Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, January 28, 1986 1 COMPUTERS '4 Computer Shakespeare adds jazz FAIRFIELD, CONN. (AP)-Exit Henry VI, slain with the light touch of a,"delete"key. The Duke of Clarence, zap. Lord Hastings, Lady Anne-zap, zap. The Rev. Donald Lynch, an associate professor of English at Fairfield University, smiles each time a character from Shakespeare's "Richard III" disappears from his computer screen. THE BARD HAS gone digital in the basement of a building at the univer- sity, where Lynch has devised a color- ful computer program that catalogues, sorts, graphs, maps, and outlines plots and characters in nearly all of Shakespeare's plays. ,,.At the touch of a button, its user can find out how many lines of verse are Romeo and Julet, whether Shakespeare's history plays were longer than his comedies or who said, '"Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows." (It was Siephano in "The Tempist.") Students can even take tests by an- swering questions randomly selected by the computer from a bank of about 200 entered by Lynch. THE PROGRAM IS embellished with elaborate graphics in green, blue, red, gold, and fuchsia. Its title, The Shakespeare Library, appers on the screen inside a golden crown behind which the background dissolves from color to color before I'm a Jesuit priest, unmarried, and celibate. This is my baby.' -Rev. Donald Lynch exploding in red and fading into black. "That's a little jazz," Lynch said. "I do see some kids falling asleep with some programs." Lynch, 57 and a Shakespeare professor for 25 years, is putting his program to use in his classroom and it's usually available in Fairfield's computer lab to students wanting to brush up before an exam, take a missed quiz or do some extra studying. ONE DAYS, AFTER it's completed and copyrighted, he hopes to sell his program to a distributor allowing other college and high-school teachers to use it as a tool. The seeming incongruity of teaching Shakespeare by computer is not lost on Lynch. "I'm an English teacher, my hob- bies are gold and stained glass. What the heck am I doing here?" Lynch said during a recent interview in the lab. BEGINNING SEVERAL years ago, "I told my students, 'If you're going to get anywhere in the world, you've got to know computers.' I decided I'd bet- ter put up or shut up," he said. Lynch took a yearlong sabbatical to take computer courses. His goal was to "see how a humanities professor could use a computer. Teachers in humanities are afraid of high-tech. But if we can use chalkboards and overhead projectors, why not these?" During his sabbatical he discovered a keen interest in computers, and it coincidentally meshed with his love of Shakespeare. The Shakespeare Library was a natural development. "I'M A JESUIT priest, unmarried, and delibate," he said. "This is my baby." While Lynch has created a teaching tool for his students, a group in Chicago is attempting a more am- bitious coupling of the Bard and the microchip. Volunteers are working on the Shakespeare Data Bank, which they hope will eventually commit tens of thousands of pages of scholarly work, as well as the plays and poems themselves, to computerbmemory. Lynch's program is based on his own lectures and notes and in final form will be packaged in four sec- tions. There will be a canon that con- tains information about all the plays-their length, type, percentage of verse and prose, date written-and three sections, Comedies, Histories and Tragedies, that examine the in- dividual works. THE HEART OF THE program is the "Dramatis Personae," which displays the name of every character in each play within boxes color-coded to "prod the imagination" and make the information more memorable. Characters who die a violent death, for example, often appear in red. A comic character might be in laven- der. All are connected with lines to show their relations to others in the plays. "This is stuff I've been putting on the blackboard for 20 years," said Lynch. "To see all these people in 'Richard III' zapped is just great." "It doesn't take the place of creative, imaginative teaching. In fact, it enhances it. I want kids to come away having experienced the plays in their own imaginations." Jackson brings diversity to job ATARI 520 ST Available now at CHELSEA COMPUTER (above Bivouac) 334 S. State St. 663-0090 (Continued from Page 1) similar to his current ones as a building director, he said. NOW THAT he is back at the University, Jackson intends to use his past experiences to improve Couzens. Jackson said he would like to in- crease dormitory activities and in- tegrate faculty and students. "We are looking at particular kinds of faculty involvement. We'd have faculty coming over to have dinner with us, then retiring to the living room. It would be casual and infor- mal - I think a lot of times that is when the best