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NL-KR Digest Volume 13 No. 20

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NL KR Digest
 · 10 months ago

NL-KR Digest      Sat May 14 23:03:50 PDT 1994      Volume 13 No. 20 

Today's Topics:

CFP: JELIA94 - 4th European Workshop on Logics in AI
Announcement: OOPSLA94 Workshop on AI for OO SE, Oct 94, Portland
CFP: Post-COLING 94 Lexical Workshop, Aug 94, Beijing

Subcriptions, requests, policy: nl-kr-request@cs.rpi.edu
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cs.rpi.edu, Port 70, choose RPI CSLab Anonymous FTP Server. Mail requests
will not be promptly satisfied. Starting with V9, there is a subject index
in the file INDEX. Back issues and automated index are also available from
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and Al Whaley (al@sunnyside.com).

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: craig@minster.york.ac.uk
Date: Tue, 3 May 94 12:25:44
To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu
Subject: CFP: JELIA94 - 4th European Workshop on Logics in AI



J E L I A '9 4

4th European Workshop on Logics in AI

York, September 5-8, 1994


Call for Participation
----------------------

The European Workshop on Logics in AI provides a major biennial forum
for the discussion of logic-oriented approaches to artificial
intelligence. Following previous meetings in France (1988), The
Netherlands (1990) and Germany (1992), the fourth workshop will be
held in York, England, from 5-8 September 1994. The workshop will be
hosted by the Intelligent Systems Group at the University of York.

The 1994 workshop is sponsored by the ESPRIT NOE COMPULOG-NET, ACM
SIGART, the Association for Logic Programming - UK Branch (ALP-UK) and
the German Informatics Society (GI).

As in previous workshops, the aim is to bring together researchers
involved in all aspects of logic in artificial intelligence.

Topics include:

o foundations of logic programming and
knowledge-based systems
o automated theorem proving
o knowledge representation
o modal and epistemic logics
o nonmonotonic reasoning and belief revision
o logics of action and time
o abductive reasoning
o hybrid reasoning systems

The programme consists of submitted contributions and invited papers,
all of which will be presented in plenary sessions of at least 40
minutes, allowing time for discussion of the ideas presented. A full
list of accepted papers is attached below.


Invited Speakers

Georg Gottlob, Technical University, Vienna, Austria
Ewa Orlowska, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Teodor Przymusinski, University of California at Riverside, USA



Programme Committee

Carlo Cellucci, University of Rome, Rome, Italy
Luis Farinas del Cerro, IRIT, Toulouse, France
Phan Minh Dung, AIT, Bangkok, Thailand
Jan van Eijck, CWI, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Patrice Enjalbert, Universite de Caen, France
Ulrich Furbach, Universitaet Koblenz-Landau, Koblenz, Germany
Dov Gabbay, Imperial College, London, UK
Antony Galton, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK
Michael Gelfond, University of Texas at El Paso, USA
Vladimir Lifschitz, University of Texas at Austin, USA
Craig MacNish, University of York, York, UK (Workshop Chair)
Victor Marek, University of Kentucky, Lexington, USA
Bernhard Nebel, University of Ulm, Ulm, Germany
Wolfgang Nejdl, University of Aachen, Aachen, Germany
David Pearce, Freie Universitaet, Berlin, Germany (Programme Co-chair)
Luis Moniz Pereira, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal
(Programme Co-chair)
Hans Rott, Universitaet Konstanz, Konstanz, Germany


About the Venue...

York is one of the United Kingdom's most historic cities. Originally
known as Eboracum, it began life as a fortress built by the Romans in
AD71, and was home to the accession of Constantine the Great to Roman
Emperor in AD306. The city is best known for its Viking links, forming
the centre of the Viking Kingdom of Jorvik, from which it derives its
present name. The Normans had a more lasting influence, however, and
helped York become a major centre of government and religion in the
North.

The evidence of York's past is retained in its historic buildings and
museums, making it one of England's most popular tourist destinations.
Attractions include the York Minster - the largest medieval cathedral
in Northern Europe, built between 1220 and 1472; the City Walls, first
built by the Romans and later strengthened by the Normans; and
Clifford's Tower - a castle keep built by Henry III.

