From: CBS%UK.AC.EARN-RELAY::EARN.UTORONTO::HUMANIST 7-SEP-1989 04:23:03.00 To: archive CC: Subj: 3.441 BIOGRAFY 22 (677) Via: UK.AC.EARN-RELAY; Thu, 7 Sep 89 4:22 BST Received: from UKACRL by UK.AC.RL.IB (Mailer X1.25) with BSMTP id 5786; Thu, 07 Sep 89 04:16:15 BS Received: by UKACRL (Mailer X1.25) id 1452; Thu, 07 Sep 89 04:16:00 BST Date: Wed, 6 Sep 89 23:02:54 EDT Reply-To: Willard McCarty Sender: HUMANIST Discussion From: Willard McCarty Subject: 3.441 BIOGRAFY 22 (677) To: BSMTP Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 3, No. 441. Wednesday, 6 Sep 1989. Autobiographies of Humanists Twenty-first Supplement Following are 22 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. It is kept on Humanist's file-server; for more information, see the Guide to Humanist. Further additions, corrections, and updates are welcome. Willard McCarty Centre for Computing in the Humanities, Univ. of Toronto mccarty@utorepas 6 September 1989 ================================================================= *Aristar-Dry, Helen I have a Ph.D. in English Language and Linguistics from the U. of Texas at Austin, where I did a dissertation on syntactic reflexes of point of view in Austen's _Emma_. I am an Assoc. Prof. of English and linguistics at the U. of Texas at San Antonio; but currently I have a Fulbright lecturing/research grant to the U. of Tromso in Norway. My research interests involve primarily the syntactic and pragmatic analysis of literary narrative; thus, the paper I am giving at the Giessen conference on "Co-operating with Written Texts" in September is on Henry James' use of presuppositional constructions. Recently, however, I have become interested in computational stylistics. I have several of Austen's texts on disk (courtesy of the Oxford Text Archive) and am looking at them for use of non-anaphoric reflexives and past tense modals. Also, I hope to teach a course on computation and style here at Tromso next semester. ================================================================= *Barr, David Lawrence Professor of Religion, Director, University Honors Program, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio 45435; (513) 873-2661. Home Address: 206 Cambria Drive, Beavercreek, OH 45440; (513) 429- 9574 Born April 24, 1942, in Belding, Michigan; Married: Judith Kay Dunlap (1966); Two Children: Elizabeth Kay (1973), Nathaniel David (1976) Education: Ph.D. in Religion, Florida State University, Interdepartmental Program In Humanities, August, 1974. M.A., Florida State University, 1969. B.A. Ft Wayne Bible College, 1965. Travel: Turkey and Israel in the summer of 1986. Experience: Chairer, Department of Religion, Wright State University, 1980- 1986. Co-Director, Public Education Religion Studies Center, 1978-1985. President, Eastern Great Lakes Biblical Society, 1985-86; VP 1984-85. Associate Editor, Proceeding of the Eastern Great Lakes and Midwestern Biblical Societies, 1986- Co-Chairer, Bible in Ancient and Modern Media Group in the Society of Biblical Literature, 1987-. Memberships: Society of Biblical Literature; Catholic Biblical Association; American Academy of Religion; Eastern Great Lakes Biblical Society; Dayton New Testament Seminar; Society for the Study of Narrative Books: New Testament Story: An Introduction. Wadsworth Publishing Company, 1987. The Bible in American Education, a centennial volume prepared for the Society of Biblical Literature and published by Fortress Press and Scholars Press, 1982 (co-editor with Nicholas Piediscalzi). The Bible Reader's Guide, Bruce, 1970 (Co-author with James V. Panoch, Rodney Allen and Robert Spivey). Religion Goes To School: A Practical Handbook for Teachers, Harper & Row, 1968 (Co-author with James V. Panoch). Selected Articles: "The Fifth Gospel: The Book of Revelation as Good News," Adult Biblical Independent Learning Tucson: ABIL Foundation, 1989. "The Apocalypse of John as an Oral Enactment," Interpretation, 40/3 (July 1986): 243-56. "Elephants and Holograms: From Metaphor to Methodology in the Study of John's Apocalypse," Society of Biblical Literature 1986 Seminar Papers, Scholars Press, 1986: 400-411. "The Apocalypse as a Symbolic Transformation of the World: A Literary Study," Interpretation, January 38/1 (1984) 39-50. "The Conventions of Classical Biography and The Genre of Luke-Acts," in Luke-Acts: New Perspectives from the SBL Seminar, edited by Charles Talbert, Crossroads Press, 1983: 63-88, (co-author with Judith Wentling). "The Bible in Public Education Today," in The Bible in American Education, Scholars Press and Fortress Press, 1982:165- 97, (co-author with Peter Bracher). "The Drama of Matthew's Gospel: A Reconsideration of its Structure and Purpose," Theology Digest 24/4 (January, 1977), 349-359 (translated into Japanese in 1983). Reviews published in the