Abstract
William C. Mann passed away on August 13, 2004, after a long struggle with leukemia. He is known to readers of Computational Linguistics as a keen supporter and past president (1987) of ACL, a pioneer in the development of text generation as a field of research in computational linguistics, the originator of rhetorical structure theory (RST) and dialogue game theory (DGT), and the developer (together with David Weber) of dialect adaptation as a technique within machine translation. And he’ll be remembered for these and many other contributions, but above all, in this context, he’ll be remembered as a unique visionary in computational linguistics (CL) and as a truly wonderful and extraordinarily generous colleague. Bill Mann made huge contributions to many people’s intellectual development, to their careers, and to their lives in general. What follows are my own recollections of him, selected from a crowded jungle of memories. I will leave it to others to fill out the picture, but I shall attempt to give an indication of the intellectual and historical context in which Bill was working and also of the network of researchers that he created; his ideas have radiated throughout this network of scholars around the world. I met Bill in April 1980 and worked as a research linguist on a succession of projects he directed, or codirected, at the Information Sciences Institute (ISI) at the University of Southern California (USC), until I left the institute to take up a position at the University of Sydney in August 1988. Through that period (which happened to coincide, more or less, with the Reagan years), not only was Bill a very wise and wonderful project leader, but he also became a mentor and guide and a true friend. I followed from afar the further developments in his life: his departure from ISI and move to Kenya with his family to take up a position with the Summer Institute of Linguistics (SIL) as a consultant responsible for work on discourse and computational matters, their return to the United States, and his new phase of research with initiatives in RST and DGT.
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