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NL-KR Digest Volume 13 No. 24
NL-KR Digest Mon Jun 6 19:28:28 PDT 1994 Volume 13 No. 24
Today's Topics:
Position: post-doctoral in Chinese Comp. Ling., Taipei
Announcement: Summer Inst. in Cog Sci: WORKSHOPS, Jul 94, Buffalo
Announcement: ICCS'94 Second Notice, Aug 94, College Park
Subcriptions, requests, policy: nl-kr-request@cs.rpi.edu
Submissions: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu
Back issues are available from host ftp.cs.rpi.edu [128.213.3.254] in
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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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BITNET subscribers: please use the UNIX LISTSERVer for nl-kr as given above.
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and Al Whaley (al@sunnyside.com).
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Date: Thu, 26 May 1994 23:34:47 +0008
From: Chu-Ren Huang <HSCHUREN@ccvax.sinica.edu.tw>
Subject: Position: post-doctoral in Chinese Comp. Ling., Taipei
To: linguist@tamvm1.tamu.edu,
Post-doctoral Position (Chinese Computational Linguistics)
Chinese Knowledge Information Processing (CKIP)
Academia Sinica
Primary Field: Chinese Linguistics (Syntax/Semantics)
OR: Computer Science (Chinese NLP)
Secondary Fields: Computational Linguistics, Classical Chinese
Openings: 1 Or 2
Time: July/August 1994 to June 1995
(renewable yearly pending budget approval)
Salary: U.S. $25,000/year (est.)
Requirements: (1) Ph. D. in Linguistics/C.S.
(2) (near) Native Fluency in Mandarin Chinese
Location: Chinese Knowledge Information Processing (CKIP) Group
Academia Sinica, Nankang, Taipei, Taiwan, ROC
Application:
I. BY June 6 (Monday): Email (1) cover letter (2) C.V. (3) list
of publications
TO: churen@iis.sinica.edu.tw
II. BY June 13 (Monday) [If Short-listed]
Send (1), (2), (3), (4) Thesis (draft),
(5) proof that you will get your doctorate by
September 1994, (6) relevant publications, and
(7) additional material showing your research
ability
TO: Chinese Knowledge Information Processing
Institute of Information Science
Academia Sinica
Nankang, Taipei
Taiwan 115
III. Enquiries:
1. Send to the above email and/or snail mail addresses
OR 2. Call 886-2-7883799 ext. 2111 Dr. Chu-Ren Huang
ext. 2211 Dr. Keh-jiann Chen
The CKIP group is a on-going long-term research project on Chinese
computational linguistics. The project started in 1986 and has
already built an electronic lexicon, a parser, a classical Chinese
corpus, and a Modern Mandarin corpus. The project is funded by
both Academia Sinica (Institute of Information Science and
Institute of History and Philology) as well as outside agencies
(such as the Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation and the National Science
Council of R.O.C.). Research in the academic year of 1994-5 will be
focused on (1) Balanced Mandarin Corpus, (2) Corpus-based Synchronic
Ancient Chinese Lexicon, and (3) Chinese Parser. Both previous
post-doctoral fellows with CKIP now hold tenure-track positions
with national universities in Taiwan.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Thu, 26 May 1994 10:04:30 -0400
From: cogsci94@cs.Buffalo.EDU (SUNY at Buffalo Cognitive Science Announcements)
To: cogsci94@cs.Buffalo.EDU
Subject: Announcement: Summer Inst. in Cog Sci: WORKSHOPS, Jul 94, Buffalo
===============================================================================
UPDATE UPDATE UPDATE UPDATE (26 May 1994) UPDATE UPDATE UPDATE UPDATE
===============================================================================
FIRST INTERNATIONAL SUMMER INSTITUTE IN COGNITIVE SCIENCE (FISI-CS)
Center for Cognitive Science
State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA
(North Campus)
JULY 5 - 29, 1994
REGISTRATION IS STILL OPEN FOR THE FIRST INTERNATIONAL SUMMER INSTITUTE IN
COGNITIVE SCIENCE, BUT HURRY--BECAUSE SOME COURSES ARE FILLING UP QUICKLY.
IN ADDITION TO THE COURSES, WHICH MAY BE TAKEN FOR UNDERGRADUATE OR GRADUATE
CREDIT, THERE IS A MONTH-LONG SERIES OF EVENING LECTURES BY MAJOR FIGURES IN
COGNITIVE SCIENCE AND A SERIES OF WEEKEND AND DAY-LONG WORKSHOPS ON A VARIETY
OF TOPICS.