Journal of Biblical Literature, Interpretation, the Journal of the American Academy of Religion, The Second Century, TSF Bulletin, and other journals. Papers read at meetings of the Society of Biblical Literature, Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas, Eastern Great Lakes Biblical Society, American Academy of Religion, and other societies. Work in Progress: Pursuing research on the social world of the Apocalypse, which has included a research trip to Turkey, with a view toward an integrated literary, historical, and social analysis of this important document. Have agreed to write a narrative commentary on the Apocalypse of John, to be part of a new series published by Polebridge Press, R. Alan Culpepper, general editor. "How Shall We Understand Matthew's Relation to Judaism? A Question of Method," a major essay being revised for publication. ================================================================= *Besemer, Susan P. INSTITUTION: SUNY College at Fredonia DEPARTMENT: Reed Library TITLE: Director of Library Services EMAIL: BESEMER@SNYFREBA PHONE: (716)673-3181 ADDRESS: 037 Reed Library SUNY Fredonia Fredonia, New York POSTAL CODE: 14063 COUNTRY: USA BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH: I have been the Director of the Library at SUNY Fredonia for just over two years. Before that I was at the Butler Library at SUNY College at Buffalo for almost 15 years. I am interested in using computers to improve access to library information, and for my own use as a professional person. I started using microcomputers in the early 1980s when I learned WordStar on an old Heathkit computer. I taught WordStar to faculty and other people in classes and indiviually, enjoying that very much. I also bought my own Osborne I at that time and used it to compile a book (published by Greenwood Press) which lists interviews with visual artists which are recorded on film, video and audiocassette. Much to the amusement of some, I still use my Ozzie, and haven't moved up to a PC. ================================================================= *Bestul, Thomas Professor of English and Director, Humanities Research Facility, Department of English / University of Nebraska-Lincoln / Lincoln, NE 68588-0333; (402) 472-1813 I am a professor of English (Ph.D. Harvard 1970), a faculty member at Nebraska since 1968, a former Associate Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, and a medievalist, with special interests in manuscript studies, Anselm of Canterbury, the Latin devotional literature of the eleventh through the fourteenth centuries, and Chaucer. My own interest in humanities computing is in applications to medieval studies, especially databases and machine-readable texts. I am a participant in the project Sources of Anglo-Saxon Literary Culture, which will eventually exist in the form of a regularly updated database, as well as in printed form. The Humanities Research Facility at the University of Nebraska- Lincoln is designed to support all aspects of research in the humanities through the use of modern technology, particularly computing. As its Director, I take responsibility for staying informed of current developments to the extent I am able. My published scholarship is in medieval studies and has not dealt with computer applications. Two recent representative examples: A Durham Book of Devotions, Toronto Medieval Latin Texts 18 (Toronto 1987), and "Chaucer's Parson's Tale and the Late- Medieval Tradition of Religious Meditation" forthcoming in Speculum. ================================================================= *Blumenthal, Dr. Henry J. Dept. of Classics and Archaeology, University of Liverpool, P. O. Box 147, Liverpool L69 3BX, U.K. My position is in Greek, till two years ago a separate department here, and most of my teaching is in Greek language and literature, but my research interests are primarily in Greek Philosophy, especially neoplatonism: lately I've spent most of my time on the Aristotelian commentators. Other interests: Comparative Philology and Homeric Epic. ================================================================= *Boggs, John (John C. Boggs, Jr.) Professor; Department of English, University of Richmond, Va. 23173; (804) 2898294; Home: 2883426 Degrees from Duke and Columbia. Teaching at U of Richmond since 1962. Principal interest in 20th-century British and American literature; special focus on Joyce and the Irish Renaissance. Also some background in 19th-century American literature, with focus on works of Melville. ================================================================= *Bryson, Tim INSTITUTION:University of Chicago DEPARTMENT:Divinity School TITLE:Ph.D. Candidate EMAIL:lsxlsls@uchimvs1 PHONE:312-324-6057 ADDRESS:5414 S. Ridgewood Ct. 3N, Chicago, IL POSTAL CODE:60615 COUNTRY:U.S.A. