RE: AIS: What is "introduction"?



I think that the INTENT of the regulation is to get the info to the
registrar. Whether it is; an original ad torn from the catalog, a photocopy
of the ad, a printout of the web ad from the web catalog, etc etc. The
originality of the information would seem irrelevant. The advising of the
registrar along with some sort of credible back up material to substantiate
the introduction claim is the relevant part.

Christopher Hollinshead
Mississauga, Ontario  Canada  zone6b
AIS(Region 16), CIS, SSI
Director-Canadian Iris Society (CIS)
Newsletter Editor-Canadian Iris Society
E-mail:  cris@netcom.ca <c*@netcom.ca>
Canadian Iris Society (CIS) website:  http://www.netcom.ca/~cris/CIS.html
Siberian-Species Convention 2003 website:
http://www.netcom.ca/~cris/2003/index.html
Iris-talk info: http://www.netcom.ca/~cris/CIS/iristalk.html

> -----Original Message-----
> From: wmoores [w*@watervalley.net]
> Sent: Thursday, January 06, 2000 09:16
> To: iris-talk@onelist.com
> Subject: re: [iris-talk] AIS: What is "introduction"?
>
>
> 	If you print the internet ad, doesn't it then become 'hard copy?"
> And, then you would have to mail that 'hard copy' to the Registrar,
> who currently is not wired.  At that point, it is no longer an
> internet ad; it's just a printed copy.
>
> 	Also, aren't internet ads made from 'hard copy?"
>
> 	Maybe I am too picky!
>
> 	Walter Moores
> 	Enid Lake, MS 7/8
>


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