<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0">
 
   <teiHeader>
      <fileDesc>
   
         <titleStmt>
    
            <title>TEI Members Meeting 2002: Elections</title>
   
         </titleStmt>
   
         <publicationStmt>
            <availability>
               <p>Licensed under <ptr target="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/uk/"/>
               </p>
            </availability>
         </publicationStmt>
   
         <sourceDesc>

            <p>Original</p>
   
         </sourceDesc>
  
      </fileDesc>
      <revisionDesc>
         <change when="2007-09-12"><date>12 September 2007</date>
            <p><name>Chris Ruotolo</name> Converted to P5</p>
         </change>
         <change when="2002-08-20"><date>20 August 2002</date>
            <p>
               <name>Lou Burnard</name> First draft</p>
         </change>
      </revisionDesc>
   </teiHeader>
 
   <text>
  
      <body>

         <p>The following persons, having been nominated by the TEI Nominating
committee, have agreed to stand for election to the TEI Council and
Board. </p>

         <p>The election will take place during the TEI Members Meeting, to be
held in October 2002,
according to the procedures defined in the TEI Charter and
Byelaws. Votes may be cast in person, by post, or electronically (see
    further <ref target="/Consortium/TEIby-A2.html">Article 2 of the
     TEI bylaws</ref>). </p>

         <p>Ballot papers for the election, including the form to be used by
    members wishing to cast proxy votes, may be <ref target="Ballot_papers.pdf">downloaded from here</ref>.</p>


         <p>Candidates have been asked to provide a brief statement of their
career and their views on the TEI. Click on the name of each candidate
to see their brief statement. Additional information is also available
from each candidate's home page, listed below. </p>


         <div>
            <head>TEI Council</head>

            <p>Each voting member of the Consortium is requested to select a
maximum of FOUR names from the following list of candidates:
<list type="electoral">

                  <item>

                     <name>
                        <ref target="#AB">Bia, Alejandro</ref>
                     </name>

                  </item>

                  <item>

                     <name>
                        <ref target="#DB">Birnbaum, David</ref>
                     </name>

                     <ref target="http://clover.slavic.pitt.edu/~djb/">Home page</ref>

                  </item>

                  <item>

                     <name>
                        <ref target="#DD">Durand, David</ref>
                     </name>

                  </item>

                  <item>

                     <name>
                        <ref target="#KH">Hastings, Kirk</ref>
                     </name>

                     <ref target="http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/autobiography/khasting/">Home page</ref>

                  </item>

                  <item>

                     <name>
                        <ref target="#FJ">Jannidis, Fotis</ref>
                     </name>

                     <ref target="http://www.jannidis.de/">Home page</ref>

                  </item>

                  <item>

                     <name>
                        <ref target="#MM">Mueller, Martin</ref>
                     </name>

                     <ref target="http://www.classics.northwestern.edu/faculty/mueller.htm">Home page</ref>

                  </item>

                  <item>

                     <name>
                        <ref target="#MP">Popham, Michael</ref>
                     </name>

                  </item>

                  <item>

                     <name>
                        <ref target="#CR">Ruotolo, Chris</ref>
                     </name>

                  </item>

                  <item>

                     <name>
                        <ref target="#SS">Schreibman, Susan</ref>
                     </name>

                     <ref target="http://eies.njit.edu/~schreib/">Home page</ref>

                  </item>

                  <item>

                     <name>
                        <ref target="#JW">Walsh, John</ref>
                     </name>

                     <ref target="http://www.letrs.indiana.edu/jawalsh/">Home page</ref>

                  </item>

               </list>

            </p>
         </div>


         <div>
            <head>TEI Board</head>

            <p>Each voting member of the Consortium is requested to select a
maximum of THREE names from the following list of candidates:

<list type="electoral">

                  <item>

                     <name>
                        <ref target="#GC">Crane, Gregory</ref>
                     </name>

                     <ref target="http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/About/grc.html">Home page</ref>

                  </item>

                  <item>

                     <name>
                        <ref target="#WK">Kretzschmar, William</ref>
                     </name>

                  </item>

                  <item>

                     <name>
                        <ref target="#GR">Rockwell, Geoffrey</ref>
                     </name>

                     <ref target="http://www.humanities.mcmaster.ca/~hccrs/grockwell.htm">Home page</ref>