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH A.B. Harvard. A.M. Stanford/University of Chicago. I am presently (8/89) at the University of Chicago working at a dissertation on religious syncretism. I have used my IBM AT to advantage in this project not only for word-processing (Notabene) but for locating (Dialog) and organizing (NotebookII) bibliographical references. In addition I use Multi-Lingual Scholar to help me communicate in Bengali by mail with contacts in Calcutta. Recently I joined CompuServe and now Humanist which, if nothing else, will relieve the obsessional isolation of dissertation work. My academic specialization is modern Hinduism. But this academic interest stems from my previous experience as a monk first in a Japanese Rinzai Zen monastery and then in an Hindu Vedanta monastery. I seek to exploit computer technology ultimately as a tool for research and communication in the task of inter-cultural understanding at the deepest level. Right now all I have in mind are things like simply encouraging scholars in my field to use computers to help them find, organize and present their data; someday working on inter-active multi- media role- playing programs and relational databases such as the Apple labs are developing in San Francisco; and somehow encouraging the expansion of telecommunications networking within and beyond our cultural boundaries. ================================================================= *Cohn, Robert L. Philip and Muriel Berman Scholar in Jewish Studies, Department of Religion, Lafayette College, Easton, PA 18042 USA; 215-250-5182 I received the B.A. from Northwestern University and A.M. and Ph.D. from Stanford in Religious Studies and Humanities. My areas of teaching are in Hebrew Bible, Judaism and comparative religion. My research of late has focused on literary approaches to biblical narrative with articles on the Elijah-Elisha tales, a commentary on 1 Samuel, and ongoing work on images of the "other" in biblical literature. At the same time I am interested in comparative categories such as "sainthood" and "scripture" and I tend to approach Judaic phenomena from a comparative perspective. Currently I am teaching at Lafayette College and am affiliated with the Philip and Muriel Berman Center for Jewish Studies located at Lehigh University and serving the six colleges in the Lehigh Valley. Half of University and serving the six colleges in the Lehigh Valley. As part University and serving the six colleges in the Lehigh Valley. Part of my teaching, under the sponsorship of the Center, is at the other colleges in the consortium. The Center also sponsors seminars and conferences for the colleges and the community. My wife, Renee Cohn, is an attorney in Allentown, PA, and our sons, Gideon, nearly 6, and Michael, 2 1/2, amaze and delight us. ================================================================= *Corsi, Sandro Asst. Prof., Dept. of Art, Univ. of Wisconsin - Oshkosh, Oshkosh, WI 54901 USA; (414) 424-1238, or -2219, or -2235 Degrees Master of Fine Arts, 1986, and Bachelor of Fine Arts, 1984. The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Employment Assistant professor of Art, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh, 1987-current. Animation assistant, David Alexovich Animation, Chicago, IL, 1984-85. Free-lance illustrator, Rome, Italy, 1979-1983. Awards SIGGRAPH Conference Grant for Educators, ACM/SIGGRAPH, Boston, 1989. Research grant, University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh, Faculty Development Program, 1988. Mellon Fellowship, Center for Advanced Studies in Art and Technology, Chicago, 1985-86. Recent Exhibitions "Electronic Image Exhibition", St.Louis Community College, St.Louis, MO, 1989. Art Show The Arts & Technology II symposium, Connecticut College, New London, CT, 1989. "Q-Cu, Kunst und Medien" competition, Karlsruhe, Federal Republic of Germany, 1988. Art Show 1st International Symposium on Electronic Art, Utrecht, The Netherlands, 1988. Art Show SIGGRAPH'88 conference, Atlanta, GA, 1988. "Emerald City Classic VII" Nepenthe Mundi Society, Wichita, KS, 1988. First place award, computer-professional. "Art of the Computer", Euphrat Gallery, De Anza College, Cupertino, CA, 1988. Published work Credited for all the illustrations in: "Storia degli antichi astronomi", "Storia dell'astronomia moderna", "Storia dell'universo", 1984; "La Creazione", 1982; "Nasce l'uomo moderno", 1980. All of the above were originally published by Jaca Book, Milano, Italy. Other publishers included Winston Press, Minneapolis, in the US. Also credited for part of the illustrations in other books and periodicals. Aside from... To the above "formal" bio, I might add that I have a mixed academic background (having started out with physics, later moving on to a variety