
65/1/application of computers to written texts. I have been working on
60/1/ancient Indo-European Languages especially Ancient Greek and
60/1/Latin and ancient Anatolian Languages (Hittite, Hieroglyphic
13/1/Luwian etc.).
65/1/=================================================================
37/1/*Dumont, Stephen D. <DUMONT@UTOREPAS>
1/1/
60/1/Senior Fellow, Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 59
62/1/Queen's Park Crescent East, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 2C4, Canada,
21/1/(416) 926-1300 x3232.
1/1/
55/1/In 1974 I graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Wabash College,
61/1/Crawfordsville, Indiana with a double major in philosophy and
64/1/English literature.  All my graduate studies were pursued at the
62/1/Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Toronto (M.A. 1976,
61/1/Ph.D 1983) and the Pontifical Institute for Mediaeval Studies
64/1/(M.S.L. 1979).  In 1982 I was appointed instructor at the School
64/1/of Philosophy at the Catholic University of America, Washington,
60/1/D.C., and in 1983 assistant professor. In 1985 I accepted an
64/1/appointment as Junior Fellow at the Pontifical Institute and was
38/1/promoted to Senior Fellow 1 July 1988.
1/1/
65/1/My area of interest and research was and continues to be medieval
65/1/philosophy and theology, especially after Aquinas. I have focused
60/1/most on the philosophy of Duns Scotus and his school, and my
57/1/doctoral thesis was on the Subtle Doctor's proofs for the
65/1/existence of God.  I am currently revising the thesis into a more
62/1/general treatment of natural theology in the late middle ages.
58/1/Concurrently, I have published a number of articles on the
62/1/central philosophical contributions by Scotus and traced their
55/1/fate at the hands of his fourteenth century critics and
64/1/disciples.  As most of my research is based on unedited sources,
64/1/I have recently investigated computer assisted critical edition.
65/1/=================================================================
30/1/*Heino, Aarre <AOHEINO@FINFUN>
1/1/
62/1/University of Tampere, P.O. Box 607 SF-33101, TAMPERE Finland;
14/1/+358 31 156274
1/1/
63/1/I have worked almost twenty years at the university of Tampere,
65/1/the last ten years as second professor of comparative literature.
65/1/My main fields are German literature and the theory of the novel.
59/1/I teach and write about the phenomena of literature and the
63/1/function of arts. I try to bring every term a group of students
65/1/together with computers, which is here not so simple for students
62/1/of the human faculty. At the moment I am planning a seminar in
65/1/co- operation with my colleague in Indiana. Her students and mine
65/1/write about the same topics, then we change papers via BITNET and
34/1/also give each other the feedback.
1/1/
58/1/In these years I have had much to do with the Institute of
58/1/extended studies of my university, where I now develop the
64/1/distance education and the multimedia-teaching. I hope I can use
34/1/also computers for these purposes.
1/1/
64/1/In short I try to develop my teaching as a whole so that I could
64/1/get the major benefit of computers. The hypertext and hypermedia
63/1/programs seem to have qualities that I perhaps could use in the
60/1/future. Until now my main software is MS-WORD, GrandView and
38/1/Tornado, which I use in my daily work.
65/1/=================================================================
35/1/*Hill, Lamar M. <LMHILL@UCI.BITNET>
1/1/
58/1/Professor of History, Department of History, University of
54/1/California, Irvine, CA 92717 USA; (714) 856-6524, 6521
1/1/
64/1/NOTA BENE: I am not responding "for" for School of Humanities at
60/1/UCI but I shall try to distribute HUMANIST items when I can.
63/1/Access to this network by humanists is limited by the generally
65/1/apathetic (to hostile) relationship of humanists to computers for
58/1/more than word processing and by a woeful lack of funds to
64/1/support computer communication.  I hope that the later will be a
61/1/non-issue in the short-term future.  The former is a far more
64/1/intractable problem but we are working on it ("we" being a small
57/1/number of us in the School who use computers comfortably.
