Newsgroups: comp.parallel
From: farrens@ucdavis.edu (Matthew Farrens)
Subject: 28th Microarchitecture Symposium (MICRO-28) Advanced Program
Organization: Department of Computer Science, University of California, Davis
Date: 9 Oct 1995 15:18:10 GMT
Message-ID: <45befi$20g@usenet.srv.cis.pitt.edu>

                               Advanced Program
      28th Annual IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Microarchitecture
______________________________________________________________________________

This mail message contains the complete Advanced Program for the 28th Annual
IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Microarchitecture (MICRO-28).  This and
other conference information (including talk abstracts) can be accessed via:

World Wide Web at               http://american.cs.ucdavis.edu/Micro28
or by anonymous ftp from        american.cs.ucdavis.edu:/Micro28
or by sending e-mail to         micro28@cs.ucdavis.edu
______________________________________________________________________________

                        Message from the General Chair

     On behalf of the entire organizing committee, it is my pleasure to invite
you to the 28th Annual International Symposium on Microarchitecture being held
this year in Ann Arbor, Michigan from November 29 to December 1, 1995.

     In recent years MICRO has become the leading forum for work  on  instruc-
tion level parallelism.  This year interest in the conference has continued to
grow; and we had the strongest response yet to the call for  papers,  with  90
submissions.   Of  these,  22  were  accepted  as  long papers and 15 as short
papers.  The reviewing process was extremely rigorous, with each paper receiv-
ing nearly six independent reviews (5.6 on average).

     In order to complement the strong slate of technical papers, this year we
have  chosen  executives  from  the  computer  industry  to be our Keynote and
Invited Speakers.  We are hoping they will be able to provide a different per-
spective  on  the  industry and its direction.  In particular, I would like to
thank our keynote speaker Richard Baum (IBM Fellow and Vice President), Thomas
Jermoluk  (President  and  C.O.O.,  SGI),  and  Fred Pollack (Intel Fellow and
Director) for agreeing to present their views at MICRO-28.  Their visions will
be of great interest in their own right.

     This year, we also have incorporated a day of tutorials  in  the  confer-
ence, featuring three 2 1/2 hour presentations on the microarchitecture design
rationale of three important new microprocessors (Intel P6, HaL  SPARC64,  and
HP  PA8000).   The  presentations  will be given by technical experts from the
chip design teams.  The tutorials are free of charge  to  the  registrants  of
MICRO-28.

     In addition to the excellent slate of presentations, MICRO is famous  for
its  opportunities  for  personal  interaction with leading researchers in the
area.  I invite you to join us in Ann Arbor, and I look forward to  personally
greeting each and every one of you!

Trevor Mudge
General Chair, MICRO-28

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

                           Conference at a glance:

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28
18:30-20:00 Welcoming Reception

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29
08:00-08:15 Welcoming Remarks:  Trevor Mudge, Kemal Ebcioglu
08:15-09:15 Keynote Address:  Richard I. Baum, IBM
09:30-10:45 Session 1:  Branch Prediction I
11:00-12:15 Session 2:  ILP Compilation I
13:45-15:00 Session 3:  Memory System Issues
15:15-16:15 Session 4:  Topics in Software Pipelining and ILP Compilation
20:00-22:00 Business Meeting

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30
08:00-09:00 Invited Speaker:  Thomas A. Jermoluk, SGI
09:15-10:05 Session 5:  Data flow and Multithreading Architectures
10:20-11:35 Session 6:  ILP Compilation  II
11:50-12:20 Session 7:  Analysis of Branching Architecture
13:45-14:35 Session 8:  Software and Hardware Object Code Translation
15:00-15:45 Session 9:  Data Prefetching
16:00-17:30 Panel:  "The Best Road to Higher Performance: VLIW vs SMP vs
                        Superscalar vs ..." Jim Bondi, TI
19:00-21:30 Conference Dinner

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1st
08:00-09:00 Invited Speaker:  Fred J. Pollack, Intel
09:15-10:00 Session 10:  Branch Prediction II
10:15-11:00 Session 11:  Multithreading and Superscalar Design studies
11:15-12:30 Session 12:  Architectural Features for ILP
12:30-13:30 Conference Luncheon
13:45-15:00 Session 13:  Software Pipelining II
15:00-15:15 Closing Remarks