                  </item>

                  <item>

                     <name>
                        <ref target="#GS">Simons, Gary</ref>
                     </name>

                     <ref target="http://www.sil.org/sil/roster/simons.htm">Home page</ref>

                  </item>

                  <item>

                     <name>
                        <ref target="#MS">Smith, MacKenzie</ref>
                     </name>

                  </item>

               </list>

            </p>
         </div>

         <div>
            <head>Candidates' Statements</head>


            <p xml:id="AB">
               <name>Alejandro G. Bia</name> has a BS and a MS degree in Computer Sciences from ORT
University, a Diploma in Computing and Information Systems from Oxford
University and is finishing his PhD thesis on Computing Methods to Automate
the Production of Digital Resources in Digital Libraries at the University
of Alicante. Currently he is working as Subdirector of Research and
Development at the Miguel de Cervantes Digital Library of the University of
Alicante, where the results of his ongoing research are being put to
practice. He also works as a lecturer at the department of Fundamentals of
Economic Analysis of the School of Entrepreneurial Sciences of the
University of Alicante.
    </p>
            <p>
In the past he has worked as Special-Projects Manager at NetGate (1996),
Documentation Editor of the GeneXus project at Advanced Research and
Technology (ARTech) (1991-1994), and worked at the Telephone Traffic
Processing Unit of ANTEL (1994-1989). He has been a lecturer on Operating
Systems, Computer Organization, Computer Networks and English for Computer
Sciences at ORT University (1990-1996). His current fields of interest are:
digitisation automation by computer methods, digital preservation,
digitisation metrics and cost estimates, texts structuring and markup 
languages.
    </p>
            <p>He writes:
I am very pleased to be a candidate for the TEI Council. I can contribute in
several ways towards the spread of the TEI markup scheme, specially in
Spanish speaking countries. In this sense, we have already translated to
Spanish some technical reference documents like the <title>TEI Lite: An
Introduction to Text Encoding for Interchange</title> (Document No.: TEI U5) and of
the <title>Bare Bones TEI</title> (Document No. TEI U6). At the MCDL we also work as a
reference institution for those digitization projects in the Hispanic world
which are interested in using the TEI. This includes efforts of mutual
cooperation with scholarly groups, the organization of courses, seminars,
and other training and support activities.
    </p>
            <p>
I consider a very important goal for the TEI community to solve the
migration from TEI-SGML to TEI-XML. I believe  that software tools can be
built to partially automate this task. Another important goal is the
development of training materials, courses, guides-of-good-practice,
examples and software tools to ease the learning process in order to expand
the community of users. If elected I will try to play an active role in
reaching these objectives.
    </p>


            <lb/> 
            <p xml:id="DB">
               <name>David J. Birnbaum</name> is Associate Professor
and Chair of the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at the
University of Pittsburgh (USA). His research interests are derived from his extensive 
experience in applying computer technology to the study of medieval 
Slavic manuscripts, and his publications and conference presentations 
have addressed both specific and general issues pertaining to 
character set standardization and structured text technology. In the 
world of TEI administration he has served on the TEI Council and has 
been a very active member of the TEI Character Set working group.

    </p>

            <lb/>
            <p xml:id="GC">
               <name>Gregory Crane</name> writes:
I learned about SGML initially from Elli Mylonas and her colleagues 
at Brown (Allen Renear and Steve DeRose) in 1984. Their analysis of 
SGML and its potential substantively shaped the way in which we 
planned the development of the Perseus Digital Library in the middle 
eighties. We invested heavily in SGML encoding before the TEI existed 
and Elli, then one of the leaders of the Perseus Project, helped 
contribute to the TEI guidelines. We at Perseus have been avid 
supporters of the TEI and have urged our collaborators (not always 
successfully) to follow the TEI rather than create yet more DTDs for 
particular projects.
    </p>
            <p>
My current research centers on the interactions between back-end 
datastructures and front-end user interaction. On top of our initial 
classical collections, we at Perseus have created substantive 
collections on the History of Science, the history and topography of 
London and its environs, Shakespeare and Early Modern English, the US 
Civil War and other topics. My personal goal has been to study the 
needs of different fields and the problems of different document 
sets. The TEI has proven a very powerful instrument by which we can 
capture many of the differences and commonalities of these 
collections. While Perseus covers a variety of media, my personal 
interests remain centered on language. I am particularly interested 
in applying the TEI for automated and semi-automated tagging 
(syntactic and/or morphological analysis; automatic content 
extraction and other language technologies).
    </p>


