Selected Media Coverage: December 8, 2005

Students IM libraries to ask questions, get info
12/06/2005 - WHP-TV (cir. )

News in brief from eastern Pennsylvania
12/04/2005 - Associated Press (cir. )

Phila. PR society holds annual awards
12/03/2005 - Philadelphia Business Journal (cir. 11,441)

Philadelphia PR Pros Honored at 37th Annual Pepperpot & Achievement Awards
12/02/2005 - MarketWatch (NY) (cir. )

Automatic Transporter Retrieval System
12/02/2005 - WPVI-TV (cir. )

PAST PERFECT AND A PROMISING FUTURE
11/27/2005 - Khaleej Times (United Arab Emirates) (cir. )

Quashing Quicksilver
11/23/2005 - Mechanical Engineering Magazine (cir. 92,910)

What Does the Law Say?
11/01/2005 - Teaching Exceptional Children (cir. 60,000)

Book Review
10/01/2005 - Journal of Biblical Literature (cir. 9,000)

Poker Academy Texas Hold'Em Software
08/01/2005 - Poker Pro Magazine (cir. )


con_paperclip.gif alt=>Students IM libraries to ask questions, get info
12/06/2005 - WHP-TV (cir. )
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Students IM libraries to ask questions, get infoALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP) - Two Lehigh Valley universities are using instant messaging technology as the latest way for students to ask questions and get information from the college library. At Moravian College in Bethlehem, students can send a question from their home or dorm through America Online's instant messenger. A librarian on duty at Reeves Library will respond within minutes.
Lehigh University also has an InstantService, which allows librarians to send journal articles or Web pages to students over the chat medium. Moravian librarian Wendy Juniper says the technology is a way to engage students and connect with them through a medium that is familiar to them. She says library officials see them chatting on A-I-M with their friends on the library computers all the time. Juniper said the library staff figured that would be easier than teaching students how to use a new program. --- Information from The Morning Call, http //www.mcall.com 2005 Associated Press.
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. PRINT & E-MAIL MORE HEADLINES Struggling Erie likely to cut centralized Court New Page 1 WHP CBS 21 is proud to air Educational and Informational programming for children.
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con_paperclip.gif alt=>News in brief from eastern Pennsylvania
12/04/2005 - Associated Press (cir. )
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ALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP) _ Two universities are using instant
messaging technology in the latest way for students to ask
questions and get information from the college library.
At Moravian College in Bethlehem, students can send a question
from their home or dorm through America Online's instant messenger.
A librarian on duty at Reeves Library will respond within minutes.
Lehigh University also has a InstantService, which allows
librarians to send journal articles or Web pages to students over
the chat medium.
Moravian librarian Wendy Juniper said the technology is a way to
engage students and connect with them through a medium that is
familiar to them.
``We see them chatting on AIM with their friends on the library
computers all the time,'' Juniper said. ``I figured it would be
easier than teaching them how to use a new program.''
___
BETHLEHEM, Pa. (AP) _ City officials are considering whether to
expand its smoking ban on city property beyond the current
regulations, which apply only to City Hall.
City-owned parks and buildings could go smoke-free next year,
according to the city health bureau.
Councilman Gordon Mowrer is pushing an initiative to make all
buildings in Bethlehem smoke-free but health bureau officials see a
smoking ban on city property as more feasible.
AP-ES-12-05-05 0854EST
Copyright 2005 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not
be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Lehigh University


con_paperclip.gif alt=>Phila. PR society holds annual awards
12/03/2005 - Philadelphia Business Journal (cir. 11,441)
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Toplin Public Relations of Fort Washington, Pa., and Diccico Battista Communications of Horsham, Pa., won top honors Thursday night in Philadelphia's annual public relations awards held at the Union League of Philadelphia. The agencies won 'best of show' for their cooperative effort on an organ donor campaign, according to the Philadelphia chapter of the Public Relations Society of America, which hosted the 37th annual Pepperpot & Achievement Awards. Last year's big winner, FCF Schmidt, took home eight Pepperpots. Other multiple first-place winners were Tattar Richards-DBC, LevLane Public Relations, Lehigh University and Star Rosen. A total of 118 entries were judged. PRSA's Philadelphia chapter has 500 members.


con_paperclip.gif alt=>Philadelphia PR Pros Honored at 37th Annual Pepperpot & Achievement Awards
12/02/2005 - MarketWatch (NY) (cir. )
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12/2/2005 8:35:01 AM
PHILADELPHIA, Dec 02, 2005 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- The Philadelphia chapter
of the Public Relations Society of America (PRSA) awarded Toplin
Publimmer programmes. We have also offered summer
programme at St Hughes College in Oxford, England and field trips to
various destinations in Europe and in the Gulf, Dr. Suhair added.
Starting with a class of 120 students in three majors in 1999, the
college now has close to 600 students in five majors. It targets at
least 200 more students for enrolment for the coming academic year.
There is a lot of interest in the community in our college and what
it offers. The success of our programmes is also related to the fact
that our majors were chosen after a feasibility study in the community
and survey among high school students as well as among prospective
employers as to what fields they most need skilled professionals in,
she explained. All our graduates have gone on to higher studies or
are hired in challenging positions with excellent salaries, often
before they graduated from college, she added.
Top
(c) 2005 Khaleej Times All Rights Reserved.

Lehigh\University


con_paperclip.gif alt=>Quashing Quicksilver
11/23/2005 - Mechanical Engineering Magazine (cir. 92,910)
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Publication date: 2005-11-01
Arrival time: 2005-11-23
By Winters, Jeffrey
Last March, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency issued its
first-ever restrictions on mercury emissions from coal-fired power
plants. The new regulations, long opposed by the power industry, which
feared the expense of control devices, order a 23 percent cut by 2010
and a nearly 69 percent reduction by 2018.
But meeting these goals may not be as costly and difficult as first
thought, if research results from Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pa.,
can be applied. In tests at three East Coast power plants, flue-gas
emissions of mercury have been slashed by as much as 70 percent
without depressing plant performance or boosting fuel costs.
U.S. power plants spew 40 tons of mercury yearly.
The system under testing changes the operation within the boiler to
promote the oxidation of mercury in the flue gas so that it can be
absorbed in the fly ash. When oxidized in this way, the mercury can be
readily captured by common pollution control equipment, such as
scrubbers or filters.
One of the developers of the system, Carlos Romero of Lehigh's Energy
Research Center, estimates that such a system could save a 250 MW
coal-fired power plant as much as $2 million a year in mercury control
costs.
The research will be published in an upcoming issue of the journal
Fuel.
JEFFREY WINTERS
Copyright American Society of Mechanical Engineers Nov 2005
Publication date: 2005-11-01
(c) 2005, YellowBrix, Inc.

Lehigh University


con_paperclip.gif alt=>What Does the Law Say?
11/01/2005 - Teaching Exceptional Children (cir. 60,000)
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Perry Zirkel, professor, college of education, wrote an article for Teaching Exceptional Children magazine. For a complete view of the article, please click on the paperclip above.


con_paperclip.gif alt=>Book Review
10/01/2005 - Journal of Biblical Literature (cir. 9,000)
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Benjamin Wright, professor, religion studies, wrote a book review for The Journal of Biblical Literature. For a complete view of the article, please click on the paperclip above.


con_paperclip.gif alt=>Poker Academy Texas Hold'Em Software
08/01/2005 - Poker Pro Magazine (cir. )
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Hector Munoz-Avila, assistant professor, computer science and engineering, was quoted in an article for Poker Pro magazine. For a complete view of the article, please click on the paperclip above.