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Microcap & Penny Stocks : TGL WHAAAAAAAT! Alerts, thoughts, discussion. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jim Bishop who wrote (95427)11/3/2001 8:54:43 PM
From: StocksDATsoar  Respond to of 150070
 
SPEEDY HAD ANOTHER NEW BORN...ROTF!

KAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAABOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM!!!

suzukicycles.com

suzukicycles.com



To: Jim Bishop who wrote (95427)11/3/2001 9:06:31 PM
From: StocksDATsoar  Respond to of 150070
 
Venom 800 Twin Turbo 0 to 60 mph in 2.4 Sec!

WOW WEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE LOLLLLLLLLLLLL

hennesseymotorsports.com

WHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHAT!!!!

KAAAAAAAAAAABOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM!!!

Performance (as tested by MOTOR TREND):
0 - 60 mph: 2.4 sec.
0 - 100 mph: 5.5 sec.
0 - 150 mph: 12.9 sec.
1/4 mile: 10.1 @ 137 mph
0 - 100 - 0: 9.9 sec.
Top Speed: 235 mph (estimated) ESTIMATE THIS! LMAO!

hennesseymotorsports.com



To: Jim Bishop who wrote (95427)11/4/2001 9:28:12 PM
From: StocksDATsoar  Respond to of 150070
 
U.S. Jets Strike Front Line Near Kabul
Defense Secretary Rumsfeld Says Taliban Government Weakened

By GREG MYRE
.c The Associated Press

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (Nov. 4) - After four weeks of U.S. attacks, Afghanistan's ruling Taliban are no longer ''functioning as a government,'' Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said Sunday. But an opposition attack on a key northern city was reported faltering only hours after it was launched.

That raised doubts whether the factious, poorly armed northern alliance opposition could exploit U.S. airstrikes and topple the Taliban without the assistance of American ground troops.

Meanwhile, U.S. jets struck the front line about 30 miles north of Kabul, according to Atiqullah Baryalai, deputy defense minister of the northern alliance. In the Afghan capital itself, American bombs hit near the Intercontinental Hotel, set on a hill in the southwest part of the city.

They also struck the northeast town of Taloqan, which the opposition lost to the Taliban last year.

Rumsfeld, on a tour of front line states in the war against terrorism, sought to dispel fears that the air campaign, now in its fifth week, was failing to crack the Taliban's grip on Afghanistan.

''The Taliban (are) not really functioning as a government,'' Rumsfeld declared after meeting Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf, a key Muslim ally in the anti-terrorism campaign.

Rumsfeld, who later Sunday went on to India, said the Taliban were ''using their power in enclaves throughout the country'' and were ''not making major military moves.''

''They are pretty much in static positions,'' he said. Rumsfeld said the Islamic militia was using mosques as command centers and as ammunition storage sites to spare them from American attack and ''actively lying about civilian casualties.''

Earlier Sunday, in Uzbekistan, Rumsfeld gave an assessment of the military campaign's success to date. ''The effort to deal with the problem of terrorist networks is proceeding,'' Rumsfeld said. ''It is, we believe, proceeding at a pace that is showing measurable progress.''

A key element of the U.S. strategy has been to attack Taliban positions facing the northern alliance - especially on the front north of Kabul and on positions defending the Taliban-held city of Mazar-e-Sharif.

On Sunday, opposition spokesman Nadeem Ashraf said alliance forces launched a three-pronged offensive south of Mazar-e-Sharif in strategic Kishanday district in Balkh province, which borders Uzbekistan. The spokesman said the attack began after U.S. jets softened up Taliban positions by heavy bombing.

Hours later, however, Ashraf said one of the three opposition columns, led by Uzbek warlord Rashid Dostum, was making no progress and the offensive was faltering. He said Dostum's forces numbered only about 700 to 1,000 fighters and had ''no high morale.''

His assessment could not be independently confirmed. However, it points to ethnic rivalries within the northern alliance that have long hampered the opposition's ability to mount an effective challenge to the Taliban.

The other troops in the Mazar-e-Sharif front are commanded by a close ally of the northern alliance's titular leader, former Afghan president Burhanuddin Rabbani, and by Shiite Muslim warlord Mohammed Mohaqik.

Opposition commanders around the other major front, north of Kabul, have said they are preparing for a major offensive toward the capital after days of heavy U.S. airstrikes. However, there have been few signs that a major push toward Kabul is in the offing.

President Bush ordered the airstrikes Oct. 7 after the Taliban repeatedly refused to surrender Osama bin Laden, chief suspect in the September terrorist attacks that killed about 4,500 people in the United States.