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2
    Tutorials: Intel P6, HaL SPARC64, HP PA8000
    Organizer: Yale Patt, University of Michigan

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

                            Conference in Detail:

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28

18:30-20:00 Welcoming Reception

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29

08:00-08:15 Welcoming Remarks:  Trevor Mudge, General Chair
                                Kemal Ebcioglu, Program Chair

08:15-09:15 Keynote Address:  Richard I. Baum
            IBM Fellow and Vice President, Systems Architecture and Performance,
            Systems Technology and Architecture Division, IBM Corporation

-----------
09:30-10:45 Session 1:  Branch Prediction I
            Session Chair:  Yale Patt, University of  Michigan

"Performance Issues in Correlated Branch Prediction Schemes"
    Nicolas Gloy, Michael D. Smith, Cliff Young - Harvard

"Dynamic Path-Based Branch Correlation"
    Ravi Nair, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center

"The Predictability of Libraries"
    Brad Calder, Dirk Grunwald - University of Colorado, Boulder,
    Amitabh Srivastava, DEC Western Research Lab

-----------
11:00-12:15 Session 2:  ILP Compilation I
            Session Chair:  Guang Gao, McGill University

"The Performance Impact of Incomplete Bypassing in Processor Pipelines"
    Pritpal S. Ahuja, Douglas W. Clark, Anne Rogers - Princeton University

"Efficient Instruction Scheduling Using Finite State Automata"
    Vasanth Bala - HP Labs, Norman Rubin,  DEC

"Critical Path Reduction for Scalar Programs"
    Michael Schlansker, Vinod Kathail - HP Labs

-----------
13:45-15:00 Session 3:  Memory System Issues
            Session Chair:  Andrew Wolfe, Princeton University

"A Limit Study of Local Memory Requirements Using Value Reuse Profiles"
    Andrew S. Huang, John P. Shen - Carnegie Mellon University

"Zero-Cycle Loads: Microarchitecture Support for Reducing Load Latency"
    Todd M. Austin, Gurindar S. Sohi - University of Wisconsin, Madison

"A Modified Approach to Data Cache Management"
    Gary Tyson - UC Riverside, Matthew Farrens, John Matthews - UC Davis,
    Andrew Pleszkun - University of Colorado, Boulder

-----------
15:15-16:15 Session 4:  Topics in Software Pipelining and ILP Compilation
            Session Chair:  Bob Rau, HP Labs

"Petri Net versus Modulo Scheduling for Software Pipelining"
    V.H. Allan, U.R. Shah, K.M. Reddy - Utah State University

"Modulo Scheduling with Multiple Initiation Intervals"
    Nancy J. Warter-Perez, Noubar Partamian - Cal State University, Los Angeles

"Effective Scheduling of Directed Acyclic Graphs under Register Constraints"
    Balas Natarajan, Michael Schlansker - HP Labs

"Improving Instruction-Level Parallelism by Loop Unrolling and Dynamic Memory
 Disambiguation"
    Jack W. Davidson, Sanjay Jinturkar - University of Virginia

-----------
20:00-22:00 Business Meeting

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30

08:00-09:00 Invited Speaker:  Thomas A. Jermoluk
            President and Chief Operating Officer, SGI

-----------
09:15-10:05 Session 5:  Data flow and Multithreading Architectures
            Session Chair:  Jean-Luc Gaudiot, University of Southern California

"Self-Regulation of Workload in the Manchester Data-Flow Computer"
    John R. Gurd, David F. Snelling - University of Manchester (UK)

"The M-Machine Multicomputer"
    Marco Fillo, Stephen W. Keckler, William J. Dally, Nicholas P. Carter,
    Andrew Chang, Yevgeny Gurevich, Whay S. Lee - MIT AI Laboratory and
    Laboratory for Computer Science

-----------
10:20-11:35 Session 6:  ILP Compilation  II
            Session Chair:  Jim Dehnert, Silicon Graphics, Inc.