exchange of infor- mation occurs," he said. IMPROVING the residence hall in- cludes considering student suggestions. Basil Danos, the newly- elected president of Couzens said, "he seems very cooperative, very positive on a lot of my suggestions." Although some students who know him think he is cooperative, Jackson came under fire for the stricter alcohol policy he implemented in the residence hall last fall. When he first enacted the keg rule in September, many of the hall's residents objected. Jackson held a forum to respond to their opposition, but held firm and the rules still remain in effect. "I THOUGHT the initial reaction would be somewhat negative. But I didn't think it would be as negative as it was, based upon the fact that this is an institution of higher learning. And every aspect of this institution is an opportunity to learn something,'' Jackson said. Residents' complaints went beyond objections to the rule itself, to why the rule was being enacted and to how it would be enforced. "My expectation was that people would be, at least, reasonable about it," Jackson con- tinued, "and understand that policing them wasn't the intent. But just get- ting them to think about what they engage in was." Having gone through a similar ex- perience at Eastern Michigan University, Jackson understood that he would have to expect a "pocket of people" to oppose the policy. But, he has one word to explain what has hap- pened to calm the opposition: "School." "TO BE realistic," Jackson con- tinued, "I think people make adjust- ments, I think people have become more discreet." One such adjustment is the increase of 'closed-door' par- ties. Jackson said, however, that such parties are a reaction to the policy, and not a result he intended. "The intention was not to have doors closed, but to be honest," he said. "I think in terms of my perspec- tive, my stance, and being real clear about the parameters, what I an- ticipated was opening up the channels of communication. And that's a process, that doesn't happen over- night." Since the forum held in mid- September, Jackson believes he has made progress toward that goal. "I've had a number of people ap- proach me in the cafeteria, in the hallway, at the desk, and in my office. IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS Italy investigates Yugoslavian aid to Rome airport terrorists ROME-Italian authorities are investigating the possibility that Palestinian terrorists who attacked the Rome airport last month obtained aid of some kind while passing throgh Yugoslavia en route to Italy, the chief investigator said yesterday. Prosecutor Domenico Sica, who has been interrogating the long sur- viving suspect in the airport attack, also said the young Arab has not mentioned any Libyan or Iranian connection with the attack. Sica, in an interview with The Associated Press, was asked whether the investigation had otherwise turned up any Libyan link. "It is too dangerous... to answer this kind of question," he replied. The investigator confirmed reports that Italian authorites now consider three other terrorist attacks in Rome in 1985 to have been the work of Abu Nidal's followers. In those assaults-at the Via Veneto cafe, a British Airways office and the Jordanian Embassy-one person was killed and 50 people were injured. The U.S. administration says Khadafy is the main supporter of the Abu Nidal terrorist group believed responsible for the Dec. 27 attacks on the Rome and Vienna airports in which a total of 20 people died. Court stiffens toxic waste laws WASHINGTON-The Supreme Court gave states a better chance yesterday of collecting cleanup money for hazardous waste sites, ruling that trustees of bankrupt dumps cannot abandon them in violation of local health laws. The justices, splittig 5-4 in twin cases from New York and New Jersey, said federal bankruptcy laws allowing the abandonment of worthless property do not preempt state regulations governing hazardous wastes. Justice Lewis Powerll, who wrote the opinion, said, "Neither the court nor Congress has granted a trustee in bankruptcy powers that would lend support to a right to abandon property in contravention of state or local laws designed to protect public health or safety." The ruling showed the court's continued willingness to side with the states in caes that pit bankruptcy law against the environment. A year ago, the high court said businesses cannot avoid legal orders to clean up hazardous sites by filing for bankruptcy. Boulder debris circles Uranus PASADENA, CALIF.