THIS UPDATE LISTS THE THE PROGRAMS OF THE WORKSHOPS (AS FAR AS THEY ARE
CURRENTLY KNOWN). FURTHER INFORMATION IS AVAILABLE BY FTP.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
including printed registration forms, please contact:
FISI-CS
Office of Conferences and Special Events
Room 120, Center for Tomorrow
University at Buffalo
Buffalo, NY 14260-1602
USA
Telephone: (716) 645-2018
Fax: (716) 645-3869
E-Mail: cogsci94@ubvms.cc.buffalo.edu
WORKSHOPS
TOPOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE. Saturday-Sunday, July 9-10
1. Barry Smith (SUNY Buffalo)
"Introduction: Topological Foundations of Cognitive Science"
2. Max J. Egenhofer (University of Maine)
"Topological Similarity"
3. Carola Eschenbach (University of Hamburg)
"On Regions, Points, and Boundaries"
4. Christopher Habel (University of Hamburg)
"Distance, Succession, and the Structure of Topological Spaces"
5. Wolfgang Heydrich (University of Hamburg and University of Bielefeld)
"On Atomic, Non-Atomic, and Mixed Objects"
6. Jean Petitot (EHESS/CREA, Paris)
"Sheaf Mereology and Spatial Cognition "
7. Fabio Pianesi and Achille Varzi (IRST, Trento)
"The Mereotopology of Event Structures"
8. Graham White (International Academy of Philosophy, Liechtenstein)
"More Problems with Mereology"
9. Wlodek Zadrozny (IBM, Yorktown Heights, NY)
"Computational Mereology and Set Theory"
10. Wojciech Zelaniec (SUNY Buffalo)
"Rethinking Boundaries"
SPEECH ACTS AND LINGUISTIC RESEARCH. Saturday-Sunday, July 16-17
1. Bruce Fraser (Boston University and MIT)
Invited speaker: title to be announced
2. Nina Davidovna Arutionova (Institute of Linguistics, Moscow)
"Speech Acts and Truth"
3. Emanuela Cresti (Universit`a di Firenze, Italy)
"Intonational & Speech Act Units in the Theory of Spoken Language"
4. Elizabeth Hinkelman (University of Saarbruecken, Germany)
"Inference and Speech Act Compositionality"
5. Hiromi Hoda (Indiana University, USA)
"The Socio-Cognitive Functions of Japanese Sentence-Final Particles"
6. Katharzyna Jaszczolt (University of Brighton, UK)
"Relevance and Infinity"
7. Thomas Jokerst (University of Hamburg, Germany)
"Exhibitive and Protreptic Utterances and Their Bridging Principles:
A Gricean Approach to Speech Act Theory"
8. Susumu Kubo (Matsuyama University, Japan)
"Illocutionary Potentials in Illocutionary Force Understanding"
9. Ik-Hawan Lee (Yonsey University, South Korea)
title to be announced
10. Alessandro Lenci (University of California, San Diego)
"A Relevance-Based Approach to Speech Acts"
11. Massimo Moneglia (Universit`a di Firenze, Italy)
"Intonation and Illocutionary Force in the Acquisition of Italian:
Notes on the Transition from One Word to Two Word Utterances"
12. Brigitte Nerlich (University of Nottingham, UK)
"The Notion of `Speech Act' in German Linguistics and Philosophy"
13. Vassiliki Theodossopoulou-Papalois and Mari Vasarainen
(University of Minnesota)
"The Interrelation of Speech Acts with the Psychosocial Lexical
Orientation Theoretical Framework: Linguistic and Interdisciplinary
Implications"
14. Louise Cornelis (University of Utrecht, The Netherlands)
"Passive and Pronoun"
15 Anita Cremers (Eindhoven, The Netherlands)
"Some Factors Influencing Object Reference in a Shared Domain"
16 Jeff Lidtz, "Modularity and Reflexivization"
COGNITIVE AND ONTOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS OF KNOWLEDGE ENGINEERING.
