nelson@Q2.ICS.UCI.EDU (Richard Nelson) (12/11/87)
------- Forwarded Message Forwarded: Thu, 10 Dec 87 13:53:40 -0800 Forwarded: info-prolog@su-score.arpa Forwarded: Tue, 08 Dec 87 09:26:13 -0800 Forwarded: hicks@walker-emh Forwarded: Tue, 08 Dec 87 09:23:54 -0800 Forwarded: AIList@kl.sri.com Received: from [128.105.2.13] by Q2.ICS.UCI.EDU id aa18276; 7 Dec 87 13:29 PST Received: from SDNET.BITNET by WISCVM.WISC.EDU ; Mon, 07 Dec 87 12:04:34 CDT Date: 7 Dec 87 12:03 CDT From: ERIC%SDNET.BITNET@WISCVM.WISC.EDU To: NELSON@Q2.ICS.UCI.EDU Subject: BITNET mail follows Message-ID: <8712071330.aa18276@Q2.ICS.UCI.EDU> ICEBOL3 April 21-22, 1988 Dakota State College Madison, SD 57042 ICEBOL3, the International Conference on Symbolic and Logical Computing, is designed for teachers, scholars, and programmers who want to meet to exchange ideas about non-numeric computing. In addition to a focus on SNOBOL, SPITBOL, and Icon, ICEBOL3 will feature introductory and technical presentations on other dangerously powerful computer languages such as Prolog and LISP, as well as on applications of BASIC, Pascal, and FORTRAN for processing strings of characters. Topics of discussion will include artificial intelligence, expert systems, desk-top publishing, and a wide range of analyses of texts in English and other natural languages. Parallel tracks of concurrent sessions are planned: some for experienced computer users and others for interested novices. Both mainframe and microcomputer applications will be discussed. ICEBOL's coffee breaks, social hours, lunches, and banquet will provide a series of opportunities for participants to meet and informally exchange information. Sessions will be scheduled for "birds of a feather" to discuss common interests (for example, BASIC users group, implementations of SNOBOL, computer generated poetry). Call For Papers Abstracts (minimum of 250 words) or full texts of papers to be read at ICEBOL3 are invited on any application of non-numeric programming. Planned sessions include the following: artificial intelligence expert systems natural language processing analysis of literary texts (including bibliography, concordance, and index preparation) linguistic and lexical analysis (including parsing and machine translation) preparation of text for electronic publishing computer assisted instruction grammar and style checkers music analysis. Papers must be in English and should not exceed twenty minutes reading time. Abstracts and papers should be received by January 15, 1988. Notification of acceptance will follow promptly. Papers will be published in ICEBOL3 Proceedings. Presentations at previous ICEBOL conferences were made by Susan Hockey (Oxford), Ralph Griswold (Arizona), James Gimpel (Lehigh), Mark Emmer (Catspaw, Inc.), Robert Dewar (New York University), and many others. Copies of ICEBOL 86 Proceedings are available. ICEBOL3 is sponsored by The Division of Liberal Arts and The Business and Education Institute of DAKOTA STATE COLLEGE Madison, South Dakota For Further Information All correspondence including abstracts and papers as well as requests for registration materials should be sent to: Eric Johnson ICEBOL Director 114 Beadle Hall Dakota State College Madison, SD 57042 U.S.A. (605) 256-5270 Inquiries, abstracts, and correspondence may also be sent via electronic mail to: ERIC @ SDNET (BITNET) ------- End of Forwarded Message
nelson@ICS.UCI.EDU (Richard Nelson) (12/22/87)
Received: from [128.105.2.13] by Q2.ICS.UCI.EDU id aa18276; 7 Dec 87 13:29 PST Received: from SDNET.BITNET by WISCVM.WISC.EDU ; Mon, 07 Dec 87 12:04:34 CDT Date: 7 Dec 87 12:03 CDT From: ERIC%SDNET.BITNET@WISCVM.WISC.EDU To: NELSON@Q2.ICS.UCI.EDU Subject: BITNET mail follows Message-ID: <8712071330.aa18276@Q2.ICS.UCI.EDU> ICEBOL3 April 21-22, 1988 Dakota State College Madison, SD 57042 ICEBOL3, the International Conference on Symbolic and Logical Computing, is designed for teachers, scholars, and programmers who want to meet to exchange ideas about non-numeric computing. In addition to a focus on SNOBOL, SPITBOL, and Icon, ICEBOL3 will feature introductory and technical presentations on other dangerously powerful computer languages such as Prolog and LISP, as well as on