"Region-Based Compilation: An Introduction and Motivation"
    Richard E. Hank, Wen-mei W. Hwu - University of Illinois,
    B. Ramakrishna Rau - HP Labs

"An Experimental Study of Several Cooperative Register Allocation and
 Instruction Scheduling Strategies"
    Cindy Norris, Lori L. Pollock - University of Delaware

"Register Allocation for Predicated Code"
    Alexandre E. Eichenberger, Edward S. Davidson - University of Michigan

-----------
11:50-12:20 Session 7:  Analysis of Branching Architecture
            Session Chair:  Ed Davidson, University of Michigan

"Branch Aliasing in Branch Target Buffers"
    Barry Fagin - U.S. Air Force Academy,
    Kathryn Russell - Lockheed Sanders, Inc.

"A System Level Perspective on Branch Architecture Performance"
    Brad Calder, Dirk Grunwald - University of Colorado, Boulder,
    Joel Emer - DEC

-----------
13:45-14:35 Session 8:  Software and Hardware Object Code Translation
            Session Chair:  Wen-Mei Hwu, University of Illinois

"Dynamic Rescheduling: A Technique for Object Code Compatibility in
 VLIW Architectures"
    Thomas M. Conte, Sumedh W. Sathaye - North Carolina State University

"Improving CISC Instruction Decoding Performance Using a Fill Unit"
    Mark Smotherman, Manoj Franklin - Clemson University

-----------
15:00-15:45 Session 9:  Data Prefetching
            Session Chair:  Gearold Johnson, National Technological University

"SPAID: Software Prefetching In Pointer and Call-Intensive Environments"
    Mikko H. Lipasti, William J. Schmidt, Steven R. Kunkel,
    Robert R. Roediger - IBM

"An Effective Programmable Prefetch Engine for On-Chip Caches"
    Tien-Fu Chen - National Chung Cheng University (Taiwan)

"Cache Miss Heuristics and Preloading Techniques for General-Purpose Programs"
    Toshihiro Ozawa - Fujitsu Laboratories Ltd.,
    Shin'ichiro Nishizaki - Fujitsu Social Science Laboratory Ltd.,
    Yasunori Kimura - Fujitsu Laboratories Ltd. (Japan)

-----------
16:00-17:00 Panel

     Organizer:  Jim Bondi - Texas Instruments
     Title:  "The Best Road to Higher Performance: VLIW vs SMP vs
     Superscalar vs ..."
     Panelists:
     Bill Dally (MIT)
     Wen-Mei Hwu (University of Illinois)
     Kunle Olukotun (Stanford University)
     Yale Patt (University of  Michigan)
     Bob Rau (HP labs)
     Richard Sites (DEC)

-----------
19:00-21:30 Conference Dinner

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1st

08:00-09:00 Invited Speaker:  Fred J. Pollack
            Intel Fellow; Director of Measurement, Architecture, and Planning,
            Microprocessor Products Group, Intel Corporation

-----------
09:15-10:00 Session 10:  Branch Prediction II
            Session Chair:  Bob Colwell, Intel

"Alternative Implementations for Hybrid Branch Predictors"
    Po-Yung Chang, Eric Hao, Yale N. Patt - University of Michigan

"Control Flow Prediction with Tree-Like Subgraphs for Superscalar Processors"
    Simonjit Dutta, Manoj Franklin - Clemson University

"The Role of Adaptivity in Two-level Adaptive Branch Prediction"
    Stuart Sechrest, Chih-Chieh Lee, Trevor N. Mudge - University of Michigan

-----------
10:15-11:00 Session 11:  Multithreading and Superscalar Design studies
            Session Chair:  Hans Mulder, Intel

"Design of Storage Hierarchy in Multithreaded Architectures"
    Lucas Roh - Argonne National Laboratory,
    Walid A. Najjar - Colorado State University

"An Investigation of the Performance of Various Instruction-Issue Buffer
 Topologies"
    Stephan Jourdan, Pascal Sainrat, Daniel Litaize - Institut de Recherche en
    Informatique de Toulouse, Universite Paul Sabatier (France)

Decoupling Integer Computation in Superscalar Processors"
    Subbarao Palacharla, J.E. Smith - University of Wisconsin, Madison

-----------
11:15-12:30 Session 12:  Architectural Features for ILP
            Session Chair:  Steve Melvin, Zytek

"Exploiting Short-Lived Variables in Superscalar Processors"
    Luis A. Lozano C., Guang R. Gao - McGill University (Canada)

"Partitioned Register File for TTAs"
    Johan Janssen, Henk Corporaal - Delft University of Technology (Netherlands)