1/1/
60/1/I do early modern English history with a special interest in
63/1/legal history.  I also teach the Reformation.  I received my AB
62/1/from Kenyon College in history (and nearly two other majors in
65/1/English and political science), my MA from (then) Western Reserve
65/1/University after having done a year of law at Cornell, and my PhD
59/1/from the University of London (University College).  I am a
63/1/Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and am active in several
59/1/professional organizations, particularly the North American
30/1/Conference on British Studies.
1/1/
59/1/My publications have centered around the legal writings and
59/1/public career of Sir Julius Caesar, an Elizabethan/Jacobean
63/1/lawyer, judge, and bureaucrat.  I am now working in an entirely
60/1/new area, civil litigants and civil litigation in the period
62/1/1558-1625.  The two discrete studies I am presently working on
58/1/are : (1) "Mistress Bourne's Complaint" the anatomy of the
63/1/breakdown and dissolution of a late-sixteenth century marriage,
64/1/and (2) "The Jacobean Court of Requests and its Litigants: 1603-
57/1/1625" a study of an equity court, its process, personnel,
60/1/litigants and their litigation. In both instances I am using
61/1/conventional historical and legal-historical methodologies as
65/1/well as trying to develop critical apparatus for reading verbatim
42/1/pleadings and the deposition of witnesses.
65/1/=================================================================
30/1/*Hough, Michael <HOUGH@SENECA>
1/1/
65/1/I work at Seneca College in the Placement Office. I have a degree
60/1/in English from the University of Western Ontario in London,
59/1/Ontario and I am currently taking courses in History at the
59/1/University of Toronto during the evenings.  I have a strong
60/1/interest in the Arts.  I play the piano, I enjoy painting in
63/1/water colours and I like to write stories. I also read as often
64/1/as I can.  I use my computer at home to write and to explore the
64/1/world via modem.  I like to keep in touch with the social issues
61/1/that are going on in the world and for this purpose, I try to
63/1/read all that I can from reliable sources rather than tabloids.
1/1/
65/1/I am interested in joining this service because I feel that I can
62/1/effectively add my knowledge and experiences to the debate.  I
57/1/have travelled over much of Europe and I intend to travel
55/1/extensively around the rest of the world in the future.
1/1/
63/1/I am 25 years old and I was born in Bolton, England.  I am more
61/1/Canadian than English however as I moved here when I was five
10/1/years old.
65/1/=================================================================
44/1/*Kippen, Jim <eihe4874@v1.qub.ac.uk (JANET)>
1/1/
64/1/Research Fellow, Dept Social Anthropology & Ethnomusicology, The
65/1/Queen's University of Belfast, Belfast BT7 1NN, Northern Ireland,
64/1/UK; Telephone (UK) 0232 - 245133 Ext.3706, (International) +44 -
21/1/232 - 245133 Ext.3706
1/1/
60/1/I began, as many ethnomusicologists do, as a trained Western
64/1/classical musician with an undergraduate degree in music (1978).
56/1/I specialised in piano, conducting, and composition.  My
58/1/fascination for world music was kindled at that time and I
55/1/explored performance techniques of several North Indian
61/1/instruments, finally settling for specialisation in the tabla
64/1/(two-piece, tuned drum set).  As a supplement to practical work,
63/1/I began reading the anthropological literature to get some idea
63/1/of the cultural structure and social organisation of the people
62/1/who played tabla for a living.  I then enrolled for a Ph.D. in
56/1/social anthropology/ethnomusicology (1979) and undertook
57/1/fieldwork to study the music and the lives of traditional
64/1/musicians in Lucknow.  Subsequently, I published a book on tabla
61/1/and tabla musicians (1988) based largely on my thesis (1985).