            <lb/>

            <p xml:id="DD">
               <name>David Durand</name> writes: As a candidate for the
TEI council I reflect a more technical side of the TEI. I am a
computer scientist, who's worked on hypertext, collaborative editing
of documents (my dissertation research) and markup theory. I worked
for the TEI on TEI P1-P3, as a member of the committees on
Metalanguage and Syntax and Hypertext. Steve DeRose and I wrote
<title>Making Hypermedia Work: A User's Guide to HyTime.</title> I
would like to see the issue of customization (re-)addressed, as part
of moving TEI to XML. The pizza chef represents one approach,
automating the control of customization features that proved hard for
users to manage themselves. I would like to see if the use of
architectural form ideas or one of the new schema languages for XML
can simplify this process so that a specialized tool will not be
necessary.
    </p>


            <lb/>
            <p xml:id="KH">
               <name>Kirk V. Hastings</name> writes:
I am a development programmer at the California Digital Library, 
which is charged with the selection, building, management, and 
preservation of the University's shared collections of digital 
resources. I have also worked at the Institute of Advanced 
Technologies in the Humanities and UC Berkeley Library. My particular 
area of expertise is the application of XML and its related standards 
to academic publishing and the distribution of digitized primary 
resources within the library context. I have used TEI extensively for 
the encoding of academic monographs, as well as a whole range of 
primary resource formats. I am very familiar with the TEI DTD, 
guidelines, extension mechanisms, and limitations. I am most 
interested in how TEI could be more extensively used in the 
publishing and library worlds.

    </p>

            <lb/>

            <p xml:id="FJ">
               <name>Fotis Jannidis</name> writes:
I have studied German and English literature and worked in the 
computer department of our faculty. At the moment I
am teaching German literature at the university of Munich.
</p>


            <p>My main interests are literary theory, narratology and humanities
computing, especially the creation and the use of electronic editions.
I am co-editor of the <title>
                  <ref target="http://computerphilologie.uni-muenchen.de/ejournal.html">Jahrbuch
fuer Computerphilologie</ref>
               </title>, a German website and yearbook
on humanities computing. I am also co-editor of the electronic edition
<title>The young Goethe</title>, which is encoded in TEI. At the
moment we are working on a framework to put TEIlite encoded texts on
the net. Another line of interest is the encoding of manuscripts for
diplomatic transcriptions (I am working on a proposal for a grant for
a working group). As head of the commission for editorial applications
in the working group for German editions (this name was not my idea) I
am working on promoting TEI as a standard format for literary editions
in Germany by giving lectures and providing training seminars.
</p>


            <lb/>

            <p xml:id="WK">
               <name>William A. Kretzschmar, Jr.</name> (PhD, English,
University of Chicago, 1980) is Professor of English and Linguistics
at the University of Georgia. His major publications include
<title>Oxford Dictionary of 
Pronunciation for Current English</title> (with Clive
Upton and Rafal Konopka, Oxford U Press, 2001); <title>Introduction to
Quantitative Analysis of Linguistic Survey Data</title> (with Edgar
Schneider, Sage Publications, 1996); <title>Handbook of the Linguistic
Atlas of the Middle and South Atlantic States</title> (with Virginia
McDavid, Theodore Lerud, and Ellen Johnson; U Chicago Press,
1993). The primary outlet for his Linguistic Atlas research is the
<ref target="http://us.english.uga.edu">Linguistic Atlas web
site</ref>. Current work on the Atlas pursues three 
primary targets: 1) creation of text-encoding and presentation format 
for Atlas interviews which will allow for linked text, sound, maps, 
and analytical information for a wide range of users; 2) advanced 
methods of quantitative analysis, including technical geography; and 
3) creation of new field work methods which will support research in 
speech sciences and NLP as well as linguistic geography and 
sociolinguistics.  He is interested in literature as well as 
linguistics and lexicography, as shown by his special issue of 
Language and Literature (vol. 10.2, 2001) on literary dialect 
analysis with computer assistance.  He served as editor of Journal of 
English Linguistics for 15 years.  He now serves as editor-in-chief
for three Linguistic Atlas projects (LAMSAS, LANCS, LAWS) and a board member
for several others; as an executive board member for the American
Dialect Society and the Association for Computers and the Humanities;
and as an advisory board member or consultant for various professional
journals and dictionaries, including  preparation of 
American pronunciations for the new online  <title>Oxford English
Dictionary.</title>.
</p>

