Willard McCarty <MCCARTY@vm.epas.utoronto.ca> (01/17/90)
Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 3, No. 940. Wednesday, 17 Jan 1990. (1) Date: Mon, 15 Jan 90 22:06:38 CST (14 lines) From: ENCOPE@LSUVM Subject: Veteran E-Mailer To Turn Poet at Famous Convention (2) Date: Tue, 16 Jan 90 10:53:00 EST (97 lines) From: JLD1@phoenix.cambridge.ac.uk Subject: Arabic Computing Conference (3) Date: 16 Jan 90 14:02:40-EST (84 lines) From: HAHNE@UTOREPAS Subject: Bibliographic and textual database manager (1) -------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 15 Jan 90 22:06:38 CST From: ENCOPE@LSUVM Subject: Veteran E-Mailer To Turn Poet at Famous Convention Veteran e-mailer KEVIN L. COPE wishes to invite members of all lists to attend the forthcoming conference of the Mississippi Philological Association, now only two weeks away. The conference will feature the debut of old-timey e-mailer KEVIN L. COPE as a poet. Cope will read from such recent compositions as "Memo to a Department," "The Greasiad," "Ode to the Lennon Sisters," and "The Liberace Suite." Thousands of other papers and compositions in the literary arts will be featured. Interested parties should immediately contact Harry Donaghy, of the Department of English at Mississippi State University, in University, Mississippi, near Starkville. The conference will convene January 26-27, with accommodations at the palatial Ivy Guest House. (2) --------------------------------------------------------------104--- Date: Tue, 16 Jan 90 10:53:00 EST From: JLD1@phoenix.cambridge.ac.uk Subject: Arabic Computing Conference Literary and Linguistic Computing Centre and Centre of Middle Eastern Studies University of Cambridge jointly announce 2nd Conference and Exhibition on Bilingual Computing in Arabic and English 5-7 Sep. 1990 To: Ahmad Ubaydli, Convenor. Please send me: Registration documents Exhibition information I wish to contribute a paper: Yes No on theme no. (see list of themes): (PLEASE ENCLOSE A 100 WORD ABSTRACT) Deadline for abstracts: 15 February 1990 Deadline for submission of camera-ready copy: 14 May 1990 Name and address to appear in the list of participants: Surname: Title and other names: Affiliation: Address: Phone: Fax: Telex: E-mail: c/o Literary & Linguistic Computing Centre Sidgwick Avenue Cambridge CB3 9DA UK Telephone: +44 (223) 335029 Telex: 81240 CAMSPL G Fax: +44 (223) 335110 EMail: AU100@UK.AC.CAM.PHX [JANET] AU100@PHX.CAM.AC.UK [EARN/BITNET] Call for papers: Papers for the following themes are invited. Camera-ready copy for papers to be presented at the conference must be submitted by 14 May 1990. Conference proceedings will be available at registration. The main language of the conference will be English, but papers in Arabic will be considered. It may be possible for these to be used together with English abstracts or full translations. THEMES (1) Software copy protection problems in the Arab World (2) Bilingual data bases: compiling classical Arabic sources, contemporary data banks (3) Publications on bilingual computing: magazines, books and manuals (4) Computer based lexicography and machine translation (5) Teaching of Arabic by computer Hardware and Software Exhibition Conference Proceedings: It is intended to have the conference proceedings available at registration in order to facilitate discussion. There will be a limit of 10 pages per paper. The deadline for camera-ready copy will be 14 May 1990. There will be a modest charge for the conference proceedings, which will reflect a proportion of the production costs. If sufficient high-quality papers are submitted it is hoped that these can be published in book form after the conference. It may be possible to include papers for which there was insufficient time during the conference. Overnight Accommodation in Cambridge: Accommodation is available at modest rates at St Catharine's College. Bookings should be made by application to the Conference organisers and paid for at least 2 weeks before the start of the conference. Late bookings cannot be accepted. If hotel accommodation is required a list of hotels in Cambridge can be supplied. It is not possible for LLCC staff to make hotel bookings on behalf of participants. You are advised to book well in advance as Cambridge hotels are always very full. Accommodation charges will be in addition to the conference registration fee. Social Programme: (1) Official reception and conference dinner (2) Khalil Hawi memorial reception (3) A concert of European and Arabic music performed by Bottisham Opera and the Cambridge Instrumentalists Conference fees: Paid before 16 June 