applications of BASIC, Pascal, and FORTRAN for processing strings of characters. Topics of discussion will include artificial intelligence, expert systems, desk-top publishing, and a wide range of analyses of texts in English and other natural languages. Parallel tracks of concurrent sessions are planned: some for experienced computer users and others for interested novices. Both mainframe and microcomputer applications will be discussed. ICEBOL's coffee breaks, social hours, lunches, and banquet will provide a series of opportunities for participants to meet and informally exchange information. Sessions will be scheduled for "birds of a feather" to discuss common interests (for example, BASIC users group, implementations of SNOBOL, computer generated poetry). Call For Papers Abstracts (minimum of 250 words) or full texts of papers to be read at ICEBOL3 are invited on any application of non-numeric programming. Planned sessions include the following: artificial intelligence expert systems natural language processing analysis of literary texts (including bibliography, concordance, and index preparation) linguistic and lexical analysis (including parsing and machine translation) preparation of text for electronic publishing computer assisted instruction grammar and style checkers music analysis. Papers must be in English and should not exceed twenty minutes reading time. Abstracts and papers should be received by January 15, 1988. Notification of acceptance will follow promptly. Papers will be published in ICEBOL3 Proceedings. Presentations at previous ICEBOL conferences were made by Susan Hockey (Oxford), Ralph Griswold (Arizona), James Gimpel (Lehigh), Mark Emmer (Catspaw, Inc.), Robert Dewar (New York University), and many others. Copies of ICEBOL 86 Proceedings are available. ICEBOL3 is sponsored by The Division of Liberal Arts and The Business and Education Institute of DAKOTA STATE COLLEGE Madison, South Dakota For Further Information All correspondence including abstracts and papers as well as requests for registration materials should be sent to: Eric Johnson ICEBOL Director 114 Beadle Hall Dakota State College Madison, SD 57042 U.S.A. (605) 256-5270 Inquiries, abstracts, and correspondence may also be sent via electronic mail to: ERIC @ SDNET (BITNET)
lins@Apple.COM (Chuck Lins) (06/14/90)
Announcement and Call for Papers -------------------------------- Aims and Scope: The international journal "Structured Programming" serves the professional computing and engineering community. It includes technical contributions and short communications in the area of o programming o programming methodology and style o programming languages o programming environments o compilers o interpreters o applications The journal reports on technical advances in the field, announce and review systems, implementations, and relevant publications. "Structured Programming" emphasizes innovative concepts in programming (such as literate programming) and practical solutions for real problems. "Structured Programming" is not intended to be an archival journal, but instead, an informal forum for the timely exchange of ideas and information. Readership: computer scientists and engineers, software developers Call For Papers: The journal encourages contributions of original papers on any aspect of programming methodology and style, programming languages, programming environments, compilers, interpreters and applications. All papers will be reviewed. For papers of high quality, the journal can offer timely publication. Papers should be submitted to: Prof. Dr. Gustav Pomberger Johannes Kepler University of Linz A-4040 Linz Austria Tel.: +43-732-2468-683 Fax: 732-2468-10 E-Mail: K2G0190@AEARN.BITNET or to Springer-Verlag 815 De La Vina Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101 USA Tel.: (805) 963-7960 Fax: (805) 966-3491 E-Mail: rossbach@hub.ucsb.edu -- Chuck Lins | "Is this the kind of work you'd like to do?" Apple Computer, Inc. | -- Front 242 20525 Mariani Avenue | Internet: lins@apple.com Mail Stop 37-BD | AppleLink: LINS@applelink.apple.com Cupertino, CA 95014 | "Self-proclaimed Object Oberon Evangelist" The intersection of Apple's ideas and my ideas yields the empty set.