"Disjoint Eager Execution:  An Optimal Form of Speculative Execution"
    Augustus K. Uht, Vijay Sindagi - University of Rhode Island

-----------
12:30-13:30 Conference Luncheon


-----------
13:45-15:00 Session 13:  Software Pipelining II
            Session Chair:  Stanley Habib, City University of New York

"Unrolling-Based Optimizations for Software Pipelining"
    Daniel M. Lavery, Wen-mei W. Hwu - University of Illinois

"Stage Scheduling: A Technique to Reduce the Register Requirements of a
Modulo Schedule"
    Alexandre E. Eichenberger, Edward S. Davidson - University of Michigan

"Hypernode Reduction Modulo Scheduling"
    Josep Llosa, Mateo Valero, Eduard Ayguade, Antonio Gonzalez -
    Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya. Barcelona (Spain)

-----------
15:00-15:15 Closing Remarks

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2

    Tutorials: Intel P6, HaL SPARC64, HP PA8000
    Organizer: Yale Patt, University of Michigan

The MICRO-28 tutorials will feature three 2  1/2  hour  presentations  on  the
microarchitectures and the sets of rationale behind the major design decisions
of three important new microprocessors.  All of them have been announced since
the last Micro symposium.

The three have been selected due to the breadth of their target ISAs, in addi-
tion  to  their  importance  in the relevant segments of the marketplace.  The
three are Intel's P6 (the latest of the x86  implementations),  HaL's  SPARC64
(the latest of the SPARC 64 bit implementations), and Hewlett-Packard's PA8000
(one of the latest of the new RISC implementations).

The presentations will be given by distinguished technical experts  from  each
of  the  three companies.  Each speaker was centrally involved with the design
of his company's respective chip.

The tutorials will be provided free of charge to the registrants of MICRO-28.

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

         Information on the Keynote and Invited Speakers in MICRO-28:

Richard I. Baum (keynote speaker)
    IBM Fellow and Vice President, Systems Architecture and Performance
    Systems Technology and Architecture Division
    IBM Corporation

Dr. Baum's current responsibilities in IBM are leading the creation  of  stra-
tegy,  design and architecture for server systems and microprocessors, and the
performance modeling and analysis for microprocessor systems.   These  include
the  design  and analysis of future products and the development of underlying
technologies needed for them.

Dr. Baum joined IBM as a Senior Associate Programmer in the MVS  Design  group
in  the  Poughkeepsie  Programming Center in 1976, and advanced to Development
Manager in 1979, and then to Senior Programmer Manager in 1982.  From 1984  to
1985  he was Technical Assistant to the Poughkeepsie Site General Manager.  In
1985, he was promoted to Manager of Systems  Technology  in  the  Poughkeepsie
Laboratory.   After  assuming  responsibility for Central System Architecture,
High End Processor Performance and Future Systems Design, Baum became Director
of  System  Architecture  and  Design in 1989, and was appointed an IBM fellow
while in this assignment in 1991.  In 1993, Dr. Baum was  appointed  Assistant
General  Manager,  Systems  Technology,  and  in  1994,  he was appointed Vice
President, Systems Architecture and Performance, his current position.

He received a BS in Engineering Physics from Cornell University in 1971, and a
PhD in Computer Science in 1975 from Ohio State University.

----------

Thomas A. Jermoluk
    President and Chief Operating Officer
    Silicon Graphics, Inc.

Reporting directly to Edward R. McCracken, Chairman and CEO, Mr.  Jermoluk  is
in  charge  of  developing and delivering SGI's entire range of computing sys-
tems.  He is responsible for the high and  low-end  IRIS  workstation  product
groups,   research  and  development,  business  development,  administration,
finance, business systems, operations, corporate manufacturing, customer  sup-
port and marketing.

Since joining Silicon Graphics in 1986, Mr. Jermoluk has worked on the  design
of  a new CPU and bus architecture and the corresponding UNIX operating system
redesign for bringing new levels of performance to the  workstation  class  of
machines.  Previously,  he  was with Hewlett-Packard Company as a research and
development section manager, responsible for hardware and software development
on a new RISC-based computer. Prior to H-P, he was manager of systems software
at Bell Laboratories in the UNIX development lab. Mr. Jermoluk has an M.S.  in
computer  science  and  a B.S. in computer science/electrical engineering from
Virginia Tech.

