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Technology Stocks : COMS & the Ghost of USRX w/ other STUFF -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DMaA who wrote (18629)4/14/1999 3:49:00 PM
From: Scrapps  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22053
 
Item #4: White house considers high income to be just above food stamp qualification...unless you are elected.



To: DMaA who wrote (18629)4/14/1999 4:55:00 PM
From: Moonray  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 22053
 
Republican retort to your post: Quayle Announces 2000 Run For White House
04:06 p.m Apr 14, 1999 Eastern

HUNTINGTON, Ind. (Reuters) -
Former Vice President Dan Quayle,
seeking to establish himself as a viable
force to a dubious electorate, announced
his candidacy Wednesday for the 2000
Republican presidential nomination.

''I've come back home ... to announce
that I will seek and I will win the
presidency,'' Quayle said, insisting he is
not worried about long odds and big
names lined up against him.

Standing before more than 5,000
people, Quayle appeared to compare his
status to the small-town Indiana high
school, depicted in the movie
''Hoosiers,'' which upset larger foes
more than a generation ago to capture the
state basketball title.

''They worked hard. They worked
together. They were determined. They
won and I will win,'' Quayle thundered,
drawing sustained applause from a
Huntington North High School crowd.

Despite his optimistic words and the
hometown crowd's big cheers, Quayle,
52, was in jeopardy of becoming the
first sitting or former vice president in
nearly a half century to be denied his
party's presidential nomination.

A variety of national polls show Quayle
running far behind the top group in a
pack of 10 Republican presidential
hopefuls, led by Texas Gov. George W.
Bush, the son of Quayle's former boss,
President George Bush.

Quayle's message is that his years on
Capitol Hill and as vice president make
him the ''best qualified and most
experienced'' to be the Republican
presidential nominee.

In announcing his presidential
candidacy, Quayle blasted the Clinton
administration and defended his own
trademark family values.

''We are coming to the end of the
dishonest decade of Bill Clinton and Al
Gore,'' Quayle said. ''I will stand firm
and fight for our values ... faith,
respect, responsibility, integrity,
courage and patriotism.''

Quayle noted that he sparked a national
debate on values as vice president in
1992 when he criticized ''Murphy
Brown,'' the lead character in a
television comedy show by the same
name, for having a baby out of wedlock.

''Murphy Brown is gone,'' Quayle
declared Wednesday. ''I'm still here
fighting for American values.''

In 1988, Bush picked Quayle as his vice
presidential choice, calling the then
41-year-old senator -- first elected to
Congress at 29 -- ''a rising star in the
Republican Party.''

But as the vice presidential nominee and
later as vice president, he was prone to
celebrated gaffes, like when he visited a
grade school and misspelled ''potato.''

''I'd put Dan Quayle's presidential
prospects at between dim and dimmer,''
said Stu Rothenberg of the Rothenberg
Political Reporter, a nonpartisan
publication that tracks presidential,
congressional and gubernatorial races.

''Even among people who like him,
who feel that he has been treated unfairly
in the past, there is no sense that Dan
Quayle is going to be the nominee,''
Rothenberg said.

As a leading conservative voice, Quayle
opposes abortion, favors a bolstered
national defense and has proposed a 30
percent across the board tax cut. He has
repeatedly criticized Clinton's foreign
policy.

Quayle said because of ''mistake after
mistake after mistake'' by the
administration on war-torn Yugoslavia,
there are ''no good options left'' to end
the crisis in Kosovo.

In an interview this week, Quayle said
he will prove his viability by winning
state presidential preference votes,
which will begin early next year, and by
raising money, a crucial ingredient of
any successful campaign.

Quayle raised more than $2 million in
campaign contributions during the first
quarter of this year, second only to
Bush, who raked in more than $6
million.

Quayle became the sixth Republican to
formally declare his presidential
candidacy, following Sens. Bob Smith
of New Hampshire and John McCain of
Arizona, columnist Patrick Buchanan,
publisher Steve Forbes and former
Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander.

Bush is expected to announce his
candidacy within the next several
months. So are three other Republicans,
Rep. John Kasich of Ohio, conservative
activist Gary Bauer and former Cabinet
secretary Elizabeth Dole.

Copyright 1999 Reuters Limited. All
rights reserved. Republication and
redistribution of Reuters content is
expressly prohibited without the prior
written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall
not be liable for any errors or delays in
the content, or for any actions taken in
reliance thereon.

o~~~ O



To: DMaA who wrote (18629)4/14/1999 10:14:00 PM
From: John Nesbitt  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 22053
 
Aunt Abby Cohen? She looks more like my uncle Abe Cohen!!!!! HA HA HA! Who care what she says? Just another overpaid loser analyst. COMS held it's own today maybe better times are ahead.



