Mike,
  FYI; hope this helps; I don't own any shares.
   Dow Jones News Service ~ July 29, 1996 ~ 5:13 pm EST   By Wendy Mitchell 
   NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Shares of ICTS Holland Production BV  (ICTSF) hit a 52-week high in response to increased worries about  terrorism and domestic airport security.
   The stock of the provider of enhanced airport security rose 3 5/8 ,  or 39.7%, to 12 3/4, after hitting a 52-week high of 14 5/8 earlier.  Nasdaq volume was 1.8 million shares, compared with average daily  volume of 138,500. The previous high was 9 7/8, reached Friday.
   ICTS currently provides services only to foreign airports and U.S.  airlines'foreign operations, but increased worries about terrorism   could open up a large U.S. market, analysts said.
   ''Though it's too early to tell, the U.S. market has the potential to  be twice as big as the European market,'' said Kurt Kammerer, an  analyst at Unterberg Harris.
   Kammerer said President Clinton's call Friday for increased security  at U.S. airports could be seen as the first step toward enhanced  security,with new regulations probably following a report from Vice  President Al Gore's task force on aviation safety and airport  security.
   ICTS, based in Amstelveen, Netherlands, has not announced potential  new contracts in the wake of the TWA Flight 800 crash and Saturday's  bombing in Centennial Olympic Park in Atlanta.
   ICTS is the only publicly held company providing enhanced aviation  security measures, known as risk analysis, that use ''profiling''  techniques for interviewing and monitoring passengers to identify  potential terrorists.
   Kammerer said he thought ICTS was prepared to expand into the U.S.  market immediately, by increasing its consulting and training   services used by some airlines here.
   Kammerer said that after the crash of TWA Flight 800, the market  responded primarily to technology companies such as makers of  bomb-detection devices. But the jump in ICTS demonstrates that  technology alone is not enough, he said. ''There is a great need for  human intervention,'' he said.
   William Smith, an analyst at Renaissance Capital Corp. in  Connecticut, said the company is also poised to benefit from  increasing outsourcing by the airline industry.
   ''Whether it be food or security, airlines are taking more and more  of nonflight concerns and outsourcing them,'' Smith said.
   Smith said ICTS is the leader in the market, with privately held  competition including Air Defense International Inc. and  International Aviation Security Inc. |