----------

Fred J. Pollack
    Intel Fellow
    Director of Measurement, Architecture, and Planning
    Microprocessor Products Group
    Intel  Corporation

Fred Pollack has worked at Intel for 18 years.  He is currently  the  Director
of  a  group that is responsible for all x86 platform architecture and perfor-
mance analysis.  He also directs the planning for Intel's future x86 micropro-
cessors.   Before this, he was the manager of the P6 Architecture.  In January
of 1993, he was promoted to an Intel Fellow, one of 9 in the company.

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

                             MICRO-28 COMMITTEES

GENERAL CHAIR:          PROGRAM CHAIR:          PUBLICITY CHAIR:
  Trevor Mudge            Kemal Ebcioglu          Matthew Farrens
  U. Michigan             IBM T.J. Watson         U.C. Davis

STEERING COMMITTEE:
Richard Belgard, Consultant             Gearold Johnson, National Tech'l U.
James Bondi, Texas Instruments          Hans Mulder, Intel
Matthew Farrens, UC Davis               Yale Patt, Michigan
Wen-mei Hwu, Illinois                   Andrew Wolfe, Princeton

PROGRAM COMMITTEE:
Vicki Allan, Utah State                 Richard Belgard, Consultant
David Bernstein, IBM Haifa (Israel)     Jim Bondi, Texas Instruments
Bob Colwell, Intel Corp.                Henk Corporaal, Delft U. (Netherlands)
Jim Dehnert, Silicon Graphics           Josh Fisher, HP Labs
Mike Flynn, Stanford                    Guang Gao, McGill U. (Canada)
Jean-Luc Gaudiot, USC                   Rajiv Gupta, Pittsburgh
Stanley Habib, CUNY                     Martin Hopkins, IBM T.J. Watson
Wen-mei Hwu, Illinois                   Monica Lam, Stanford
Bill Mangione-Smith, UCLA               Steve Melvin, Zytek
Jaime Moreno, IBM T.J. Watson           Alex Nicolau, UC Irvine
Yale Patt, Michigan                     Bob Rau, HP Labs
Vivek Sarkar, IBM Software Solutions    John Shen, Carnegie-Mellon
Gabriel Silberman, IBM T.J. Watson      Jim Smith, Wisconsin
Mike Smith, Harvard                     Mary Lou Soffa, Pittsburgh
Andrew Wolfe, Princeton

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

                      MICRO-28 REGISTRATION INFORMATION

Registration
------------

Early registration must be postmarked by November 8,  1995.  Full  payment  in
U.S.  dollars  must  accompany  registration:  check drawn from a U.S. bank or
charge to a MasterCard or Visa card.  Credit card registrations may be faxed
to (313) 763-4617, attn: Paula Denton.  Conference registration includes  one
copy of the proceedings, lunch, reception, dinner, and coffee breaks.  The
student registration  fee  does include all meals.  Student registration must
include a copy of a valid, full-time student ID.

Conference Site and Accomodation
--------------------------------

All technical sessions and lunch on Friday will be held at the Rackham
Auditorium, located in the heart of the University of Michigan Campus.
Pre-registration on Tuesday night will occur at the Campus Inn.

We recommend attendees stay at either the Campus Inn  or  the Bell Tower Hotel.
Both  are  owned  by  the  same  company  and are within two blocks of Rackham
Auditorium.  Please contact the hotel directly for reservations and indicate
MICRO-28 conference.  Conference rates are $70 per night for single rooms and
$87  for  double  rooms,  which  includes continental breakfasts each morning.
Reservations must be received by November 3, 1995, to guarantee conference
rate.  Late  reservations  will  be accepted on a space-available basis.

Both hotels are on the main campus of the University of Michigan and are
within walking distance of many museums, theaters, bookstores, music stores,
restaurants, and bars.

    Campus Inn
    E. Huron & State St.
    Ann Arbor, MI 48104
    Call (800) 666-8693 for reservations

    Bell Tower Hotel
    300 S. Thayer
    Ann Arbor, MI 48104
    Call (800) 999-8693 for reservations

Ground Transportation
---------------------

Ann Arbor is approximately 30 miles from Detroit Metro Airport.  Taxi fare one
way is approximately $35.00.  "Commuter Transportation" is also available,
which costs $15 one way ($27 round trip).  It leaves every hour on the hour,
and runs from 7AM to midnight.  No reservations are necessary.  They can be
reached at 1-800-488-7433 if you need further information.

