From: "Catherine Austin Fitts" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

And I thought that a $4.7 Billion seizure of HUD loan sales was
big.....silly me...check out two articles below...

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Friday February 4, 2:18 pm Eastern Time

Surging gold hits 14-week spot and futures high

NEW YORK, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Gold futures and bullion prices stormed to their
highest levels since late October on Friday,
as short covering, rumored producer hedge unwinding and fresh buying fueled
panicky rallies past $300 an ounce.

COMEX April gold at 1415 EST stood at $314.50, up $25.10, or over seven
percent from Thursday's close. It reached its highest since October 21, when
gold was retracing from the spike to two-year highs near $340 on October 5.

Rumors swirled all morning that a gold mining company had bought back a
hedge position. The move got momentum when fund stop-loss buy orders were
executed at $292.50/$294 and then above $300, the break of which occured
just after noon.

``You're seeing short covering in this market and I think you are also
seeing probably funds reversing their short positions and probably going
long,'' said
George Parrill, a director at ScotiaMocatta.

Spot bullion was quoted at $301.80/2.60 an ounce, its priciest since October
25.

Bullion's leg up over $300 came just minutes after Canadian miner Placer
Dome (Toronto:PDG.TO - news) said it was moving to suspend all gold hedging
programs immediatly, based on expectations of improving gold market
sentiment.

For the April contract, the rise was the biggest in one day since the
September 27-28, $285.30-to-$310.90 surge, on the back of the September 26
Washington Agreement by 15 European central banks to cap gold market
activities for five years.


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      http://www.gold-eagle.com/editorials_00/howe020400.html">

     Reprinted with Permission


     Two Bills: Scandal and Opportunity in Gold?

     Last week the world's movers and shakers held their annual confab in
Davos, Switzerland. Bill C. and Bill G. were there. No
     doubt the scandal enveloping Helmut Kohl, Europe's greatest statesman
since Churchill and De Gaulle, provided much grist for
     gossip. But here at home, some began to glimpse the outline of a
possible new Clinton scandal -- one that could ultimately
     eclipse Watergate or Teapot Dome.

     Evidence is accumulating that the administration of Bill Clinton may
have turned the Exchange Stabilization Fund (the "ESF")
     into a political slush fund to make itself look good and simultaneously
profit some of its closest Wall Street friends and
     supporters. Specifically, the known facts support credible allegations
that the Clinton administration has effectively capped the
     gold price by using the ESF to backstop the selling of gold futures and
other gold derivative products by politically
     well-connected bullion banks. Such interference in the free market
price of gold would undermine its traditional role as a leading
     indicator of inflation. And it would do so at the same time that the
administration's many adjustments to the CPI have rendered
     that lagging indicator of inflation also suspect. Among the bullion
banks most heavily involved in selling gold futures and
     purveying gold loans, forward sales and other derivatives that undercut
its price is Goldman Sachs, former Treasury Secretary
     Robert Rubin's old firm.

     These are serious allegations, but the current administration scarcely
merits much benefit of the doubt. If these allegations are
     incorrect, Treasury Secretary Summers can deny them in unequivocal
language as Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan did two
     weeks ago with regard to similar allegations of gold price manipulation
by the Fed. Indeed, in a formal letter to Senator
     Lieberman (Dem., Conn.) (reprinted at
www.egroups.com/group/gata/346.html), the Fed chairman not only denied that
the Fed
     had intervened in the gold or gold derivatives markets, but also added:
"Most importantly, the Federal Reserve is in complete
     agreement with the proposition that any such transactions on our part,
aimed at manipulating the price of gold or otherwise
     interfering in the free trade of gold, would be wholly inappropriate."
[Emphasis supplied.]