1/1/
60/1/My work on the verbal representations of tabla music (quasi-
57/1/onomatopoeic mnemonic syllables used for transmission and
61/1/sometimes performance) suggested that techniques derived from
63/1/formal linguistics (generative grammars) could be developed for
64/1/the description of the percussion "language".  Yet by hand, such
64/1/descriptions were not feasible, and so grammars were implemented
64/1/in an expert system designed for a microcomputer portable enough
58/1/for experimental work on location.  The aim was to involve
63/1/informants as analysts in the experimental process: the machine
62/1/generated music which was assessed for quality and accuracy by
64/1/the musicians, and the musicians in turn supplied improvisations
61/1/that were analysed by the machine to test the validity of the
63/1/grammars.  By means of this interaction, models were constantly
64/1/modified and more accurate hypotheses of musical structure (with
61/1/greater cognitive validity?) were arrived at.  (This work has
65/1/been the subject of numerous articles.)  However, shortcomings in
60/1/the research theory and method forced a re-evaluation of the
56/1/usefulness of the expert system/informant interaction as
65/1/articulated by an intermediary analyst (researcher). As a result,
61/1/a learning module has now been added to the expert system and
63/1/research is currently being undertaken to assess whether or not
63/1/machine-learning is the solution to problems encountered in the
50/1/transfer of knowledge from informants to machines.
65/1/=================================================================
37/1/*Landow, George P. <el403012@brownvm>
1/1/
59/1/Professor of English, and Art Faculty Fellow, Institute for
63/1/Research in Information and Scholarship (IRIS), Box 1946, Brown
62/1/University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912 USA; 401  751-7493.
1/1/
65/1/George P. Landow, who holds the AB, MA, and PhD from Princeton U.
63/1/and an MA fr om Brandeis, has also done graduate work at the U.
62/1/of London. Landow, who has written on 19th-century literature,
65/1/art, and religion as well as on educational computing, has taught
62/1/at Columbia, the U. of Chicago, Brasenose College, Oxford, and
61/1/Brown Universities. He has been a Fulbright Scholar (1963-4),
59/1/twice a Guggenheim Fellow (1973, 1978), and a Fellow of the
61/1/Society for the Humanities at Cornell U. (1968-9), and he has
63/1/received numerous grants and awards from the National Endowment
62/1/for the Humanities and the National Endowment for the Arts. He
64/1/has organized with others several international loan exhibitions
62/1/including *Fantastic Illustration and Design in Britain, 1850-
63/1/1930* (1979), and his books include *The Aesthetic and Critical
62/1/Theories of John Ruskin,* *Victorian Types, Victorian Shadows:
60/1/Biblical Typology and Victorian Literature, Art, and Thought
64/1/*(1980), *Approaches to Victorian Autobiography* (1979), *Images
59/1/of Crisis: Literary Iconology, 1750 to the Present* (1982),
61/1/*Ruskin* (1985), *Elegant Jeremiahs: The Sage from Carlyle to
15/1/Mailer* (1986).
1/1/
60/1/Landow's projects in humanities computing began with several
65/1/involving graduate students in English literature and art history
62/1/which employed advanced mainfra me word processing, electronic
64/1/conferencing, and typesetting on the Brown mainv frame to create
62/1/group projects resulting in published books. One result was *A
60/1/Pre-Raphaelite Friendship* (1985), an edition of 19c-century
65/1/unpublished letter s with full scholarly apparatus produced by J.
65/1/H. Combs and others. Another was  *Ladies of Shalott: A Victorian
59/1/Masterpiece and Its Contexts* (1984), a heavily illustrated
60/1/exhibition catalogue fully designed online using IBM Script,
63/1/customized macros, and typesetting and page formatting programs
49/1/developed at Brown by Allan H. Renear and others.
1/1/
56/1/Since 1984, he has worked as a member of the team at the
63/1/Institute for Research in Information and Scholarship (IRIS) at
65/1/Brown that developed Intermedia, a full hypermedia system. Landow
61/1/supervised, edited, and partially wrote *CONTEXT32* a body of
60/1/several thousand hypermedia documents on this system used to
60/1/support English courses ranging from introductory surveys to
18/1/graduate seminars.