-In the latest batch of reports from Voyager'S exploration of Uranus, surprised scientists yesterday reported that the brightest of the planet's debris rings is made up of boulders the size of trashcans or bigger. Other researchers reported puzzling 220 mph jet stream winds blowing in the same direction Uranus rotates, similar atmospheric temperatures at the Equator and south pole, and a dark north pole that is warmer than the sun-lit south pole. Andrew Ingersol of Cal Tech said the Uranian atmosphere is hot, but extremely thin at its uppermost levels. But the middle portion of the at- mosphere is supercold-350 degrees below zero. The "air" warms up with greater depth and the vast ocean of water believed to exist on the surface is believed to be hot. And analysis of a single long-exposure photo revealed many additional "lanes" of fine dust enveloping the planet in addition to the 10 rings of larger particles and fragments of still more rings. Union raises hit historic low WASHINGTON (AP)-Major collective bargaining settlements in 1985 provided first year pay increases averaging only 2.3 percent, the lowest ever recorded, the Labor Department reported yesterday. With December-to-December consumer prices increasing 3.8 percent last year, economists looked upon the figures from the department's Bureau of Labor Statistics as further evidence of waning union power. "There is greater realism at the bargaining table; that has become very obvious in the past three years," said Roger Brinner, chief economist for Data Resources, Inc. The 2.3 percent average first-year wage increase for 487 contracts covering nearly 2.2 million workers compares with first-year jumps averaging 2.4 percent in 1984 contracts and 2.6 percent in 1983 agreemen- ts. But there was some evidence in the figures that the pattern of shrinking wage increases may be coming to an end. For example, over the life of the 1985 contracts-most of them for either two or three years-the average annual wage increase is 2.7 percent. That compares with an average annual pay boost of 2.4 percent in multiyear settlements signed in 1984. Ugandan rebels capture city KAMPALA, UGANDA-The Rebel National Resistance Army, the self- declared government of Uganda, captured the country's second-largest city yesterday and pursued government soldiers fleeing toward safety in Kenya and Sudan. The capture of Jinga, an industrial center with a population of 55,000 followed the rebel seizure of Kampala and its sister city of Entebbe Satuday from government troops loyal to Ugandan leader Gen. Tito Okello. The guerrillas now control about two-thirds of the east African nation. Much of the rest of the country is in chaos, with the military's tribally divided ranks fighting among themselves over whether to lay down their weapons or stage a counteroffensive against the NRA forces, diplomats said. The State Department said it has.been in touch with the new NRA government, and the United States stood ready to recognize the new regime. Vol XCVI - No. 83 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the Fall and Winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April - $18.00 in Ann Arbor; $35.00 outside the city. One term - $10.00 in town; $20.00 out of town. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and Sub- scribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and College Press Service. DFniameinnl I'miaI I -m -.0-0 ra z ; ; Z- -Q- -1 ; = : ru ; = : ; : = 1. 1 .1 Dowerua I 0 IF %FVVWI mi TT!TM- L1 K r - ? - ° 'i ++ sad; , , . 0 1 1 I t i i FEMINIZING JUDAISM THROUGH NEW RITUAL & CEREMONY: THE FEMINIST REVOLUTION IN JUDAISM A Talk by Esther Broner Tuesday, Jan. 28 7:30 p.m. at Esther Broner is a novelist A eave of 14 omen, HILLEL $2.00 Her Mother), playwright, essayist, professor of English Literature, 1 recipient of the National Co-sponsored by. Endowment for the 4 omen Arts Award and J Studies Wonder Women Dept. Award for 1983-84. HILLEL She is a forerunner 1429 HillSt. and visionary t in her new )t 663.3336 rituals for women. Dvaf nEawra == - = -= r- =---__ I U OMEGA PIZZA L___ c: r " ' . _s I A, r r s r VVI 7 %1 1 The Leading Edges Model 'D"TM Personal Computer. Full IBM Compatibility. $1495.00 Complete. Ask about our student and faculty discount price. 0 769-3400 FREE HEATED DELIVERY Full IBM® Compatibility * RGB Color/Graphics Output 256 KB Standard RAM " Battery-Backed Clock/Calendar High Resolution Mono. Monitor or Color RGB opt. Dual Half-Height Disk Drives " 4 Full-Size Expan. Slots Battery-Backed Clock/Calendar Parallel and Serial Ports " Selectric® Style Keyboard Hercules® Monochrome Graphics Emulation Fifteen Month Warranty 9 Toll-Free Technical Support Mon.- Sat. 4:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Sun. till 1 a.m. LIMITED DELIVERY AREA Lunch Carry-Out . PIZZA Mon.-Fri. 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. SALADS SUBS Editor in Chief ................. NEIL CHASE Opinion Page Editors.........JODY BECKER JOSEPH KRAUS Managing Editors ......GEORGEA KOVANIS JACKIE YOUNG News Editor.............THOMAS MILLER Features Editor........... LAURIE DELATER City Editor ............... 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