     The odd behavior of the gold price over the past five years, including
massive gold leasing and heavy bouts of futures selling
     apparently timed to abort threatened rallies, has generated
considerable speculation regarding intentional manipulation by
     governmental authorities. What has made weakness in the gold price all
the more perplexing are mounting shortfalls of new
     mine production relative to annual demand. Because most nations deal in
gold through their central banks, they are prime
     suspects. Clarifying remarks that he made to Congress in 1998, Mr.
Greenspan confirmed in his letter to Senator Lieberman
     that some central banks other than the Fed do in fact lease gold on
occasion for the express purpose of trying to contain its
     price. Gold leased by central banks to bullion banks is typically sold
by them into the market in connection with arranging forward
     sales by gold mining companies or making gold loans to mining companies
or others. The attraction of gold loans is their
     typically low interest rates (known in the trade as "lease rates") of
around 2%.

     The Fed and the ESF are the only arms of the U.S. government with broad
statutory authority "to deal in gold" and thus by
     reasonable extension in gold futures and derivatives. Were the Fed to
engage in such activities, it would of necessity have to do
     so subject to all the institutional safeguards that govern its more
important functions. Unlike the Fed, the ESF is virtually without
     institutional structure or safeguards. It is under the exclusive
control of the Secretary of the Treasury, subject only to the approval
     of the President. Indeed, direct control and custody of the ESF must
rest at all times with the President and the Secretary. The
     statute further provides (31 U.S.C. s. 5302(a)(2)): "Decisions of the
Secretary are final and may not be reviewed by another
     officer or employee of the Government."

     Originally funded out of the profits from the 1934 gold confiscation,
the little known ESF is available for intervention in the foreign
     exchange markets. In the absence of a Congressional appropriation, the
Clinton administration used funds from the ESF to
     finance the 1995 U.S. bailout of Mexico. However, accepting the
Greenspan dictum that it "would be wholly inappropriate" for
     the Fed ever to intervene in the gold market to manipulate the price,
it is hard to imagine any situation in which such intervention
     would be appropriate by the ESF, never mind one involving large profits
for the former investment bank of the Secretary himself.

     Last week, in response to an inquiry from Bridge News, Secretary
Summers "categorically denied" that the Treasury was selling
     gold. With all due respect to the Secretary, this is not the allegation
that knowledgeable gold market participants and observers
     are making. Their allegation is that the ESF -- by writing gold call
options or otherwise -- is making sufficient gold cover
     available to certain bullion banks to allow them safely to take large
short positions in gold, thereby putting downward pressure on
     the price and in the process making huge profits for themselves.

     Two devices that have put the most pressure on the gold price in recent
years are sales of gold futures contracts on certain
     public exchanges, the COMEX in New York being the largest and most
important, and sales of leased gold in connection with
     gold loans and forward selling by miners. Bullion banks that engage in
these activities must of necessity take short positions in
     gold. While these positions can result in large profits for them when
the gold price declines, they can -- if unhedged -- also result
     in large losses should the gold price rise.

     The most common tactic used by bullion banks to hedge against such
losses is the purchase of gold call options, usually from
     gold producers, other large holders of physical gold, or entities with
sufficient financial resources to guarantee cash settlement.
     In the absence of such protection, bullion banks leasing gold or
selling large amounts of gold futures contracts for their own
     account (or the accounts of any but the strongest gold credits) would
be forced to assume risky net short positions on which they
     could sustain huge losses in the event of an upward spike in the gold
price. At the same time, sellers (often called "writers") of
     gold call options also assume risk, for they will be called upon to
provide gold (or equivalent cash settlement) to the bullion
     banks in the event that the gold price rises above the strike prices of
the options.

     Given its own resources of something like $40 billion dollars and its
connection to the U.S. Treasury, which controls the nation's
     official gold reserves of about 8150 metric tonnes, the ESF has the
ability to write gold call options in circumstances where
     private parties would not. Should it do so, it can effectively permit
favored bullion banks to engage in gold futures selling and
     gold leasing under conditions where they would otherwise be forced to
curtail these activities as perceptions of increasing risk
     rendered call options from private sources either too expensive or even
unavailable. What is more, the ESF can write these
     options clandestinely so as to camouflage the true source of what
otherwise appears as inexplicable downward pressure on
     gold, thereby creating market uncertainty that itself augments bearish
sentiment and increases the profits of bullion banks privy
     to the scheme.

