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To: Night Writer who wrote (28260)6/26/1998 2:16:00 PM
From: John Koligman  Respond to of 97611
 
Off topic - Piece on shareholder suits via SI from today's WSJ...

NEW YORK -- Brad McNeely has never met face to face with any of his
fellow Corporate Vision Inc. shareholders who are taking legal action
against the company.

Instead, he "chats" with them on the popular Internet message board,
Silicon Investor, where three weeks ago he stumbled across a message
from a disgruntled shareholder offering to hire an attorney to fight the
company's plans for a proposed merger.

The 30-year-old North Carolina resident
signed on as a plaintiff, as did more than 60
other investors. And the group and their
Oklahoma attorney have carefully planned
their strategy, using e-mail and the message
board.

"I don't think I would have known anything
about what was going on without using the
message board," Mr. McNeely said. "... This
small group of investors got to know each other through the thread. We
leaned on each other. We moaned and complained. ... If it wasn't for that,
I don't think many of us would be participating in this lawsuit."

Shareholders organizing lawsuits against companies via an Internet
message board is not the norm. But shareholder advocacy groups agree
that Mr. McNeely and his cohorts are just the beginning.

In the last two years, the Internet has become a popular way for individual
investors to find information and research about an endless array of stocks.
Now Web pages and message boards are proving to be just as useful in
launching legal actions by shareholders against publicly traded companies.

Law firms, pension funds and shareholder-rights groups often use Web
pages to disseminate information about court cases and class-action suits,
usually to attract more plaintiffs or to scrounge up information. And
apparently individual investors are also using similar tactics.

Fuming investors with shares in Halifax PLC, a British bank, have been
rallied by a man in Brazil using a Web page entitled UNHAV -- United
Halifax Victims.

UNHAV claims to have 400 members in 55 countries.

"I see more and more Web sites and more and more law firms going that
route," said Chris Bohner, research analyst for the AFL-CIO's office of
investment. "All aspects of the shareholder process are being handled over
the Internet."

Elsewhere, Internet message boards and chat rooms provide a fertile
recruiting ground for potential shareholder plaintiffs.

The boards bring together people from vastly different backgrounds and
places but who share a common interest, providing an easy and cheap way
to find and talk to a company's shareholders.

Message boards are accessible to anyone with a computer and an Internet
connection, although some charge membership fees. And the Web sites
that are popular among individual investors, including the Motley Fool,
Yahoo! Finance and Silicon Investor, are visited by thousands of users
daily. For small investors attempting with limited resources to launch a
grass-roots legal battle, the Internet is an invaluable resource, said Pat
McGurn, director of corporate programs for the Institutional Shareholder
Services, an advisory group for institutional investors.

"Before the advent of the Internet, grass-roots legal efforts would have
been impossible," Mr. McGurn said. "You would not have been able to
even get a shareholder list. You would have had to sue the company and
that would have been a substantial outpouring of cash. Now you have the
Internet. ... There are so many chat rooms that coming into contact with
people is not hard to do."

Just ask Keith Anderson.

The New Jersey resident and Corporate Vision shareholder posted
messages on Silicon Investor, vowing to take legal action over a proposed
merger with Western Oil and Tire Distributors Inc. that resulted in a
300-for-1 reverse stock split and dual overseas stock placements. A few
weeks later, more than 100 disgruntled shareholders had contacted his
attorney in Oklahoma.

A complaint filed in state court earlier this month listed 66 plaintiffs.

A judge issued an injunction against the merger last week and ordered the
company to hold a shareholder meeting later this month. The company
responded by asking the court to reconsider its decision.

"How else can we shareholders contact each other?" Mr. Anderson said.
"This is what is scaring Wall Street so much. The fact that investors can
contact each other."

It's not the only thing scaring some.

While the Internet is a powerful tool for investors, time has also proven
that it can be manipulated.

"People should be very cautious," said Nell Minow, partner in Lens Inc.,
an activist money manager based in Washington. "Just like every place else
on the Internet, there are people very excited to use the Internet to take
advantage."

Jack Arnold, president of Corporate Vision and the company's sole board
member, contends that less-than-selfless motives are behind the legal
action against his company.

"One shareholder can have a hidden agenda," Mr. Arnold said. "He can
have an idea of what he would like to do. He can go to the Internet and try
and block the deal."

Reform legislation passed in 1995 to reduce "meritless" class-action
securities fraud lawsuits toughened provisions and standards for plaintiffs.
Although a provision in the legislation requires a "lead plaintiff," initially
intended to get law firms to find an institutional investor to lead the legal
fight, some firms have taken to using the Web to recruit dozens of small
investors and lump them together, Mr. McGurn said.

"They can look like grass-roots movements," she added, "but they can be
orchestrated by someone in a law firm."

John



To: Night Writer who wrote (28260)6/26/1998 2:20:00 PM
From: John Koligman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
CPQ in business alliance with Huntington Bancshares...


Dow Jones Newswires -- June 26, 1998
Compaq In Pact To Deliver Huntington
Bancshrs Unit Svc

Dow Jones Newswires

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Compaq Computer Corp. (CPQ) and Sarcom Inc.
formed a business banking alliance to deliver Huntington National Bank's
"Worry Free Computer Solution" for business banking clients.

Huntington is a unit of Huntington Bancshares Inc. (HBAN).

In a press release Friday, Huntington National said it offers business banking
clients a turnkey computer package with a Compaq desktop or notebook
computer, a Lexmark color jet printer, installation and training, and a year of
trouble-shooting through telephone help desk support.

Sarcom will deliver the service components.

Huntington Bancshares provides mortgages, trust and investment banking
services.

John



To: Night Writer who wrote (28260)6/27/1998 8:52:00 AM
From: Shane Stump  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 97611
 
Let me save you a lot of time and money on the notebook shopping: BUY A THINKPAD!! My business depends on my notebooks and IBM is by far the best. I have owned COMPAQ, TOSHIBA, DELL, and IBM. There is no comparison.

Shane
ThinkPad 770ED user