1990: 60 pounds Paid after 16 June 1990: 75 pounds Student Rates: Paid before 16 June 1990: 25 pounds Paid after 16 June 1990: 40 pounds Exhibitor's fees (per 5 square metres): 250 pounds (Cheques payable to University of Cambridge, in pounds sterling drawn on a British Bank or Eurocheques in pounds sterling). (3) --------------------------------------------------------------94---- Date: 16 Jan 90 14:02:40-EST From: HAHNE@UTOREPAS Subject: Bibliographic and textual database manager I want to announce a database manager designed especially to meet the needs of scholars, students, writers and others who work with a lot of textual and bibliographic information. I wrote LIBRARY MASTER because the limitations of typical database managers (fixed length fields, column oriented reports and limited support for non-English text) make these programs less than adequate for the type of information people in the humanities work with. LIBRARY MASTER is designed for easy entry of text of arbitrary length, rapid powerful searches, and flexible report formatting in common word processor file formats. It allows a scholar to keep track of tens of thousands of articles and books, and to take research notes on these works. The flexible report generator automatically produces annotated bibliographies formatted according to various style sheets, such as MLA, Chicago, APA and Turabian. Here are a few of the special features that make LIBRARY MASTER of particular interest to humanities scholars: 1. Variable length fields and records up to 65000 characters long. 2. Built in editor has common word processor capabilities including extensive cursor movement and text delete commands, wrap around, search and replace, block operations, and fonts such as underlining, boldface, italics, superscript and subscript. 3. Accented western European language characters can be easily entered, searched and properly sorted. 4. "Point and select" listing of field contents simplifies searching and data entry for repetitious fields (such as subject categories). 5. Multiple record types allow different types of data in the same database (e.g., books, journal articles, articles in books, dissertations, unpublished manuscripts, video recordings, interviews, etc. Each record type can have different fields and can be formatted differently in a report or bibliography. 6. A wide variety of data types including text, names, dates, numbers and literature references. 7. References to literary works such as books of the Bible, ancient Greek and Latin literature, Shakespeare, etc. can be searched by a range of references (e.g., Jn. 3:5-20; 1QS 5:20-24; Ex. Rab. 3-4). This is particularly useful when you are cataloging articles that contain an analysis of other literary works. 8. Data compression on repetitious fields saves disk space and speeds up searches. 9. Powerful search capabilities on any combination of fields using Boolean operators (AND, OR, NOT). Whole field, subfield or beginning of field can be searched for equals, not equals, greater than, greater than or equals, less than, less than or equals, and sounds like. 10. B-tree indexes allow rapid searches and updates. 11. Searches can run concurrently in the background while the user browses through matching records. 12. Flexible report generation allows reports with textual information to be arranged in almost any manner. Bibliographies are automatically formatted according to common manuals of style. New Style Sheets and report formats are easily designed. 13. Reports can automatically include formatting codes used by popular word processors, such as underline, boldface, margins, line spacing, headers, tabs, page numbers, accented characters, etc. 14. Keystroke macros allow automation of frequently repeated tasks. 15. Flexible data import capabilities allow data to be imported from online information services and library catalogs, other databases and text files. The import program can be customized to work with almost any type of file. Planned future enhancements include support for languages using non- Latin alphabets, in particular Greek and Hebrew. LIBRARY MASTER requires an IBM PC compatible with at least 384K of memory. The program may be purchased for $179 ($199, Canadian) and includes a 200 page manual. If you want a more detailed information sheet, let me know and I can BITNET it to you. If you give me your mailing address, I can send you a demonstration version of the program to try out for free. It includes most program features but limits the database size. Harry Hahne Wycliffe College, University of Toronto 5 Hoskin Ave. Toronto, Ont. M5S 1H7