Weather
-------

To say the weather is variable in late November is something of an
understatement.  Some days are beautiful and warm, others freezing and damp -
it could be anywhere from 10 to 60 degrees Fahrenheit.  It is more likely that
it will be quite cool, however, so it is best to bring a warm coat.

Ann Arbor and Surrounding Area
------------------------------

With more than a hundred parks, an Arboretum and Botanical Gardens, it is easy
to understand why Ann Arbor has been penned "Tree City, USA."  There are over
200 restaurants in the City as well as every type of musical and sporting event
that can be imagined - and it's all within walking distance of the University
of Michigan campus.

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

                          MICRO-28 Registration Form

                        November 29 - December 1, 1995
                             Ann Arbor, Michigan

Name__________________________________________________________________

Affiliation___________________________________________________________

Address_______________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________

Telephone_____________________________________________________________

Fax___________________________________________________________________

Electronic
Mail Address__________________________________________________________

X ACM X IEEE Member Number____________________________________________

Please list any special needs or accommodations: _____________________

______________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________

            Before Nov. 8     After Nov. 8
Member            $285            $345
Non-member        $360            $430
Student*          $150            $200
_____________________________________________


* Student registration must be accompaneied by a copy of  a  valid,  full-time
student ID; also see the student travel grant program.
______________________________________________________________________________


X Check drawn on U.S. bank payable to: MICRO-28
X Mastercard     X Visa

Card No.______________________________________________________________

Expiration Date______________________________________________________

Name on Card__________________________________________________________

Signature_____________________________________________________________

Send or Fax registration form with payment to:

    MICRO-28
    c/o Paula Denton
    2114A EECS Dept.
    University of Michigan
    1301 Beal Ave.
    Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2122
    Fax: (313) 763-4617

______________________________________________________________________________

This form and other conference information can be accessed via:

World Wide Web at               http://american.cs.ucdavis.edu/Micro28
or by anonymous ftp from        american.cs.ucdavis.edu:/Micro28
or by sending e-mail to         micro28@cs.ucdavis.edu

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

                       STUDENT TRAVEL GRANT INFORMATION
                                   MICRO-28
    THE IEEE/ACM 28th ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON MICROARCHITECTURE

I am pleased to announce the availability of MICRO-28 student travel grants.
The grant program is made possible through generous donations from IBM, Texas
Instruments, and Intel.  The purpose of the grant is to supplement the
advisors' research grants or the students' fellowship travel allowance to make
attending MICRO-28 more affordable. The details of the grant are given below:

(1)  Students who are presenting papers at MICRO-28 will be given higher
     priority in the selection process.  We expect to have at least 25 reci-
     pients this year.

(2)  We are aiming at covering approximately 50% of the airfare, hotel, and
     registration expenses with a maximum of $500.

(3)  Student applicants should fill out the enclosed application form and
     e-mail the application to paulad@eecs.umich.edu by November 1, 1995. The
     receipt of the application will be acknowledged immediately. The decision
     will be sent to the applicants by November 8, 1994.

(4)  The grant checks will be sent to the recipients AFTER the conference.
     Each grant recipient is required to send in all expense receipts Paula
     Denton at the address listed above, as well as a two-page summary of
     his/her experience with MICRO-28 after the conference via e-mail
     to paulad@eecs.umich.edu.  The check will be delivered after we receive
     the receipts and the report.

(5)  The grant recipients are still required to pay the conference registra-
     tion fee.  Note that all student participants will be entitled to ALL
     MICRO-28 events and proceedings in spite of the lower registration fee
     for students.

Trevor Mudge
General Chair, MICRO-28

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

                MICRO-28 Student Travel Grant Application Form
Name:_________________________________________________________________

Affiliation:__________________________________________________________

Expected degree and graduation date:__________________________________

Area of research:_____________________________________________________

Name of advisor:______________________________________________________

Postal address for sending the grant check:___________________________

E-mail address:_______________________________________________________

Paper title (if presenting a paper at MICRO-28):______________________

Have you published at MICRO before? If so, please list the years:

Estimate of expenses: airfare ____ hotel _____ registration _____
=============================================================================

