This is a brief report on CHum, I was not able to receive information from Kluwer in time to include it. I can post it as an addendum to the minutes later. CHum has been appearing on time for the past 2 years. We have 4 issues a year of about 100 pages each. This year we had 2 regular issues and 2 special issues. The articles were as follows: 36/1 Special Issue on Image-Based Humanities Computing (Matt Kirschenbaum) pp. 1-2 The Job Market for Humanities Computing (ACH page) pp. 3-6 Editor's Introduction: Image-Based Humanities Computing Matthew G. Kirschenbaum pp. 7-26 The Reappearances of St. Basil the Great in British Library MS Cotton Otho B. x Kevin Kiernan, Brent Seales, James Griffioen pp. 27-48 Digital Facsimiles: Reading the William Blake Archive Joseph Viscomi pp. 49-73 Text-image Coupling for Editing Literary Sources Eric Lecolinet, Laurent Robert, Francois Role pp. 75-93 The Place of Images in a World of Text Mary Keeler pp. 95-107 Dialogue and Interpretation at the Interface of Man and Machine. Reflections on Textuality and a Proposal for an Experiment in Machine Reading Jerome McGann pp. 109-131 Select Resources for Image-based Humanities Computing Bethany Nowviskie pp. 133-140 Instructions for Authors 36/2 pp. 141-142 HUMANIST, or the Glory of Motion Wendell Piez pp. 143-169 Profil: An Iconographic Database for Modern Watermarked Papers Brigitte de La Passardière, Claire Bustarret pp. 171-190 On the Corpus Size Needed for Compiling a Comprehensive Computational Lexicon by Automatic Lexical Acquisition Dan-Hee Yang, Ik-Hwan Lee, Pascual Cantos pp. 191-221 Extracting an Arabic Lexicon from Arabic Newspaper Text Saleem Abuleil, Martha Evens pp. 223-254 GATE, a General Architecture for Text Engineering Hamish Cunningham 36/3 Special issue on Computer Assisted Literary Criticism (Ray Siemens) pp. 255-256 The Challenge for ACH Julia Flanders, John Unsworth pp. 257-257 The Roberto Busa Award pp. 259-267 A New Computer-assisted Literary Criticism? Raymond G. Siemens pp. 269-282 The Text of Performance and the Performance of Text in the Electronic Edition Michael Best pp. 283-293 Computer-mediated Texts and Textuality: Theory and Practice Susan Schreibman pp. 295-306 Industrial Text and French Neo-structuralism William Winder pp. 307-318 The Question Concerning Theory: Humanism, Subjectivity, and Computing Tamise van Pelt pp. 319-344 Animating the Language Machine: Computers and Performance Marshall Soules pp. 345-358 Gore Galore: Literary Theory and Computer Games Geoffrey Rockwell pp. 359-378 Mutability, Medium, and Character Dene Grigar 36/4 regular issue --CHum page --Statistical Morphological Disambiquation for Agglutinative Languages by Hakkani-Tur et al. 30pp --Stylistic Constancy and Change Across Literary Corpora: Using Measures of Lexical Richness to Date Works by Smith & Kelly 20pp --Korean Combinatory Categrial Grammar and Statistical Parsing by Cha, Lee & Lee 24pp --Elliot and Valenza 6pp (left over from before my time) --Annual table of contents and keyword index 2003: 37/1 ACH special issue 37/3 or 4 Special issue on Dialectology (Bill Kretzschmar and John Nerbonne) Other two issues consist of submitted articles. We have another issue's worth of articles already accepted. The vast majority CHum's subscribers are ACH members. The rest are institutional subscriptions. Only a few are individuals who are not ACH members. We are receiving a lot of submissions, mainly in computational linguistics, especially from Asia, Greece and Turkey. Most submissions from ACH members take the form of special issues, which are very successful and of high quality. Kluwer would be willing to try and print more copies of particular issues, if they have numbers ahead of time, and if someone else takes care of the ordering. They are also always interested in ideas for printing up books from journal issues. We have discussed price on this several times. The right price point for collections of articles like that seems to be around $30. Kluwer may be able to do that for a paperback. We would have to discuss marketing. In March, we were told that Wolters Publishing, Kluwer's parent company was putting Kluwer on the market. This does not seem to have affected CHum very much. We are working with the same people, and they don't want to make any changes to CHum. --Elli Mylonas for herself and Nancy Ide (CHum co-editors)