     With the Fed's announcement that it, unlike some other central banks,
does not operate in the gold or gold derivatives markets,
     the focus of suspicion naturally shifted to the ESF. But to understand
fully why gold market participants and observers
     increasingly sense market manipulation originating somewhere in the
U.S. government, it is necessary to recount and highlight
     some recent history of the gold market, particularly for those not
fully conversant with it. And even for those who are, Fed
     Chairman Greenspan's recent letter requires reassessment of working
hypotheses involving assumptions of gold price
     manipulation by the Fed. More detail on much of what follows can be
found in earlier essays and commentaries here at The
     Golden Sextant, together with various links to supporting or
explanatory information.

     The story begins in 1995. Gold is slumbering as it has for some time
around US$375/oz. Japan's economic situation is
     worsening, and in mid-1995 the Japanese cut interest rates sharply.
Gold begins to stir, jumping over $400 in early 1996,
     propelled in part by Japanese interest rates so low that they force yen
denominated gold futures on the TOCOM into
     backwardation (i.e., when prices for future delivery are lower than
spot). The yen is falling; gold lease rates are rising. From the
     U.S. perspective, an economic collapse in Japan threatens to exacerbate
the U.S. trade deficit and possibly trigger massive
     dishoarding of Japan's large holdings of dollar denominated debt,
including U.S. Treasuries.

     From the European perspective, there is concern not only about the
obvious economic effects of a Japanese collapse, but also
     that it might cause sufficient disruption in the existing international
payments system to complicate severely or even prevent the
     planned introduction of the euro in 1999. An accelerating gold price
responding to world financial turmoil is hardly a propitious
     environment for the introduction of a new and untested currency.

     The G-7 central banks and finance ministers cobble together a plan to
support Japan, including a strategy for controlling the gold
     price through anti-gold propaganda backed by small but highly
publicized official gold sales augmented by leasing of official
     gold in large quantities at concessionary rates. For Belgium and the
Netherlands, the largest European sellers, gold sales also
     help to meet the Maastricht Treaty's criteria for the euro.

     Gold analysts, who at the beginning of 1996 were almost unanimous in
predicting a new bull market for gold, are blind-sided.
     Virtually none foresaw such a coordinated official attack on gold, and
many are slow to recognize its broad scope. The gold
     price steadily declines from over $400 in early 1996 to well under $300
in early 1998, and stays under $300 for most of 1998
     and into early 1999. Every time gold looks to rally, it is slammed on
the LBMA or COMEX by the same small group of
     well-connected bullion banks. Particularly notable in these attacks are
Goldman Sachs, Chase and Mitsui, which regularly runs
     by far the largest net short position on the TOCOM.

     Scared by falling prices and encouraged to do so by their bullion
bankers who are also their lenders, many gold mining
     companies respond by increasing their hedging activities, expanding
forward sales and buying more gold put options. The
     forward sales, generally made with gold leased from central banks
through bullion banks, add to the downward pressure on gold
     and provide fees to the bullion banks, augmented by further windfall
profits on the loaned gold as the price continues to fall. The
     bullion banks earn further fees by selling put options to the mining
companies, who frequently are forced to finance buying
     shorted-dated puts from the bullion banks by selling them long-dated
calls.

     Trading around $280 in April 1999, gold is below the total cost of
production for many mines and not far above the cash costs of
     quite a few. What is more, annual gold demand is now almost 4000
tonnes, exceeding annual new mine production of 2500
     tonnes by almost 1500 tonnes. This deficit, building over several
years, is largely filled by sales of gold leased from central
     banks by the bullion banks. Analysts trying to calculate the net short
gold position of the bullion banks in early 1999 are coming
     up with some astonishing figures, some as high as 10,000 tonnes,
equivalent to four full years of production.