of other endeavours -- which culminated in a terminal degree in the Fine Arts), and an equally mixed cultural background, having lived in several countries before moving to the US in 1983. My main interests currently concern applications of computers in the visual arts -- ranging from the simulation of older media (paint programs) to the creation of altogether new interactive works. In the past I have worked in more traditional media (drawing, filmmmaking), as well as carrying on some theoretical research on the implications of digital media for the future status of the arts. Closely related to the preceding are my art-education interests. My job involves the creation from scratch of a computer art program. So far I've taken care of the bulk of the soft/hardware purchasing, and have developed and taught two courses. I'm now in the process of writing three more course proposals -- as well as constantly revising the existing sillabi. Outside of the arts... as an undergraduate I was exposed to some semiotics and linguistics, and occasionaly I've stuck my nose into communications. I have an especially keen interest in the social implications of new channels of communications, especially those (such as computer networks) that can combine broad- and narrow- casting, and allow active participation on the part of everyone involved. ================================================================= *Davis, John N. INSTITUTION: University of Victoria DEPARTMENT: Faculty of Law TITLE: Associate Professor and Law Librarian EMAIL: Bitnet: YYJDAVIS@UVVM Internet: YYJDAVIS@UVVM.UVIC.CA PHONE: (604) 721-8562 ADDRESS: Box 2300, VICTORIA, British Columbia POSTAL CODE: V8W 3B1 COUNTRY: Canada BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH: I was born in Brant County in southwestern Ontario, and grew up on a dairy farm there. Classics were my passion in high school, where I managed to get 5 years of Latin and 3 of Greek. Before completing the honours computer science program at the University of Western Ontario, I left to do a law degree at the University of Toronto. After that, I articled, was called to the bar, and practiced law in Cayuga, Ontario for a year. Then, pining for academia, I returned to the University of Western Ontario for a degree in library science. After graduation, I went to the law library at the University of Manitoba. In my spare time there, I chaired the Faculty Association's grievance committee, and was contract administrator. Finally, after six winters in Winnipeg, I left for my present position. I have been here in Victoria just two years. My research interests are chiefly "historical" - I would not resent being called an antiquarian - focussing blurrily on legal writing styles, native law, and constitutional law. On the library side, I am constantly using computers. ================================================================= *Donaldson, Randall (Randy) INSTITUTION: Loyola College in Maryland DEPARTMENT: Foreign Languages & Literatures TITLE: Asst. Professor of German EMAIL: Donaldson@LOYVAX PHONE: (301) 323-1010 x2299 ADDRESS: 4501 N. Charles Street Baltimore, MD POSTAL CODE: 21210 COUNTRY: USA BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH (ca. 100-500 words) I am trained in German language and literature (Ph.D., Hopkins, 1977), but was in college administration for six years, during which time I became very involved with computers both mainframes and PCs, but mostly PCs even as I lost touch with my primary field(s) of interest: literary criticism; nineteenth-century German literature; and German-American Literature. As I try to put my computer knowledge to work in resuming my scholarly research, my sense is that many of my German colleagues (in the Americas or in Europe) are simply not very involved with computers at least not as involved as my own local colleagues in Italian and Linguistics seem to be. I am very interested at the moment in the existence of or plans for a computerized bibliograpy(ies) on Germans in other countries in general and German-Americans in specific. I am also beginning a project on Goethean criticism in which I hope to use a concordance program (Oxford?; WordCruncher?) to examine Goethe's works for certain key words and constellations and would be glad to learn opportunities to obtain Goethe's work in machine- readable form. ================================================================= *Essa, Al Graduate Student, Yale University; Department of Philosophy, Yale University, P.O. Box 3650, Yale Station, New Haven, CT. 06520 U.S.A.; (203)865-5971 ================================================================= *Evens, Dan Postdoctoral Fellow, Dept. of Physics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5S 1A7 I am a postdoctoral fellow, working on quantum field theory. My training