1/1/
57/1/He is corrently editor of THE CONTINENTS OF KNOWLEDGE, an
64/1/expansion of the Brown hypermedia materials by contributors from
56/1/several dozen institutions to include materials from all
63/1/disciplines. His most recent publications include essays on the
65/1/rhetoric of hypertext, the use of hypertext in education, and its
64/1/effects on collaborative work, conceptions of the literary work,
62/1/and literary criticism. He is currently editing a gathering of
52/1/essays on hypertext and literature with Paul Delany.
65/1/=================================================================
42/1/*Masterson, Karie <IVW7KJM@UCLAMVS.BITNET>
1/1/
64/1/UCLA Humanities Computing Facility, 405 Hilgard Ave., 248 Kinsey
26/1/Hall, Los Angeles CA 90024
1/1/
63/1/I am a programmer/analyst for the Humanities Computing Facility
63/1/at UCLA. I am also a phd. student of Near Eastern Languages and
63/1/Cultures at UCLA. I plan on completing the requirements for the
53/1/candidate in philosophy degree this fall quarter.  My
36/1/specialization is semitic languages.
65/1/=================================================================
47/1/*Matsuba, Stephen Naoyuki <matsuba@mtsg.ubc.ca>
1/1/
61/1/Research Associate, Centre for Textual Studies, Department of
62/1/English, University of British Columbia, #397-1873, East Mall,
29/1/Vancouver, BC CANADA  V6T 1W5
1/1/
59/1/My interests are bibliographical studies, computer-assisted
62/1/research in the humanities, late-nineteenth-century drama, and
61/1/early-twentieth-century drama.  My special interests in these
63/1/areas are Shaw, Shakespearian production and scholarship during
59/1/this period, textual editing and stemmatics, and artificial
13/1/intelligence.
1/1/
60/1/At present, my research focusses on computer-applications in
63/1/humanities research and teaching. I am completing an article on
57/1/the editing of Shaw's Man of Destiny, using the mainframe
65/1/computer.  My present research, with Professor Ira B. Nadel, is a
58/1/study of Shakespeare's sonnets using DISCAN, a content and
64/1/discourse analysis program developed by Professor Pierre Maranda
63/1/at Laval University.  The purpose of this project is to explore
59/1/and evaluate the program's potential as a research tool for
18/1/literary research.
1/1/
60/1/I am also involved with the design and implementation of the
62/1/English 100 Database for the Centre of Textual Studies at UBC.
60/1/It is a new way of administering the English 100 course, the
62/1/largest first-year English course of its kind in North America
59/1/with an enrollment of over 3500 students and a staff of 108
59/1/instructors.  The Database allows the instructors to access
62/1/information from any computer terminal on campus as well as to
60/1/express problems, offer suggestions, and keep informed about
64/1/resources available.  The Centre is developing the Database as a
64/1/teaching tool for multi-sectionned university courses regardless
17/1/of the discipline
1/1/
62/1/I have acted as the Assistant Editor for The Newsletter of the
64/1/Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada, and am teaching
63/1/at UBC as a Sessional Lecturer in the Department of English.  I
65/1/am in the process of applying for admission into a Ph.D programme
31/1/for the 1989-90 Winter Session.
65/1/=================================================================
40/1/*Ooi, Vincent Beng Yeow <ELLOOIBY@NUSVM>
1/1/
60/1/Senior Tutor, Department of English Language and Literature,
65/1/National University of Singapore, Kent Ridge, SINGAPORE 0511; 02-
7/1/7726032
1/1/
52/1/Research interests/areas: Computational linguistics;
63/1/Computational lexicography/lexicology; Artificial Intelligence;
4/1/CALL
1/1/
59/1/My MA dissertation is titled: "Computational Lexicography--
63/1/Constructing a Lexical Database in PROLOG".  I will, hopefully,
64/1/be going overseas in Autumn next year to do a PhD in some aspect
60/1/of Computational Linguistics. I'm also a member of the local
64/1/inter-tertiary CALL group which meets informally once a month to
35/1/discuss CALL problems and projects.
65/1/=================================================================
29/1/*Raben, Joseph <JQRBH@CUNYVM>
1/1/
51/1/Professor Emeritus of English, Queens College/CUNY.
