| Hey all, 
 A little blurb from the latest Forbes (streetwalker section:
 
 Dialing for dollars
 
 d TELEPHONE and Data Systems (Amex:
 TDS), the telecommunications giant, has been on
 hold. Shares in the $1.2 billion (1996 sales)
 company have dropped from around $49 last
 year to a recent $39.75. Why? Startup costs in its
 wireless personal communications services (PCS)
 unit-an alternative to cellular phones-continued
 losses in the paging unit and investor frustration
 with the company's controlling shareholders, the
 LeRoy Carlson family, who like to buy assets
 cheap but do little to help realize shareholder
 value.
 
 Time to buy. TDS has three main businesses:
 landline telephone (TDS Telecom, 100% owned),
 cellular service (U.S. Cellular, 81% owned;
 Amex: USM) and paging (American Paging, 82%
 owned; Amex: APP). There's also the PCS
 business (Aerial Communications, 83% owned;
 Nasdaq: AERL).
 
 Valuing TDS on its publicly traded units yields
 about $44.40 per share. Using multiples closer to
 its peers adds a few more dollars. How to unlock
 this value? Investor Michael Price may have an
 idea. He recently upped his holdings to 10% of
 common shares and installed a crony on TDS'
 board. The Carlsons are still in control, but Price
 may annoy them into action. Analyst Salvatore
 Muoio thinks the stock can hit $60 by mid-1998,
 a 54% rise.
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