has been in quantum mechanics, gravity and both special and general relativity, as well as the standard complement of math that a physicist absorbs in his career. My interests in computers have been mainly of a strictly practical problem solving nature, numerical integration, system modeling and such. My interests in philosophy have been mainly in a sort of dabbling in ethics and metaphysics. I am interested in the philosophy of science, and in particular the philosphy of the quantal nature of the universe. ================================================================= *Fischer, John Irwin INSTITUTION: Lousiana State University DEPARTMENT:English TITLE:Professor of English EMAIL:Enfisc@LSUVM PHONE:Office (504) 388-3023; Home (504)) 766-5816 ADDRESS:5034 S. Chalet Court, Baton Rouge, Lousiana POSTAL CODE:70808 COUNTRY:USA BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH I received my Ph.D. at the University of Florida in 1968 and have taught at LSU since that date. My interests include early eighteenth-century English satire, Swift's poetry, documentary scholarship, editing practices, and academic computing. I have some skill manipulating Ventura 1.1 and Nota Bene 3.0. I am a beginner at BITNET. My publications include _On Swift's Poetry,_ Florida, 1976; _Contemporary Studies in Swift's Poetry_ (co-edit),Delaware, 1981; and _Swift and His Contexts_ (co-edit), AMS, 1989. ================================================================= *Gall, Norman R. Graduate Student (PhD Candidate) Philosophy, York University, 4700 Keele Street, North York, ON M3J 1P3, 663-2901 My areas of research are primarily in the philosophy of mind and psychology with a decidedly Wittgensteinian slant. I am also interested in the status of so-called 'fringe science', i.e. parapsychology, etc. I am very skilled in the use, maintenance, and installation of medium to large Macintosh netowrks and interconnections with EtherNet backbones, and IBM (yuk) Token-Ring nets. I want to see what sorts of software tools can be integrated with new hardware schemes to provide researchers with the best systems possible. In addition, I collect all manner of public-domain and Shareware software. ================================================================= *Gilbert, David INSTITUTION: University of Illinois - Urbana/Champaign DEPARTMENT: School of Music. Division of Musicology TITLE: PhD Candidate EMAIL: U22006 at UIUCVMD BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH (ca. 100-500 words) Before coming to U of I to enter the MA/PhD program in musicology I was a systems analyst in Chicago. I also have an MA in library science from the Univ. of Chicago but I was only a librarian for six months (at the American Library Association). My main areas of study are 19th century France, the composer Hector Berlioz, and 19th and 20th century opera. My main computing interests are network applications (such as this one), bibliographic data bases and catalogs (I came to this list via PACS-L), and the design of user interfaces to such beasts. ================================================================= *Golan, Lew Achimeir 13, Tel Aviv 69126, Israel; tel: 972-3-427638 I am on the Faculty of Humanities at Tel Aviv University, in a dual capacity with the Diaspora Research Institute: (1) as an editor of academic papers, and (2) as a consultant on personal computing in general and Nota Bene in particular. However, my work in academia is more of a sideline to my work in (you should excuse the expression) the real world. I am a writer and creative director in several areas of communication -- marketing, advertising, training and education. I use desktop publishing (Ventura Publisher, Publisher's Paintbrush, H-P scanner, QMS 800+ Postscript laser printer) for much of my work -- producing academic journals for other research institutes at the university, and creating and producing ads and brochures for my commercial clients. I got into computing the way many other writers have done...moving from a manual Royal to an electric Praxis to a Kaypro 2X to a Tandy 1000 with two floppies to a Tandy 3000 with a 40-megger and a RAMpage 286 expanded memory. I write educational television programs that are used for teaching English in Israel's school system. I ghosted several textbooks for a professor in labor relations in the States. I attended the University of Chicago (which makes me a humanist in good standing from way back in 1948), and earned my degree in journalism at the University of Illinois. We (wife, four daughters) moved to Israel in 1970. We (wife, youngest daughter) moved back to the States in 1978. We (wife) moved back to Israel in 1986, leaving our youngest daughter at Indiana University. The pendulum has swung between some other extremes as well: I have been senior vice president