1/1/
62/1/Founded the journal Computers and the Humanities and edited it
59/1/for twenty years; founding president of the Association for
62/1/Computers and the Humanities. At present, adjunct professor at
5/1/CUNY.
65/1/=================================================================
55/1/*Roovers, Ton <mcvax!gufalet!ton OR ton@gufalet.rug.nl>
1/1/
59/1/Head of Computer Department, Faculty of Arts, University of
58/1/Groningen, Grote Rozenstraat 31, NL 9712 TG Groningen, The
29/1/Netherlands, tel. 3150636063.
1/1/
63/1/While studying Dutch Linguistics in the seventies I learned how
64/1/to program in SNOBOL4 and SPITBOL. Since then I became a user of
61/1/many other languages and tools on all kinds of computers, but
41/1/still SNOBOL to me is *our own* language.
1/1/
57/1/Since the beginning of the eighties I am in charge of the
62/1/computing facilities of the Faculty of Arts of our university,
60/1/and I have let and see them grow from a few terminals on the
57/1/university mainframe to a network with about 150 personal
61/1/computers, with file servers, UNIX hosts and workstations and
65/1/lots of printers of all kinds. SPITBOL plays a modest but growing
61/1/role next to Pascal, C, Lisp, Prolog and so on, plus packages
64/1/like SPSS, dBASE, OCP and last but not least: the UNIX tools. My
57/1/task as a manager of these facilities (with the help of 5
62/1/colleagues) is growing fast, but it will continue to be a very
61/1/challenging one, due to the fast development of the available
61/1/computer hardware and software. Furthermore there will be the
65/1/need to repeatedly explain to hardware and software vendors, that
64/1/our needs can not be compared to those of the other faculties in
38/1/our university, with a few exceptions.
1/1/
61/1/And last but not least: our own university and faculty boards
58/1/must be convinced, that our faculty needs more than a good
28/1/library and some classrooms.
65/1/=================================================================
37/1/*Santiago, Delma (D_Santiago@UPRENET)
1/1/
61/1/Teodoro Aguilar st. 789 Los Maestros, Rio Piedras, P.R. 00923
1/1/
63/1/I am a history school teacher in Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico. I am
65/1/presently coursing my Master's Degree in History Education in the
64/1/University of Puerto Rico at the Rio Piedras Campus. My research
62/1/work is based on the use of the computer in the Social Studies
59/1/class. Prior to this investigation I was  reading about the
44/1/influence of technology in family education.
1/1/
63/1/This is my first contact with computers and I'm very interested
61/1/in obtaining all the advantages and knowledge that this group
16/1/will proportion.
65/1/=================================================================
63/1/*Smith, David <C51017@JPNKUDPC.BITNET> To:   <MCCARTY@UTOREPAS>
1/1/
63/1/School of Sociology, Kwansei Gakuin University, Nishinomiya 662
53/1/Japan.    (0798) 53-6111 x 5390; Fax: (0798) 51-0955.
49/1/(Nishinomiya is half-way between Kobe and Osaka.)
1/1/
63/1/I am spending the year in Japan at Kwansei Gakuin University as
64/1/the Visiting Professor of Canadian Studies. I am teaching Gender
65/1/Relations and am trying to set up a dialogue between Japanese and
63/1/Canadian (and US) students on BITNET. The conversation is to be
58/1/part of an experiment in teaching as well as other things.
1/1/
57/1/Additional interests include a strong orientation towards
64/1/bioethical issues (I consulted with the Law Reform Commission of
56/1/Canada for 2 years on matters concerning abortion, fetal
63/1/experimentatin, genetic engineerin frozen embryoes and so on. I
65/1/am also starting collaboration with the Japanese scholars who are
63/1/most interested in this area (very limited interest in Japan at
54/1/the moment). My formal training is in sociology and my
58/1/"specialty" areas include quantitative methods and medical
64/1/sociology. I have a very keen interest in matters concerning the
65/1/philosophy of science (particularly social science) and try (with
61/1/considerable ineptitude) to read Plato in the original Greek.