A short drive from York are two striking areas of natural beauty: the
Yorkshire Dales National Park (home of the writer James Herriot) and
the North York Moors National Park (including the coastal town of
Whitby which inspired Bram Stoker's "Dracula").



Registration Information
------------------------

GRANTS

A number of grants are available (aided by sponsorship from ACM SIGART)
to assist those who would not otherwise be able to attend the
Workshop, particularly those from countries with soft currencies. If
you wish to apply for assistance please send details to the Workshop
Chair at the address below.


REGISTRATION

Registration fees include participation in the technical programme,
proceedings (published by Springer-Verlag), all lunches and
refreshments during the Workshop, and the welcome reception on Sunday
evening.

Before 20th June After 20th June

Non-student 168.00 GBP 188.00 GBP

Student 108.00 GBP 128.00 GBP

Participants affiliated with the sponsoring organisations
(COMPULOG-NET, ALP-UK, GI, ACM SIGART) may deduct 10.00 GBP from the
non-student rates. Please state affiliation on the registration form.

Students should attach a letter of support from their supervisor or
institution confirming student status.


ACCOMMODATION

Campus Accommodation

Accommodation is available at the University for the nights of the
4th, 5th, 6th and 7th of September (it may be possible to arrange
additional nights if required). The price for single rooms (mostly
with shared facilities) is 24.00 GBP per night. The price covers bed
and breakfast, as well as use of College facilities including a lounge
area and evening bar.

Some twin accommodation is also available at the same price per
person.

As the number of rooms is limited it is advisable to book early in
order to guarantee accommodation.


Hotel Accommodation

Stakis York Hotel (4 Star) has a privilege rate with the University.
Prices for bed and breakfast are:

61.00 GBP per night single
45.00 GBP per person per night sharing

Bookings should be made directly with the hotel on +44 904 648 111
mentioning participation in the Workshop at the University of
York. The hotel is located in the city centre at 1 Tower Street, York,
and is a short bus ride from the campus.

Names and telephone numbers of alternative hotels and guest houses can
be supplied on request.


EVENING MEALS

The Workshop Dinner, "A Taste of Yorkshire", will be held on Monday
evening in the centre of York. This will be a five course set-menu
dinner, including wine, and will cost 20.00 GBP per person. A
vegetarian option is also available.

On Sunday, Tuesday and Wednesday evenings dinner will be served at the
University for a cost of 10.00 GBP per person. (As catering is
provided specifically for the Workshop this must be booked in
advance.) Bar facilities will also be available.

Please state any special dietary requirements (eg vegetarian) on the
registration form.


TOURS

A coach trip to the scenic Yorkshire Dales National Park will be
arranged for Tuesday afternoon (providing there is sufficient
interest). The cost of the tour is 9.00 GBP.


TRAVEL INFORMATION

The best way to reach York is by the direct train link from Manchester
International Airport. The airport serves most major European cities.
York is also situated on the high speed rail link between London and
Edinburgh providing access from London Heathrow, Gatwick and Stanstead
airports. For those wishing to hire a car during their stay,
Leeds/Bradford Airport is less than half an hour's journey, and
provides a limited European service.

The University itself is built around an artificial lake on the
grounds of an old manor house, about two miles from the centre of
York, and can be reached by bus, taxi, or by foot.


PAYMENT

All payments should be made payable to the "UNIVERSITY OF YORK" and
should be made by cheque drawn on a UK Bank or by Eurocheque. A
Eurocheque must not exceed 700.00 GBP. If payment is made by BACS
please send separate advice of payment to the address below.

For further information please contact:

Dr Craig MacNish
Jelia'94
Department of Computer Science
University of York
York YO1 5DD
England
email: jelia@minster.york.ac.uk
fax: +44 904 43 2767
phone: +44 904 43 2746

==========================================================================


Jelia'94 Registration Form
---------------------------

(Please type or print clearly)

Name and Title:

Affiliation:

Address:



Email:

Phone: Fax:


REGISTRATION
Before 20th June After 20th June

Non-student 168.00 188.00 _______

Student 108.00 128.00 _______

Affiliation with sponsors ________________________ -10.00 _______


CAMPUS ACCOMMODATION

Nights (please circle) Single ___ nights @ 24.00 _______

Sun 4th Mon 5th Tues 6th Wed 7th Double ___ nights @ 48.00 _______


MEALS

Sunday Tuesday Wednesday ___ nights @ 10.00 _______

Workshop Dinner (Monday) 20.00 _______

Dietary Requirements ________________________________

TOURS

Yorkshire Dales Tour 9.00 _______


TOTAL GBP
=======
Please return with payment (see above) to:

Dr Craig MacNish
Jelia'94 Registration
Department of Computer Science
University of York
York YO1 5DD
England

========================================================================



JELIA'94 LIST OF PAPERS ACCEPTED FOR PRESENTATION


"Viewing hypothesis theories as constrained graded theories"
P. Chatalic

"Adding Priorities and Specificity to Default Logic"
G. Brewka

"Efficient Stratagies for Automated Reasoning in Modal Logics"
S. Demri

"The Computational value of Joint Consistency"
Y. Dimopoulos

"On the Concept of Generic Object: A Nonmonotonic Reasoning Approach"
L. E. Bertossi and R. Reiter

"Prioritized Autoepistemic Logic"
J. Rintanenen

"Belief, Provability and Logic Programs"
J.J. Alferes and L. M. Pereira

"TAS-D++: syntactic trees transformations for automated theorem proving"
G.Aguilera, I.Guzman, and M. Ojeda

"Revision specification by means of programs"
V. Marek and M. Truszczynski

"How to Use Modalities and Sorts in Prolog"
A. Nonnengart

"Propositional State Event Logic"
G. Grosse

"Compactness Properties of Nonmonotonic Inference Operations"
H. Herre

"A Complete Connection Calculus with Rigid E-Unification"
U. Petermann

"Description logics with inverse roles, functional restrictions, and
n-ary relations"
G. De Giacomo and M. Lenzerini

"Around a powerful property of circumscription"
Y. Moinard and R. Rolland

"Revision of Non-Monotonic Theories"
C. Witteveen, W. van der Hoek, and H de Nivelle

"A unification of ordering refinements of resolution in classical logic"
H de Nivelle

"Temporal Theories of Reasoning"
J. Engelfriet and J. Treur

"Towards Resource Handling in Logic Programming the PPL Framework and
its Semantics"
J. Jacquet and L. Monteiro

"Extending Horn Clause Theories by Reflection Principles"
S. Constantini, P Dell Acqua, and G. Lanzarone

"Reasoning about Knowledge on Computation Trees"
K Georgatos

"Belief dynamics, abduction, and databases"
C Aravindan and P.M. Dung

"Adding Equality to the Substitutional Framework"
R. Scherl

"On the Logic of Theory Base Change"
Mary-Anne Williams



-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Thu, 5 May 94 21:30:01 +0200
From: kaih@oop.geu.siemens.co.at (Hermann Kaindl)
To: kaw@swi.psy.uva.nl,
Subject: Announcement: OOPSLA94 Workshop on AI for OO SE, Oct 94, Portland



CALL FOR PAPERS

Workshop at OOPSLA '94
(23-27 October 1994, Portland, Oregon, USA)

Artificial Intelligence for Object-Oriented Software Engineering


WS Overview
AI has contributed to OO. For example, frames for knowledge
representation have contributed to the object notion.
Classification of concepts helped to develop the notion of
inheritance. Moreover, software engineering has been an
enduring interest in the AI community ranging from program
verification, automatic programming up to the development
of programming assistants. Therefore, the application of AI
technology especially to OO software engineering is very promising.

This workshop will provide a forum to discuss open questions, to
present work done, and to establish future collaborations and
mutual insemination. Every useful contribution to apply AI
technology to object-oriented software engineering is welcome.

Goals and Focus
The objective of this workshop is to strengthen the bridges between
AI and OO. In particular, we want to foster impact from AI onto OO
software engineering.

The workshop is intended to support the following purposes:
- to provide an overview of academic and industrial activities
- to serve as a discussion panel for the coordination of these
efforts
- to identify research topics of common interest
- to identify industrially applicable results of current research
- to establish a network of people and organizations interested
in these questions.