            <lb/>


            <p xml:id="MM">
               <name>Martin Mueller</name> writes: I am a Professor of
English and Classics at Northwestern University.  My primary research
field has been the uses of ancient epic and tragedy by European
writers since the Renaissance. I have also written on Homer and
Shakespeare. More recently I have become interested in the uses of
information technology for traditional philological
inquiries. Together with Ahuvia Kahane, Craig Berry, and Bill Parod I
am the editor of The Chicago Homer, a bilingual Web-accessible
database of early Greek epic, published by the University of Chicago
Press klast fall.</p> 
            <p>As for the TEI, I have been a great admirer of
the subtle and complex thinking that has gone into its design. At the
same time, I doubt whether it can get a foothold beyond a small circle
of editors and hackers unless it can become an authoring tool that
graduate students or faculty with low technology pain thresholds may
find advantageous to use for various projects.  My hope is that an
appropriately modified version of the TEI-Lite could serve that
function and would provide a way of <soCalled>ramping up</soCalled> to
more complex uses. I see the construction of such a
<soCalled>ramp</soCalled> as the most promising way of anchoring
familiarity with the TEI in the broader community of humanities
scholars on whose interest and support the success of the TEI will
depend in the long run.</p>

            <lb/>


            <p xml:id="MP">
               <name>Michael Popham</name> writes: I have a long-standing
interest in SGML/XML, and have been following the work of the TEI
since its inception. As Head of the <ref target="http://ota.ahds.ac.uk">Oxford Text Archive</ref>, the centre for
literature, languages, and linguistics within the UK's national <ref target="www.ahds.ac.uk">Arts and Humanities Data Service</ref>, I am
responsible for the management and distribution of an extensive
collection of TEI-encoded scholarly materials.  The OTA has been an
advocate of the TEI's work for many years, and is keen to see the TEI
Consortium develop in ways appropriate to the needs of researchers,
teachers, and students within the UK's Higher and Further Education
communities. In addition to supporting the TEI, I am a Committee
Member of XML-UK (the UK Chapter of the International SGML/XML Users'
Group), and also a Member of the Committee of the British Computer
Society's Electronic Publishing Specialist Group (serving as Chair
from 1996 to 2000).
</p>




            <lb/>




            <p xml:id="GR">Dr. <name>Geoffrey Martin Rockwell</name> is an Associate Professor of Humanities 
Computing and Multimedia in the School of the Arts at McMaster University. He received a 
B.A. in philosophy from Haverford College, an M.A. and Ph.D. in 
Philosophy from the University of Toronto and worked at the 
University of Toronto as a Senior Instructional Technology 
Specialist. He has published and presented papers in the area of 
textual visualization and analysis, humanities computing, 
instructional technology, computer games and multimedia.He is 
currently a co-investigator on three SSHRC (Social Science and 
Humanities Research Council of Canada) funded projects that make 
extensive use of the TEI. He was elected for one year to the TEI 
Council where he contributed by chairing the subcommittee on training 
which developed a training strategy and requests for proposals for 
training initiatives. He is currently the project leader for the CFI 
(Canada Foundation for Innovation)  funded project TAPoR, a Text 
Analysis Portal for Reasearch, which is developing a text tool portal 
for researchers who work with electronic texts.
    </p>


            <lb/>


            <p xml:id="CR">
               <name>Chris Ruotolo</name> writes: I've worked with TEI for
about five years, as Assistant Director and then Associate Director of
the Electronic Text Center at the University of Virginia Library.  In
my new position in Digital Services Integration, one of my goals will
be to integrate TEI-encoded SGML texts with other kinds of digital
objects, by migrating them to XML and developing crosswalks from the
TEI header to more universal metadata schemes.  I'm also interested in
non-web renderings of TEI-encoded texts (such as ebooks and
print-on-demand) and in encodings for non-western character sets. I am
currently the chair of the TEI workgroup on SGML-to-XML migration.
    </p>