To: DMaA who wrote (18629)4/20/1999 3:43:00 PM
From: Moonray  Respond to of 22053
 
eMachines Launches New Sub-$600 PCs Offering
Enhanced Features and Processing Performance
08:47 a.m. Apr 19, 1999 Eastern

IRVINE, Calif., April 19 /PRNewswire/
-- eMachines, Inc., the creator of the
sub-$600 PC market segment, today
announced its new Q2 '99 product line of
$399, $499 and $599 eTower computers.
Increasing its quarterly eTower
production to 400,000 units, after having
shipped approximately 300,000 in Q1,
eMachines continues on its path to ship
between 1.7 and 2.0 million of its
low-cost PCs, and exceed $1 billion in
revenue in its first full year of business.

The four new eMachines' eTower
products are designed to appeal to a
variety of computing requirements and
levels of expertise while maintaining the
sub-$600 price points. This quarter's
offerings include two Cyrix and two Intel
Celeron processor-based systems,
establishing 400 MHz as the company's
new high-end $599 model. A new
eTower with DVD is introduced
reflecting the increasing trend towards
convergence products and demand for
DVD products in the entry-level PC
market.

"We are continuing to see extraordinary
demand from national retailers and
consumers for all three pricing segments
of our eTower products," stated Stephen
A. Dukker, President and CEO of
eMachines, Inc. "By continuing to
increase production capacity of eTowers,
we are enabling more first-time buyers to
purchase a PC and experience the power
of the Internet."

400MHz & DVD Models Present
Unprecedented Price/Performance in
Ultra Low Cost PC Space

In its Q2 lineup, eMachines introduces its
first 400 MHz system and a 366 MHz
unit with a 5x DVD drive. eMachines is
now delivering functionality comparable
to PCs selling for over $1,500 only six
months ago. "Never before has the PC
industry seen such dramatic increases in
price/performance in such a brief span of
time," said Dukker.

Four New eTower Models

-- Priced at $399 (after $75 rebate), the
eTower 333cs features a Cyrix M-II 333
MMX processor, 512K Level 2 cache,
32 MB memory, 2.1 GB hard drive, 32x
CD-ROM, ATI Rage IIc 3D AGP
graphics with 4MB SDRAM, V.90/56K
fax/modem, 3.5 inch 1.44 MB floppy
drive, Crystal 3D audio, two USB ports,
three expansion slots, a keyboard, mouse
and speakers. Software includes
Microsoft Windows 98 and Microsoft
Works.

-- The eTower 366c, priced at $499 (after
$75 rebate), features a Cyrix M-II 366
MMX processor, 512K L2 cache, 3.2
GB hard drive, 32x CD-ROM, ATI Rage
IIc 3D AGP graphics with 4MB
SDRAM, V.90/56K fax/modem, 3.5
inch 1.44 MB floppy drive, Crystal 3D
audio, two USB ports, three expansion
slots, a keyboard, mouse and speakers.
Software includes Microsoft Windows
98 and Microsoft Works.

-- The eTower 366id, featuring a 5x DVD
drive, is priced at $599 (after $75 rebate)
and includes an Intel Celeron 366 MHz
processor with 128KB on-chip cache, 32
MB memory, 4.3 GB hard drive, 5x
DVD drive, Mediamatics' DVD Express
software decoder, ATI Rage Pro-Turbo
2X AGP with 4MB SDRAM and
hardware DVD acceleration, a V.90/56K
fax/modem, 3.5 inch 1.44 MB floppy
drive, Crystal 3D audio, two USB ports,
three expansion slots, a keyboard, mouse
and speakers. Software includes
Microsoft Windows 98 and Microsoft
Works.

-- The eTower 400i, priced at $599 (after
$75 rebate), features an Intel Celeron 400
MHz processor with 128 KB on-chip
cache, 4.3 GB hard drive, 32x
CD-ROM, ATI Rage IIc 3D AGP
graphics with 4MB SDRAM, V.90/56K
fax/modem, 3.5 inch 1.44 MB floppy
drive, Crystal PCI 3D audio, two USB
ports, three expansion slots, a keyboard,
mouse and speakers. Software includes
Microsoft Windows 98 and Microsoft
Works.

About eMachines, Inc.

Founded in September 1998, eMachines
is the first PC company to focus on
desktop computers exclusively in the
$399 to $599 price range with a mission
to expand household penetration of
first-time purchases and increase second
and third computers per house
ownership. eMachines' principle
investors include Korean PC
manufacturer TriGem Computer and
monitor maker Korea Data Systems
(KDS). With the backing of these two
manufacturing powerhouses and the
channel expertise of its management
team, eMachines is positioned to become
a major computer-centric consumer
electronics brand. The company's Web
site is located at www.e4me.com.
SOURCE eMachines, Inc.

Copyright 1999, PR Newswire

o~~~ O