Theme(s):
We invite contributions, among others, on the following topics:

Knowledge acquisition and elicitation techniques for OOA

Knowledge representation
- for capturing OO analysis, design and code artifacts (and their
traceability links) to support retrieval and/or reasoning about
these artifacts
- for capturing domain models and other results of OO domain
analysis
- capturing macro and micro development processes in order to
assist developers in an unobtrusive fashion
- for dealing with quality requirements on classes/objects

(Semi-)automatic support based on AI techniques for
- constructing designs from OOA specs
- constructing low level designs from high level OO designs
- programs from low level OO designs
- the verification of
. a high level design against OO analysis specifications
. transformations of high level OO designs into low level designs

User interfaces:
- natural language processing for assisting requirements
specification, use case development, automatic artifact
descriptions, etc.
- visual development of OO software systems based on knowledge
repositories

Formal descriptions for
- the definition of OO features (inheritance, polymorphism, dynamic
binding, ...)
- extensions of pre- and post-condition formalisms to represent the
semantics of asynchronous one-way interactions and/or object
creation and deletion

Case-based reasoning for identifying frameworks and class libraries

Model-based reasoning for diagnosing software bugs

The final content of the workshop will depend on the contributions. We
are aiming at both the presentation of academic results applicable to
practical problems and the identification of practical challenges
needing further research.

Addressees:
Practitioners in OO SE,
senior fellows in AI both from industry and academia,
students interested in application of AI techniques to OO SE

Schedule:
Aug 15, 1994: workshop position papers due to workshop organizers
Sep 7, 1994: workshop acceptance notice to participants
Sep 16, 1994: advance registration due to conference.

Agenda:
This workshop will be full-day. The first half day will be used
to communicate the work of selected participants in short
presentations.
The second half day will be dedicated to small groups discussing
topics of special interest, and the presentation of their key results
to the other participants. An open discussion will conclude the
workshop.

Attendance and Submissions:
Every prospective attendee is required to submit a 1-2 page research
summary including a list of relevant publications, regular and email
address (where possible), and voice and fax phone numbers.
Participants who wish to present their work are additionally required
to submit a short paper (3-5 pages).
Please send submissions preferably via e-mail (ASCII or PostScript) to
all of the organizers, or send three copies to A. Schappert.
Participation at the workshop is by invitation only, based on the
submission.

Organizing Committee:
Dennis de Champeaux, OntoOO
Hermann Kaindl, Siemens Austria
Albert Schappert, Siemens AG

Submissions:
email: ddc@netcom.COM, kaih@siemens.co.at,
albert.schappert@zfe.siemens.de
other channels:
Dr. Albert Schappert, Oopsla94 AI-OO WS
Siemens AG
Software and Engineering
D-81730 Munich, Germany
Phone: +49 89 636 2296

**************************************************


-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Wed, 11 May 94 22:39:36 BST
From: Paul Mc Kevitt <P.McKevitt@dcs.shef.ac.uk>
To: nl-kr@cs.rochester.edu,
Date: Fri, 06 May 1994 17:41:27 -0400 (EDT)
From: chengming <chengming%BEPC2@SERV02.SLAC.STANFORD.EDU>
Subject: CFP: Post-COLING 94 Lexical Workshop, Aug 94, Beijing
To: klavans@cs.columbia.edu, glottolo@icnucevm.cnuce.cnr.it,


xxxxxxxxx POST-COLING 94 WORKSHOP ANNOUNCEMENT xxxxxxx


INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP
ON
DIREACTIONS OF LEXICAL RESEARCH

15-17th of August, 1994
in Beijing

Co-Chairs
Nicoletta Calzolari
Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale del CNR
Via della Faggiola 32, 56100 PISA, ITALIA

Cheng-ming Guo
China National Laboratory of AI Technology and Systems
Tsinghua University
BEIJING 100084 CHINA

1. Intentions
The scholarly and scientific tradition in lexical research
was given an engineering edge by three outbursts of massive
lexical work that began in the last decade, the CYC project
in the United States, the EDR project in Japan, and the
Grosseto Workshop whose principle of reusability generated a
series of EC projects including Acquilex, ET-7, Multilex,
and Genelex. These projects led to, and were equalled by,
world wide interest in statistics on very large corpora. The
close inter-relationships between Lexicon development and
Corpus analysis are increasingly accentuated. This
international drive on the lexicon over a period of a decade
has done the field an immense service.