Over the past week, U.S. attacks have shifted from cities to Taliban positions facing the northern alliance. However, opposition forces are poorly armed and outgunned, and the approach of winter is making resupply of its front-line positions more difficult.

In Washington, Air Force Gen. Richard Myers, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, acknowledged that the U.S. military is ''settling in for the long haul.''

The Taliban ''have a substantial force left, but at this point that's exactly what we expected,'' Myers said on NBC's ''Meet the Press.''

He said a couple more teams of special forces were placed in Afghanistan in the last day or so to work with opposition leaders and better coordinate airstrikes.

Myers and Army Gen. Tommy Franks, commander of U.S. forces in the war, declined to say whether it would take a major deployment of U.S. ground troops to topple the Taliban.

Appearing on ABC's ''This Week,'' Franks was asked whether he would rule out the use of a large number of ground forces. ''Absolutely not,'' he replied.

In Pakistan, Rumsfeld addressed the issue of a pause in the bombing campaign during the Islamic holy month Ramadan, which begins around Nov. 17. Bush has ruled out any pause, despite appeals from Musharraf and other Muslim allies.

''The reality is that the threat of additional terrorist acts is there,'' Rumsfeld told reporters. The United States will be sensitive to the views in the region, he added, but he declined to outline the U.S. military plans.

In other developments:

- The U.N. special envoy for Afghanistan brought his search for a broad-based government for Afghanistan to Iran on Sunday, where he met with Afghan exiles.

- In London, British Prime Minister Tony Blair scheduled a meeting with key European leaders Sunday to discuss the war on terrorism, his office said. Blair was also expected to brief allies on his efforts to shore up Muslim support for the campaign.

AP-NY-11-04-01 2059EST

Copyright 2001 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.



To: Jim Bishop who wrote (95427)11/4/2001 9:43:44 PM
From: StocksDATsoar  Respond to of 150070
 
WOW, READ THIS, UNBEAL IN MY OPINION.

ragingbull.lycos.com

By: CoolHandII $$$$
Reply To: None Thursday, 1 Nov 2001 at 11:46 PM EST
Post # of 25985


BIGT:NASDAQ $18 ASSET VALUE FOR $.65
See Research links at bottom of post:
Pinnacle Holdings, Inc. (BIGT:NASDAQ) which owns over 5,000 wireless tower sites in the United States. This is a recession proof "public utility" type sector with exponential growth: The time the average user spends on the cellphone (growing 38% annually) means that capacity has to increase 75% ayear to keep pace. Potential investors note:

1)BIGT Insiders have bought 328,000 shares between $.78 and $1.02 in last 2 months.

2)The John Hancock fund, one of the premier small cap funds in the U.S, PURCHASED 10% OF BIGT IN AUGUST (SEC 13g Filing dated August 31, 2001). John Hancock officials met with BIGT executives for 2 weeks prior to their investment and liked what they heard.

3)BIGT has an net asset value approaching $20 per share based on the following:
Industry observers say wireless towers are CURRENTLY (in a depressed market) valued at 12-15 X EBIDTA (earnings before interest, depreciation and taxes). In a NORMAL market towers would be valued at 18-22 X EBIDTA. Applying a conservative 15 multiple to BIGT forecast 2002 EBIDTA of $113 MM gives a net asset value of $1.7 BB or $33 per share. Back out BIGT $840 MM debt gives equity value of $18 per share.

4)BIGT is trading at DEEP discounts to others in the Tower Sector. BIGT Price/Sales ratio is .09 compared to 1.0 for SITE and 2.9 for AMT. If BIGT traded on a comparable basis it would be between $5 and $13.

5)The ongoing SEC investigation has artificially depressed BIGT's share price. BIGT has complied with the SEC investigation by filing reaudited financial statements by a different auditor. The expectation by several analysts following BIGT is that the SEC Investigation will conclude before year end, which will bring Institutional Investors back en masse.

6)Cash: BIGT has $23 MM cash, $10 prepaid expense (cash due from Motorola), and $35 MM in assets for sale they have CURRENT offers for per last conference call.

USEFUL DD LINKS:
Sarasota Herald Tribune Article on BIGT: New Orleans Broker rates BIGT as compelling buy opportinity.
newscoast.com

Wireless area is telco "bright spot", Usage per tower to double in the next 5 years
messages.yahoo.com

Loop Capital Markets BIGT Report in August- $10 Target for BIGT, liquidity concerns overstated
messages.yahoo.com

BIGT Profile, Website
biz.yahoo.com
Insider buying:
biz.yahoo.com

Recent Aquisition of 5 million shares by John Hancock Fund:
ragingbull.tenkwizard.com tal=&back=1&g=&attach=on

Cool