FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE December 17, 2002

Berkeley Electronic Press Teams with ProQuest to Unveil New Electronic Dissertation Submission Program

ProQuest Company's (NYSE: PQE) Information and Learning unit, in conjunction with The Berkeley Electronic Press, today announced the development of a Web-based application for the submission, review, and approval of electronic theses and dissertations. The application, which will be made available to graduate schools, is expected to improve and speed the dissertation publishing process for graduate students, faculty, and graduate schools.

Through its UMI® Dissertation Publishing program, ProQuest publishes more than 50,000 dissertations and master's theses each year and offers full text copies of more than one million dissertations dating from the 19th century forward. Some 3,000 (or 5%) dissertations submitted for publication in 2002 were in electronic format, and that number is expected to increase significantly in the next few years.

"This is a major step toward the development of comprehensive dissertation authoring tools and services," said Dan Arbour, Executive Director and Vice President of ProQuest's UMI division. "We believe this new system will allow for greater efficiencies in the dissertation publishing process. It facilitates communication among the graduate students, faculty, and scholars, and provides a consistent medium and process."

The new system allows a graduate student to upload his or her approved dissertation into the publishing system, where it is automatically reformatted into Adobe PDF and sent directly to the graduate school. There, the document is reviewed for compliance with graduate school policy and format. Using an administrative tool, the graduate school reviewer can accept the document or request formatting revisions. The author is automatically notified by email of the actions taken.

Once the dissertation is accepted, the document and all relevant data are delivered to UMI Dissertation Publishing and to the university library for expedited processing, cataloguing, and posting. The new automated system is expected to substantially improve the publication process.

The backend technology to support this new process was developed entirely by The Berkeley Electronic Press. "We are pleased to support ProQuest in their efforts to streamline the dissertation process," said Robert Cooter, co-founder of The Berkeley Electronic Press. "This system will enable theses and dissertations to be processed and disseminated in a much more efficient manner, saving time for students, professors, and administrators."

The service is available now and is being rolled out to graduate schools throughout the next year. Graduate schools interested in signing up may contact ProQuest at electronic_submissions@il.proquest.com. UMI continues to accept dissertations for publication in print format.

About ProQuest Company

ProQuest Company (NYSE: PQE) was born of Bell & Howell Company's two highly respected information access businesses. Based in Ann Arbor, Mich., ProQuest Company is a leader in e-learning and e-publishing. For its customers in the academic, library, automotive, and powersports industries, the company provides access to a body of content that is unmatched in breadth and depth. Additional information on ProQuest Company can be found at www.proquestcompany.com.

ProQuest Information and Learning is a world leader in collecting, organizing, and distributing information worldwide to researchers, faculty, and students in libraries and schools. Known widely for its strength in business and economics, general-reference, humanities, social sciences, and STM content, the company develops premium databases comprising periodicals, newspapers, dissertations, out-of-print books, and other scholarly information from more than 8,500 publishers worldwide. Users access the information through the ProQuest® Web-based online information system, Chadwyck-Healey™ electronic and microform resources, UMI® microform and print reference products, and XanEdu™ online faculty and student resources. For more information about ProQuest Information and Learning, visit www.il.proquest.com.

About The Berkeley Electronic Press

Founded by academics in 1999, The Berkeley Electronic Press ("bepress") is both a publisher of peer-reviewed electronic journals and a software developer, having created the institutional repository platform that powers Digital Commons as well as the University of California's eScholarship Repository. The Company produces tools to improve scholarly communication via innovative and effective means of content production and dissemination. Bepress has a portfolio of products and services that reduces the costs of and barriers to access.

For additional information on bepress, please see: www.bepress.com.