However, recent reflections on the lexical research over the
last ten years are not always as favourable as one might
expect. Wilks (1993) made a criticism of IBM's approach to
Machine Translation. The main point was that there is a
natural ceiling of success to PURE statistical methods. Ide
and Veronis (1993) went Aso far as to ask if we have wasted
our time over the last decade on extracting knowledge from
machine-readable dictionaries.

Another area of concern nowadays is the development of
common lexical specifications, or lexical standards. Up to
which level of lexical description can standards be
proposed, to ensure data reusability?

Furthermore, one important development in AI and Cognitive
Science in recent years warrants the attention of lexical
researchers. It involves the trend for the integration of
NLP with various subareas of AI, e.g. computer vision (see
Dennett, 1991; Mc Kevitt, 1994). The need for unified
representation scheme incorporating both perceptual
information and common sense knowledge poses new challenges.

The proposed workshop attempts to clarify issues in current
lexical research in terms of further research directions as
an answer to recent challenges. Suggested topics are as
follows:

a) notes comparing between well-known lexical projects,
particulary the EDR project, the CYC project, and the EC
projects --what have we learned ?

b) lexical needs for unified representations of common sense
knowledge and perceptual knowledge, visual or audio
--brainstorming on the design and construction of the
lexicons for such integrated systems;

c) lexical needs of very large knowledge bases for nuclear
lexicons as the core for knowledge acquisition --
speculations and practice concerning the design and
construction of such nuclei.

References

Amsler, R. (1980) The structure of the Merriam-Webster pocket
dictionary (PhD dissertation). Austin, TX: University of Texas,
Department of Computer Science.

Dennett, D. (1991)
Consciousness explained
Harmondsworth: Penguin

Ide, N. and Veronis, J. (1993)
Extracting knowledge bases from machine-readable dictionaries:
have we wasted our time?
In: Proceedings of International Conference on Building and Sharing of Very
Large-Scale Knowledge Bases, 257-266
Dec. 1-2 (Conference) /3-4 (Workshop) Tokyo, Japan

Mc Kevitt, P. (1994) (Guest Editor)
Integration of natural language and vision processing
Special volume (Issues 1, 2, 3) of AI Review Journal
Dordrecht: Kluwer (forthcoming)

Sparck-Jones, K. (1967)
Dictionary Circles
System Development Corporation

Walker, D., Zampolli, A., Calzolari, N. (1994) (Eds.) Automating the
lexicon: research and practice in a multilingual environment.Oxford: OUP.

Wilks, Y. (1993) Corpora and machine Translation.
In: Proceedings of the Fourth Machine Translation Summit, 137-145.
July 20-22 Kobe, Japan.

2. Format
This workshop is intended as an opportunity provided for the
exchange of views on issues of common concern to the area of
lexical research. Panel sessions and discussions are
stressed rather than formal speeches. All activities at the
workshop are intended as reactions to recent challenges.

The workshop will take place on the beautiful Tsinghua
University campus on the outskirt of Beijing.

Day 1: the state-of-the-art discussion -- achievements,
issues and concerns
Day 2: lexical needs for integrated systems
Day 3: lexical needs for knowledge acquisition for very
large knowledge systems

Each attendee of the workshop pays $100 to cover
registration, preprints, local transportation from and to
Beijing Airport, and hotel + food expenses for the 3-day
workshop duration. Each additional night of stay costs $50.
Air fare to and from Beijing rests with all attendees themselves.

All correspondence concerning workshop registration
should be directed to Chengming Guo by fax, e-mail, or postal
mail at the Computer Science Department, Tsinghua University,
Beijing, 100084, China. Total attendances are limited to 55.

3. Submission requirements
Papers or extended abstracts of no more than 6 pages should be
submitted by e-mail to the co-chairs of the workshop at
"glottolo@icnucevm.cnuce.cnr.it" for Nicoletta Calzolari,
and at "chengming%bepc2@slacmh.slac.stanford.edu" for Chengming Guo.
Postal mail of three hard copies of the paper or extended abstract to
Chengming Guo is also acceptable. Submissions must be printed
to 8 1/2 to 11" size. Workshop preprints will be made available to
all attendees.