63/1/Because of my previous dealings with both the medical and legal
60/1/professions I am also interested in concepts of evidence and
6/1/proof.
65/1/=================================================================
36/1/*Stuart, Thomas W <c078d6s6 at ubvm>
1/1/
57/1/School of Information & Library Studies, SUNY at Buffalo,
11/1/Buffalo, NY
1/1/
65/1/I am currently an MLS graduate student and computer lab assistant
63/1/here at SILS, SUNY at Buffalo.  Earlier education background in
65/1/social sciences, English, and regional planning.  Work experience
61/1/in environmental health, behavioral health (mental health and
65/1/crisis services), and human services (youth services, information
45/1/and referral, and criminal justice planning).
1/1/
63/1/Now, a career change (not necessarily a change in interests) to
59/1/library and information services.  Why?  Reasons range from
60/1/liking how books feel and smell, through enjoyment of what I
64/1/discover when browsing, to combined attraction to and misgivings
60/1/about what new technologies promise/portend for mindfulness,
34/1/creativity, sense and sensibility.
1/1/
61/1/Current research and inquiry interests also range widely, but
61/1/include: 1. e-mail and networking as media for dialogue among
64/1/thoughtful people; 2. computer use for fast transfer of critical
62/1/and urgently needed info to health and human service providers
63/1/and community groups; 3. organizing, tracking, and locating all
57/1/the stuff now being generated and published in electronic
62/1/journals, conferences, and lists such as Humanist; 4. feminist
65/1/critiques of research and knowledge handling, and feminist models
65/1/to produce or recognize, work with, and share data, knowledge and
61/1/understanding; 5. all the dilemmas which arise when trying to
59/1/seriously clarify relationships among erotica, pornography,
62/1/intellectual freedom, and violence against women; 6. curiosity
65/1/about whether folks in humanities disciplines may be more able to
62/1/creatively and responsibly employ tools like e-mail and Bitnet
59/1/without becoming unwittingly or uncritically dependent upon
5/1/them.
65/1/=================================================================
30/1/*Tomlinson, Tom <19910TOM@MSU>
1/1/
65/1/Assistant Coordinator, Medical Humanities Program, Michigan State
49/1/University, East Lansing, MI 48824; 517-355-7550.
1/1/
64/1/I teach and speak on issues in health care ethics to medical and
65/1/nursing students, as well as practicing physicians and nurses. My
63/1/interests in computers and medical ethics have taken two forms.
60/1/One is a computer bulletin board on the IBM mainframe at MSU
60/1/which is the heart of the Medical Ethics Resource Network of
61/1/Michigan.  This bulletin board features postings of meetings,
57/1/recent article abstracts, and summaries of court cases in
65/1/Michigan and elsewhere; and a discussion forum which provides for
61/1/commentaries and exchanges on difficult cases, draft hospital
62/1/policies, and the like. The other is the development of CAI in
15/1/medical ethics.
1/1/
55/1/I have written a pilot program on the ethics of medical
64/1/confidentiality using an authoring language developed by a group
61/1/of programmers at MSU. I would be willing to share this pilot
64/1/with anyone interested, and would like to hear of other teaching
54/1/uses of computers in medical ethics or the humanities.
65/1/=================================================================
36/1/*Tweyman, Stanley <YFPL0007@YORKVM1>
1/1/
59/1/Director of Graduate Programme in Philosophy, Department of
61/1/Philosophy, York University, North York, Ontario, Canada, M3J
19/1/1L1; (416) 736-5113
1/1/
65/1/Interests: Hume, Descartes, Computer-aided analysis of text (c.v.
24/1/available upon request).
