For information - Roger Needham died last Friday. In the 1960s he published on clustering and classification. Information retrieval was among the areas he contributed to. Among his publications: "Keywords and clumps", J. Documentation, 20, 5-15, 1964. "Applications of the theory of clumps", Mechanical Translation, 8, 113-127, 1965. "Automatic classification in linguistics", The Statistician, 17, 45-54, 1967. "Automatic term classifications and retrieval", Information Storage & Retrieval, 4, 91-100, 1968. The following is from a short editorial I wrote for The Computer Journal. Fionn Murtagh When, last summer, a meeting of editorial board members of The Computer Journal was proposed for January 2003, one of those planning to attend was Roger Needham. His participation was not to be. Following a struggle with cancer, Roger Needham passed away on 28 February 2003. Roger was one of 'les grands' of computer science. His work ranged over an incredibly wide swathe of computer science. His early work at Cambridge in the 1950s included cluster analysis and information retrieval. In the 1960s, he carried out pioneering work on computer architecture and system software. In the 1970s, his work involved distributed computing. In later decades, he devoted considerable attention to security. His many honours included Fellow of the Royal Society, Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, and CBE. In 1997, Roger set up and became first director of Microsoft Research in Cambridge. He was in this position when he died. He is survived by his wife, Karen Sparck Jones. Fionn Murtagh Editor-in-Chief _________________________________________________________________ The new MSN 8: smart spam protection and 2 months FREE* http://join.msn.com/?page=features/junkmail