Paper or extended abstract submission by the 31st of May, 1994
Notification of acceptance by the 20th June, 1994
Camera-ready copy by the 15th of July, 1994

4. Sponsors
Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale del CNR, Pisa, ITALY

China National Laboratory of AI Technology and Systems,
Tsinghua University, Beijing China

5. Co-Chairs

Nicoletta Calzolari
Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale del CNR
Via della Faggiola 32, 56100 PISA, ITALIA
Phone: +39 50 56 04 81
Fax:+39 50 58 90 55
Email:glottolo@icnucevm.cnuce.cnr.it


Cheng-ming Guo
Computer Science Department
Tsinghua University
Beijing 100084 CHINA
Phone: +86 1 2594895
Fax:+86 1 2562768
Email: chengming%bepc2@slacmh.slac.stanford.edu
or: chengming%bepc2@serv02.slac.stanford.edu

6. Program committee:

Sue Atkins
Oxford University Press, UK
E-MAIL: BTATKINS@vax.oxford.ac.uk

Nicoletta Calzolari
Institute of Computational Linguistics, CNR, Italy
E-MAIL: glottolo@icnucevm.cnuce.cnr.it

Kenneth Church
AT&T Bell Laboratory, USA
E-MAIL: kwc@research.att.com

Cheng-Ming Guo
Tsinghua University, China
E-MAIL: chengming%bepc2@slacmh.slac.stanford.edu

Judith Klavans
Columbia University, USA
E-MAIL: klavans@cs.columbia.edu

Paul Mc Kevitt
University of Sheffield, UK
E-MAIL: P.McKevitt@dcs.shef.ac.uk

Yoshihiko Nitta
Hitachi Advanced Laboratory, Japan
E-MAIL: nitta@harl.hitachi.co.jp

Yorick Wilks
University of Sheffield, UK
E-MAIL: yorick@dcs.shef.ac.uk

Toshio Yokoi
EDR, Japan
E-MAIL: yokoi@edr.co.JP

Antonio Zampolli
Institute of Computational Linguistics, CNR, Italy
E-MAIL: glottolo@icnucevm.cnuce.cnr.it

Uri Zernik
GE, USA
E-MAIL: zernik@sol.crd.ge.com

-----------------------------------







REGISTRATION FORM

Please type or write in capital letters
Mr/Mrs
_____________________________________________________________________
Family name First name Title/Position
Arriving Time Departure Time

______________________________________________________________________
Affiliation:

______________________________________________________________________
Mailing address:

______________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________
Fax: Tel:

______________________________________________________________________
E-mail:
______________________________________________________________________
Accompanying Persons:

Mr/Mrs

______________________________________________________________________
Family name First name Title/Position
Arriving Time Departure Time

______________________________________________________________________
Mr/Mrs

______________________________________________________________________
Family name First name Title/Position
Arriving Time Departure Time

______________________________________________________________________


NOTE:

Each attendee pays $100 registration fee to cover local expenses
for the 3-day workshop duration. Each additional night of stay costs $50.
For example, an attendee arriving on the 14th and leaving before 11:00 am
on the 18th (staying 4 nights) would pay $150. International airfare to
and from Beijing rests with all attendees.

Please make bank drafts (either wire transfer or mail transfer)
payable to:

Beijing Head Office, Bank of China, Account No. 71403301
(International Workshop on Directions of Lexical Research)

Send completed form and payment (with a copy of the receipt from your bank)
by post to:

Chengming Guo
International Lexical Workshop
Tsinghua University
Computer Science Department
Beijing 100084 China


Tel: + 86-1-2594895 (office) +86-1-2551731 ext 503 (home)
Fax: + 86-1-2562768
E-mail: chengming%bepc2@serv02.slac.stanford.edu
or: chengming%bepc2@slacmh.slac.stanford.edu

A brief e-mail or fax message to Chengming Guo about the posted letter
would be appreciated.

Upon receipt of the completed registration form with the correct fee,
a formal letter of invitation will be sent to the attendee for purposes
of obtaining visa from a Chinese Embassy.




End of NL-KR Digest
*******************

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