Saturday-Sunday, July 23-24
1. Mihai Barbuceanu (University of Toronto, Canada)
"Conceptual Modelling Approaches to Knowledge Acquisition"
2. Steven Bayne (University of Connecticut, USA)
"Modelling Causal Relations between Events"
3. Carola Eschenbach (University of Hamburg, Germany)
"An Ontological Framework for Measurement"
4. Natalya Fridman (Northeastern University, USA)
"An Ontology for Substances and Processes in Molecular Biology"
5. Carl Hewitt (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA)
6. Graeme Hirst (University of Toronto, Canada)
7. Adam Kovach (Indiana University, USA)
"A Coherent Expression of Content Irrealism"
8. Maria Novella Catarsi (CNR, Pisa, Italy)
9. Aldo Gangemi (CNR, Rome, Italy)
10. Luca Pazzi (University of Modena, Italy)
11. Mike Uschold (University of Edinburgh, UK)
12. Achille Varzi (IRST, Trento, Italy)
CONNECTIONISM: 25-26 July
1. Paul Smolensky
"Connectionism and Higher Cognition: From Neural Computation to
Universal Grammar"
2. Geoffrey Hinton, "Unsupervised Learning"
3. James L. McClelland
"Parallel Distributed Processing and Human Cognition"
4. Jerry Feldman, "Structured Connectionist Models"
DEIXIS IN NARRATIVE. 25 July
Naturally-occurring narrative texts often contain elements that
seem at first blush to be out of place. Such texts contain sen-
tences that are not straightforward assertions, and expressions
that are either literally incoherent or situationally inappropri-
ate. Many of these "misplaced" elements involve deixis. Tem-
poral, spatial, and personal deictic terms in narrative often do
not index real times, places, or people. In addition, deictic ori-
entations seem to occur even without their linguistic expression.
This workshop is designed to explore some of the linguistic, con-
ceptual, and computational issues that arise when a cognitive
agent has to process deictic (situational) reference from a text
without being present at the scene being indexed.
Participants include:
1. Gail Bruder (SUNY Buffalo, USA)
2. Judith Felson Duchan (SUNY Buffalo, USA)
3. Arthur C. Graesser (Memphis State University, USA)
4. David M. Mark (SUNY Buffalo, USA)
5. William J. Rapaport (SUNY Buffalo, USA)
6. Stuart C. Shapiro (SUNY Buffalo, USA)
7. David A. Zubin (SUNY Buffalo, USA)
ONTOLOGY OF SPACE
26 July:
1. Roberto Casati (University of Neuchatel, Switzerland)
and Achille Varzi (IRST, Trento, Italy)
"Holes and Other Superficialities"
2. Christopher Habel (University of Hamburg, Germany)
"Structures of Spatial Theories in Common-Sense Reasoning"
3. Christian Freksa (University of Hamburg, Germany)
"Spatial Relations in Artificial Worlds"
4. David M. Mark (SUNY Buffalo, USA)
"Geographic Information Systems as Claims about the Ontology
of Geographic Space"
5. Simone Pribbenow (University of Hamburg, Germany) (tentative)
"Parts and Wholes and Their Relations"
6. Geoffrey Simmons (University of Hamburg, Germany) (tentative)
"Knowledge of Shape between Language and Perception"
7. Barbara Tversky (Stanford University, USA)
"Spatial Metaphors in Graphic Displays"
27 July:
Session 1: Cultural Variation in Spatial Conceptualization
All participants are from the Cognitive Anthropology Research Group,
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmeegen, the Netherlands.
Eve Danziger, Kyoko Inoue, Sotaro Kita, Stephen Levinson, Eric Pederson,
David P. Wilkins
Spatial cognition has always been an understandably cen-
tral part of cognitive science. However, the categories pos-
tulated for spatial conceptualization and in particular their
coding in language are all too often assumed to be univer-
sal and more or less intuitively available to the researcher
independent of the researcher's own cultural background.
The Cognitive Anthropology Research Group of the
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics has operated
from the premise that the basic categories of spatial repre-
sentation in language and other aspects of cognition (and
the degree to which such categories can be considered uni-
versal) have yet to be determined. The group takes a fun-
damentally anthropological approach, which (1) explores
semantic parameters from a language specific point of view,
(2) explores the full range of usage of relevant linguistic
expressions in verbal interaction, (3) investigates associ-
ated cultural phenomena, and (4) explores correlated non-
linguistic cognitive preferences. This exploratory research
into spatial cognition demonstrates considerable cross-linguistic
and cross-cultural variation in seemingly basic spatial cat-
egorization.