and head of creative services at the world's largest marketing services agency, with hundreds of writers, art directors and other people reporting to me...and I have worked alone as a fulltime freelance writer. I have lived in a megalopolis...and I was a member of a kibbutz for five years. Still, one aspect of my life has remained relatively constant: I'm an incurable protester. In the 60's, I marched on Washington during the Vietnam war, and with Martin Luther King at Selma. Today, I march against the government's handling of the intifada, and against the actions of settlers on the West Bank. No, I didn't burn my draft card in the 60's. The army didn't want me in the first place, because I've been totally deaf since the age of 6. So I burned my library card instead. ================================================================= *Grycz, Czeslaw Jan INSTITUTION: University of California DEPARTMENT: Division of Library Automation TITLE: Chair, Scholarship and Technology Study Project EMAIL: CJG$UR@UCCMVSA.BITNET PHONE: (415) 987-5061 ADDRESS: Kaiser Center, Eighth Floor 300 Lakeside Drive Oakland, California POSTAL CODE: 94612-3550 COUNTRY: U.S.A. BIOGRAPHY: Involved with Scholarly Publishing since 1971, first at Stanford University Press, and - for the last thirteen years - at the University of California Press. As of July 1, 1989 heading up a project to provide electronic journal publication facilities at the University of California utilizing the MELVYL network as a distribution carrier. Interested, therefore, in SGML, object- oriented text tagging, and similar issues. Lecture and speak widely. ================================================================= *Hallheim, Arne Maint.eng., Adr. : PO Box 53, Universitetet, N-5027 Bergen, Norway; Phone: +47 5 212954; Fax : +47 5 322656 I'm working at Norvegian Computing Centre for the Humanities, located in Bergen, Norway. My work includes system-operation of our Local Area Network (appr. 30 pc's) and two SUN workstations. I also do some programming (Pascal/C). This is my first job after Technical College, electronics/micropros. studies. My interests are programs/technical applications that might be usefull for users in the Humanities. ================================================================= *Hancher, Michael Professor of English, University of Minnesota, 207 Lind Hall, 207 Church Street, S.E., Minneapolis MN 55455 USA; 612/625-3363 Author: numerous articles on speech-act theory, literary theory, literature and the law, and literary illustration; also a book on John Tenniel. Member: American Society for Aesthetics, Dictionary Society of North America, Linguistic Society of America, Modern Language Association of America. Current computing interests: mainly utilitarian (on-line catalog- , bibliography- and text-searching, listservers such as this, etc.). ================================================================= *Hansen, Tom Computing Resource Center, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 326 Adm., Lincoln, NE 68588-0496, (402) 472-5224 I'm an Urban Sociologist with a keen interest in computing and the humanities. I'm currently employed as a computer resource specialist with one of my more interesting and pleasurable responsibilities being our Humanities Research Facility. My major research interest is the development of tools to access widely distributed databases by individuals using microcomputers connected to a network. Anything that deals with HyperText and/or HyperMedia will also get my attention ================================================================= *Harris, Mary Dee Consultant in Natural Language Processing and Artificial Intelligence in the Washington, DC, area.; Address: Language Technology, 2153 California St. NW, Suite 304, Washington, DC 20008; (202)-387-0626. Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin, in English literature and Computer Science; dissertation: "Computer Collation of Manuscript Poetry: Dylan Thomas' 'Poem on his Birthday'" Research interests: interaction of metaphor and discourse structure, knowledge-based natural language processing, cognitive linguistic approaches to natural language processing Major publications: Introduction to Natural Language Processing (Prentice-Hall, 1985). "Dylan Thomas' Use of Roget's Thesaurus during Composition of 'Poem on his Birthday'," PBSA, LXXII, No. 4 (1978), 505-517. "Dylan Thomas the Craftsman: Computer Analysis of the Composition of a Poem," ALLC Bulletin, 7, No. 3 (1979), 295-300. "Poetry vs the Computer," Festschrift in honor of Roberto Busa, S.J., edited by Antonio Zampolli and Laura Cignoni, University of Pisa, Fall, 1987. "Analysis of the Discourse Structure of Lyric Poetry," CHum, forthcoming. [Presented at ICCH/1987, Columbia, South Carolina, April, 1987.] *****end*****