65/1/=================================================================
27/1/*Wang, Jude <AOJXW@ASUACAD>
1/1/
63/1/Manager, Humanities Computing Facility, c/o English Department,
62/1/Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-0302; (602) 965-2679
1/1/
64/1/I'm trained as a linguist but working as a computer person. As a
64/1/linguist I've been working in historical-comparative Micronesian
59/1/linguistics -- no, not at Arizona, but at the University of
57/1/Hawaii.  It won't be easy to continue this work -- or any
65/1/linguistic research -- at ASU.  At UH my computer work was mostly
62/1/in lexicography, using Bob Hsu's LEXWARE programs.  At ASU I'm
63/1/mostly just babysitting a bunch of PCs and PC users who haven't
62/1/learned how to read the WordPerfect manual.  I was told that I
64/1/would be working with scholars doing research in the humanities.
64/1/I haven't seen much of that here.  I'd like to know what's going
25/1/on at other institutions.
65/1/=================================================================
47/1/*Waters, Stacy <93651@UWAVM.ACS.WASHINGTON.EDU>
48/1/               <stacy@entropy.ms.washington.edu>
1/1/
58/1/Humanities and Arts Computing Center, DW-10, University of
46/1/Washington, Seattle, WA  98195; (206) 543-5370
1/1/
62/1/I currently use computers in conjunction with a Middle English
63/1/problem of my own.  In addition, I advise and assist members of
59/1/the local community on a wide range of textual matters from
42/1/computer assisted analysis to typesetting.
65/1/=================================================================
31/1/*Werner, Stefan <WERNER@FINUJO>
1/1/
62/1/Department of General Linguistics, University of Joensuu, P.O.
59/1/Box 111 SF-80101, Joensuu Finland; +358/73/151-4334 (work),
20/1/+358/73/27094 (home)
1/1/
64/1/After university studies in West Germany where I gained my first
62/1/experiences in computing in the humanities (text analysis with
64/1/programs like COCOA and TEXTPACK) and in general (programming in
58/1/Fortran and Lisp) I took up work as a linguistics lecturer
62/1/concentrating on - essentially introductory - computer courses
63/1/for language and literature students (use of OCP, WordCruncher,
63/1/BETA etc.). I also work as an adviser and occasional programmer
59/1/for the staff of the language departments. My main research
63/1/interests are in literary computing, semiotics and the study of
11/1/mass media.
65/1/=================================================================
36/1/*Willett, Perry <PWILLETT@BUINGVAXC>
1/1/
62/1/Reference Librarian Bartle Library SUNY-Binghamton Binghamton,
41/1/Ny.Y.  13901; (607)777 777-4386, 777-2345
1/1/
61/1/I am currently a librarian .  I have undergraduate degrees in
63/1/German and English from Washington U. in in (St. Louis), and an
60/1/M.A. in Comparative Libterature and an M.L.S . from Rutgers.
64/1/Besides a general interest in the humanities, I am interested in
61/1/the use and development of microcomputer appilications in the
48/1/study and teaching of languages and literatures.
65/1/=================================================================
29/1/*Wyman, John C. <LIBJCW@SUVM>
51/1/                Internet: <LIBJCW@SUVM.ACS.SYR.EDU>
1/1/
60/1/Sr. Systems Analyst, Syracuse University, Academic Computing
60/1/Services, Research Computing Department, Syracuse, NY 13244;
19/1/(315) 443-1145/2143
1/1/
60/1/My interests in HUMANIST revolve around humanist uses of the
63/1/computer of all types and subjects.  Also since I am in a "hard
65/1/core" area of computing on campus, I value exposure to ideas from
65/1/areas outside of computing center circles.  Ideas such as:  human
61/1/interface to computers, human language processing, system and
61/1/computer language design (from a user viewpoint), training of
45/1/people using the computer as as vehicle, etc.
1/1/
62/1/Specific computer interests are:  data base design, system and
65/1/program design (from a productivity viewpoint), user interface to
63/1/computing systems, text processing, non-numerical computations,
64/1/library automation, and microcomputers. Specific computer system
62/1/and language interests are:   On CMS:   CMS, REXX, SPIRES, and
61/1/PL/I   On UNIX:  C and Unix itself   On PC's:  C, RBASE, DOS,
49/1/Extended Batch Language, and share-ware programs.
13/1/*****END*****
END/