            <lb/>
            <p xml:id="SS">
               <name>Susan Schreibman</name> is Assistant Director
Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities (MITH) and
Affiliate Assistant Professor of English. She is the General Editor of
The <ref target="http://jefferson.village.virginia.edu/macgreevy">Thomas
MacGreevy Archive</ref>, an SGML/TEI digital archive published at
IATH, and developed and maintains <ref target="http://irith.org">Irish
Resources in the Humanities</ref>, an XML database being delivered
through Tamino. She has given many TEI workshops, including those at
University Of Maryland, University College Dublin (Ireland) and
Malaspina University-College (British Columbia). She has been
instrumental in developing <ref target="http://www.mith2.umd.edu/products/ver-mach/">The Versioning
Machine</ref>, which will be launched in October under general public
license. The VM is a software tool which allows editors to display
multiple witnesses of deeply-encoded text using TEI's
parallel-segmentation encoding. She holds a Ph.D. from University
College Dublin in Anglo-Irish Literature and Drama (1997). Her book
publications include <title>Collected Poems of Thomas MacGreevy: An
Annotated Edition</title> (CUA, 1991). She is currently co-editing the
Blackwell <title>Companion to Digital Humanities</title> with Ray
Siemens and John Unsworth.
    </p>


            <lb/>
            <p xml:id="GS">
               <name>Gary Simons</name> Gary Simons is Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs of SIL
International (Dallas, Texas).  He was active in the committee that
developed the TEI's guidelines for text analysis and interpretation
(1989-1994) and drafted chapter 26, <title>Feature System Declaration</title>, of the
TEI Guidelines. He also served as a member of the TEI's Technical Review
Committee (1996-1998).  He is currently active in two projects that are
seeking to promote text markup as best practice within the language
documentation and description community: the <ref target="http://www.language-archives.org">Open Language Archives
Community</ref> and <ref target="http://www.linguistlist.org/emeld">Electronic Metastructure for
Endangered Language Data</ref>.  Prior to taking up
his current position, he was Director of SIL's Academic Computing
Department (1984-1999) and did field work with SIL in Papua New Guinea
(1976) and the Solomon Islands (1977-1983).  He received a Ph.D. in general
linguistics (with minor emphases in computer science and classics) from
Cornell University in 1979.
    </p>

            <lb/>

            <p xml:id="MS">
               <name>MacKenzie Smith</name> is the Associate Director for Technology at the MIT 
Libraries where she works on a variety of library and digital library 
applications, and directs the <ref target="http://www.dspace.org">DSpace project</ref> to build a digital 
repository system for faculty research material. She writes: 
    </p>
            <p>
As a digital library technology expect I have always been a strong 
proponent of standards for digital production in research and 
publishing. Without good standards, such as the TEI, the work of 
digital libraries becomes much more difficult and we risk the future 
of academic and scholarly research. Over the years I have worked with 
a variety of standards groups, including METS, EAD, OAI, to name just 
a few, and have learned much about their development and maintenance. 
The digital library, and indeed the digital media market, have 
reached a point of maturity and complexity where traditional 
solutions such as individual consortia supporting a single standard 
are perhaps no longer sustainable -- we need alternative models to 
ensure the future of these important standards. In joining the TEI 
board I would be interested in learning how the needs of the TEI, 
both technical and financial, differ from other encoding standards, 
and to help develop models for its sustainable support in the future.

    </p>


            <lb/>
            <p xml:id="JW">
               <name>John Walsh</name> writes: I am currently Manager
of Electronic Text Technologies with Indiana University's e-text
center (LETRS) and Digital Library Program.  As such, I am involved in
a wide range of e-text and digital library projects.  I have eight
years experience working with SGML, XML, and the TEI in a library
setting.  I also hold a Ph.D. in English literature and have a strong
interest in the use of markup languages and the TEI as scholarly
editorial and critical tools.  I am the editor of the <ref target="http://www.letrs.indiana.edu/swinburne/">Swinburne
Project</ref>, an on-line, TEI-encoded collection of the works of
Victorian poet and critic Algernon Charles Swinburne.  From a
technical standpoint, I am an enthusiastic supporter of the now
successful effort to bring the TEI into the XML world, and I am
interested in using the full range of XML technologies to exploit the
possibilities of TEI-encoded texts.  I am currently a member of the
TEI Workgroup on SGML/XML Conversion.  Given the opportunity to serve
on the council, I am committed to working hard to keep momentum going
on DTD development, education and training development, working group
activities, and other efforts of the TEI consortium.  </p>

         </div>

      </body>
   </text>
</TEI>