The variation correlates not just with the linguistic
system available to the subjects, but also with their lan-
guage use in specific social contexts, with their gestural
representations of space, and with the other semiotic sys-
tems found in the culture,
During the presentation, we will demonstrate both
some linguistic elicitation techniques and various non-linguistic
cognitive experiments that were developed in turn. The
co-ordinated results from these elicitations and cognitive
experiments allow us to better determine the categories of
human spatial reasoning and the degree of variation across
individuals and cultures.
Session 2:
1. Jerry Feldman (University of California, Berkeley)
"Space is Not the Final Frontier"
2. George Lakoff (University of California, Berkeley, USA)
"Spatial Inference, Metaphor Systems, and Abstract Inference:
The Role of Spatial Relations in the Embodiment of Mind"
3. Annette Herskovits (Wellesley College, USA)
" `Across' and `Along': Lexical Organization and the
Cognitive Geometry underlying Language"
4. Terry Regier (University of Chicago, USA)
"Modeling the Human Capacity for Categorizing Spatial Relations"
APPLIED COGNITIVE SCIENCE: COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN THE WORKPLACE. 27 July
Participants include:
Donald A. Norman (Apple Computer, Inc., Cupertino, CA, USA)
THE SNePS KNOWLEDGE REPRESENTATION AND REASONING SYSTEM. 28-29 July
This will be the Third International SNePS Workshop. The
first day of the two-day workshop will be devoted entirely to a
hands-on SNePS tutorial for people interested in learning about
SNePS. The second day will be used for the presentation and
discussion of SNePS-related papers.
The Semantic Network Processing System (SNePS), devel-
oped by Stuart C. Shapiro et al., is the implementation of a
fully intensional theory of knowledge-representation and reason-
ing. Since its first incarnation in the early 1970s, the main goal
driving its development has been the construction of an artifi-
cial or computational cognitive agent capable of communicating
intelligently with other cognitive agents in natural language. In
the last several years, many laboratories and individuals all over
the world have obtained copies of SNePS, and have been using
it as a tool for their own research or as part of implementations
of applied AI systems.
The SNePS Tutorial is intended to be a one-day, hands-on
learning session for people interested in how to use SNePS. The
tutorial will be taught by Stuart C. Shapiro with the assistance
of William J. Rapaport and members of the SNePS Research
Group. Participants will receive a set of "classic" SNePS papers
and a complete SNePS bibliography.
THE EVOLUTION OF COGNITION. 28 July
1. Martin Daly and Margo Wilson (McMaster University, Canada)
"Natural Selection Theory & the Investigation of Cognitive Phenomena"
2. Marc Hauser (Harvard University, USA)
"The Design of Animal Minds"
3. Steven Pinker (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA)
"Evolution and Cognitive Science"
4. Peter M. Todd (Rowland Institute for Science, Cambridge, MA, USA)
"Studying the Evolution of Cognition through Computer Simulations"
COGNITION AND BILINGUALISM. 29 July
Ellen Bialystok (York University, Canada)
Jim Cummins (Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, Toronto, Canada)
Annick De Houwer (University of Antwerp, Belgium)
Anna Maria Escobar (University of Illinois, USA)
Fred Genesee (McGill University, Canada)
Tom Givon (University of Oregon)
Michael Harrington (Carnegie Mellon University, USA)
Monica Heller (Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, Toronto, Canada)
Jacqueline Schachter (University of Oregon, USA)
Eta Schneiderman (University of Ottawa, Canada)
John Schumann (University of California, Los Angeles, USA)
Russell Tomlin (University of Oregon, USA)
For further information and application forms, contact:
FISI-CS
Office of Conferences and Special Events
Room 120, Center for Tomorrow
University at Buffalo
Buffalo, NY 14260-1602
USA
Telephone: (716) 645-2018
Fax: (716) 645-3869
E-Mail: cogsci94@ubvms.cc.buffalo.edu
INSTRUCTIONS FOR FTP ACCESS TO THE FISI-CS HANDBOOK:
To ftp this brochure (with application forms) or the FISI-CS handbook with
course and workshop descriptions, do the following (where % is your prompt):
%ftp ftp.cs.buffalo.edu
When you are asked for your name, type "anonymous"
When you are asked for your password, type your email address
When you get the "ftp>" prompt, type:
cd users/rapaport
At the next "ftp>" prompt, type either:
get fisi-brochure [for a copy of this document]
or get fisi-handbook.ps [for the postscript version of the handbook]
or get fisi-handbook.dvi [for the .dvi version of the handbook]
or get fisi-handbook.tex [for the LaTeX version of the handbook]
or get fisi-handbook.ascii [for the plain text (ASCII) version]
At the next "ftp>" prompt, type
quit
** PLEASE NOTE THAT THESE DOCUMENTS ARE UPDATED ON A REGULAR BASIS **
For further assistance, send email to: cogsci94@ubvms.cc.buffalo.edu
************* END OF BROCHURE *************
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
To: comp-ai-nlang-know-rep@uunet.uu.net
From: cecilia@umiacs.UMD.EDU (Cecilia Kullman)
Subject: Announcement: ICCS'94 Second Notice, Aug 94, College Park
Date: 1 Jun 1994 17:10:24 -0400
Second Notice
Second International Conference on
CONCEPTUAL STRUCTURES
ICCS'94
August 16-20, 1994
University of Maryland
College Park, MD, USA
ADVANCE PROGRAM - HIGHLIGHTS
10th Anniversary Meeting
WELCOME TO ICCS'94
This year we will celebrate the tenth anniversary of "Conceptual Structures"
(Sowa, 1984) and ten years of conceptual graphs (cgs) development in
both theory and application. Outstanding speakers will give a retrospective
of the last ten years and their views on the future. A selection of
quality papers will be presented covering, among other subjects,
general problem solving, knowledge engineering, natural language
understanding, formal languages and contexts.
We anticipate that ICCS'94 will be an event you will not want to miss.
In line with our focus on future development, we shall place special
emphasis on student and first-time participants. We look forward to
welcoming you to the Washington area.
Honorary Chair
John F. Sowa
State Univ. of New York
sowa@turing.pacss.binghamton.edu
General Chair Program Chair European Co-ordinator
Judith P. Dick William Tepfenhart Pavel Kocura
Univ. of Maryland AT&T Bell Labs Loughborough Univ. of Techn
dick@glue.umd.edu bill@violin.att.com P.Kocura@lut.ac.uk
Peirce Workshop Chair Knowledge Acquis Chair Enterprise Modeling Chair
Gerard Ellis Dickson Lukose Alex Bejan
Univ. of Queensland Univ. of N. England IBM, Boca Raton FL
ged@cs.uq.oz.au lukose@peirce.une.edu.au alex_bejan@vnet.ibm.com
INVITED TALKS
EILEEN WAY, SUNY at Binghamton
"Conceptual Graphs - Past, Present, and Future"
PAT HAYES, Beckman Institute, Urbana, Ill.
"Aristotelian and Platonic Views of Knowledge Representation"
JACK MINKER, University of Maryland at College Park
"Deductive Databases - A Retrospective"
JOHN F. SOWA, SUNY at Binghamton
"Representations of Representations"
CONFERENCE OVERVIEW
Tuesday, August 16
8:00 - 9:00 Registration
9:00 - 9:30 Welcome Address
9:30 - 10:30 Opening Address - Eileen Way
11:00 - 12:00 Session 1: Rational Problem Solving
12:00 - 1:30 Lunch
1:30 - 2:30 Session 2: Natural Language I
3:00 - 4:30 Session 3: Natural Language II
4:30 - 5:30 Panel Discussion
5:30 Opening Reception
Wednesday, August 17
8:00 - 9:00 Registration
9:00 - 10:30 Session 4: Knowledge Representation and Applications
11:00 - 12:00 Invited Talk - Pat Hayes
12:00 - 1:30 Lunch
1:30 - 2:30 Session 5: Conceptual Graph Theory
3:00 - 5:00 Session 6: Contexts and Canons
Thursday, August 18
8:00 - 9:00 Registration/Officers Meeting
9:00 - 10:30 Session 7: Data Modeling
11:00 - 12:00 Invited Talk - Jack Minker
12:00 - 1:30 Lunch
1:30 - 3:00 Session 8: Conceptual Graphs and Data Conceptual Model
3:30 - 4:30 Closing Address - John Sowa
4:30 - 5:00 General Meeting
5:30 Final Reception
Friday, August 19
8:00 - 9:00 Registration
9:00 - 5:00 Workshop: Third PEIRCE Workshop:
A Conceptual Graph Workbench
9:00 - 5:00 Workshop: Knowledge Acquisition
Using Conceptual Graph Theory
Saturday, August 20
8:00 - 9:00 Registration
9:00 - 5:00 Workshop: Third PEIRCE Workshop:
A Conceptual Graph Workbench
9:00 - 5:00 Workshop: Deep Knowledge
Enterprise Modeling
WORKSHOPS
Third PEIRCE Workshop: A Conceptual Graph Workbench
Chairperson: G. Ellis (Australia)
Knowledge Acquisition Using Conceptual Graph Theory
Chairperson: D. Lukose (Australia)
Deep Knowledge Enterprise Modeling
Chairperson: A. Bejan (USA)
CONFERENCE LOCATION
ICCS'94 will be held at the Inn and Conference Center at the University
of Maryland, College Park.
Baltimore Washington International (BWI) Airport is closest to the
Conference Center. There is a BWI Shuttle bus service available
at the airport, which will arrange for transit to your destination.
The charge is $16. Telephone: 301-441-3108.
Service is available as well from Dulles International (IAD) Airport
and Washington National (DCA) Airport. The AERO Shuttle van services
all three airports. The charge for door-to-door service to UMCP
is $25 per single person from BWI and DCA and $45 from IAD.
Telephone: 301-441-8267.
If you have further questions about location or accommodations,
please write Cecilia@umiacs.umd.edu.
ACCOMMODATIONS
The conference facility is the Inn and Conference Center at the
University or Maryland. To make a room reservation at the Inn
and Conference Center, please use the registration form on the
next page. Additional rooms are available at the Greenbelt
Marriott at $97 - $112 for a regular room and $107 - $122 for
an upgraded concierge room. Marriott Reservations: (301) 441-3700.
Quality Inn has rooms for $44 - $49. Please ask for University of
Maryland rates. Quality Inn Reservations: (301) 864-5820.
Reservations at these facilities should be made directly.
*****************************************************************************
ICCS'94 REGISTRATION FORM
Name: ___________________________________________________
Affiliation: ________________________________________________
Address: _________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
Telephone: ___________________________
Tax: ________________________________
e-mail: ______________________________
Please indicate which event(s) for which you are registering.
Workshop registrants need not register for the Conference unless
they wish to do so.
___ $325 Conference fee (excl. workshops) before 7/15/94
___ $370 Conference fee (excl. workshops) after 7/15/94
___ $125 Student fee (excl. workshops) before 7/15/94
___ $175 Student fee (excl. workshops) after 7/15/94
___ $50 PEIRCE Workshop
___ $40 PEIRCE Workshop, student
___ $35 Knowledge Acquisition Workshop
___ $25 Knowledge Acquisition Workshop, student
___ $35 Enterprise Modeling Workshop
___ $25 Enterprise Modeling Workshop, student
Amount Enclosed: $________________
MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO "UMIACS-ICCS'94."
Conference fee includes proceedings and receptions.
Payment must accompany the registration form. Checks must be
in US dollars only and payable to "UMIACS-ICCS'94." Please do not send cash.
CREDIT CARDS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED. Students must provide a copy of
a student I.D. card or a letter from an advisor for proof of student
status.
RETURN BY JULY 15, 1994 TO:
Johanna Weinstein
UMIACS
University of Maryland
College Park, MD 20742, USA
Tel.: (301) 405-6722. Fax: (301) 314-9658
e-mail: johanna@umiacs.umd.edu
****************************************************************************
HOTEL RESERVATION FORM
ICCS'94
August 16-20, 1994
The Inn and Conference Center
University of Maryland University College
Please reserve the following accommodations:
___ $69 Single Occupancy
___ $84 Double Occupancy
Arrival Date: ____________
Departure Date: ____________
___ Smoking ___ Non-smoking
___ Deposit check enclosed in the amount of $ ____________
___ Credit card guarantee:
Credit card number: _____________________________
Credit card expiration date: ____________
Signature: ________________________________
Name: ___________________________________________
Affiliation: _________________________________________
Address: __________________________________________
__________________________________________________
Telephone: _________________________________________
Fax: ______________________________________________
Rates are per room per night. All rates are subject to a 5% occupancy
tax. All reservations must be accompanied by a deposit of one night's
room rate plus tax, or a credit card guarantee. Guaranteed reservations
will be held until 6:00 a.m. the following day. Reservations not canceled
prior to 6:00 p.m. on the arrival day will be charged one night's room rate
plus tax.
SEND BY JULY 15, 1994 TO:
Reservations
The Inn and Conference Center
University of Maryland University College
College Park, MD 20742, USA
Tel.: (301) 985-7310, Fax: (301) 985-7445
End of NL-KR Digest
*******************