     Since much of this leased gold is sold into the Asian jewelry market,
particularly to India which regularly absorbs 25% to 30% of
     annual world production, many question where all the gold necessary for
repayment will be found. But at the beginning of 1999,
     some is expected to come from the proposed sale of over 300 tonnes by
the IMF to raise funds for aid to heavily indebted poor
     countries, an initiative strongly supported by the U.S. and Britain.

     On May 6, 1999, gold again nears $290 and is threatening to explode
above $300 due in part to increasing doubts that the
     proposed IMF gold sales will be approved. Short positions are in grave
peril. Then comes a wholly unexpected bombshell which
     will have even more unexpected consequences.

     On May 7, 1999, the British announce that the Bank of England on behalf
of the British Treasury will sell 435 tonnes of gold in a
     series of public auctions ostensibly to diversify its international
monetary reserves. The manner of the British sales -- periodic
     public auctions instead of hidden sales through the BIS -- belie any
effort to get top dollar and smack of intentional downward
     manipulation of the gold price. All indications are that these sales
were ordered by the British government over the objection of
     BOE officials. Palpably spurious and inconsistent reasons for the sales
are offered, but no persuasive ones. There is only one
     logical conclusion: the gold sales were directly ordered by the Prime
Minister for unknown political or other reasons. What is
     more, his reasons are unlikely to have been frivolous. As leading
supporters of the proposed IMF gold sales, the British clumsily
     put themselves in the position of front-running them, and ultimately
the British sales are an important catalyst in forcing the IMF to
     change tack.

     For most knowledgeable gold market participants and observers, the
British announcement is the smoking gun -- proof positive
     that the world gold market is being manipulated with official
connivance and support. But what none yet suspects is that the BIS,
     the ECB and the central banks of the EMU countries are having serious
second thoughts about the gold manipulation scheme.

     The British announcement quickly sends the gold price into near free
fall toward $250. Gold mining companies panic. Urged on
     by the bullion banks, led again by Goldman Sachs, the miners add to
their hedge positions. The very dangerous practice of
     financing short-dated puts with long-dated calls expands exponentially
as financially strapped mining companies, threatened
     with reduction or loss of credit lines by their bullion bankers, are
often left with little other choice. Then comes a second and even
     larger bombshell that takes the bullion bankers and their customers
completely by surprise. Indeed, it is likely a watershed event
     for the entire world financial system, comparable only to the closing
of the gold window in 1971.

     On September 26, 1999, 15 European central banks, led by the ECB,
announce that they will limit their total combined gold
     sales over the next five years to 2000 tonnes, not to exceed 400 tonnes
in any one year, and will not increase their gold lending
     or other gold derivatives activities . Besides the ECB and the 11
members of the EMU, Britain, Switzerland and Sweden are
     parties. The 2000 tonnes include the remaining 365 tonnes of British
sales and 1300 tonnes of previously proposed Swiss
     sales, leaving only 335 tonnes of possible new sales. The announcement,
made in Washington following the IMF/World Bank
     annual meeting, is ironically christened the "Washington Agreement"
although the government in Washington played no role.
     However, the BIS, IMF, U.S. and Japan are all expected to abide by it,
and the BIS is expected to monitor it.

     The effect in the gold market is quick and dramatic. Within days, as
some gold shorts rush to cover, the gold price jumps from
     around $265 to almost $330 and gold lease rates spike to over 9%. By
late October gold retreats back under $300, and a
     month later lease rates are almost back to normal levels. But the
hugely over-extended net short position in the gold market is
     clearly revealed and far from being resolved. Two heavily hedged gold
mining companies, Ashanti and Cambior, are virtually
     bankrupt and in negotiations with their bullion bankers. Indeed, soon
the entire rationale of hedging is under comprehensive
     review throughout the gold mining industry as shareholders rebel at
practices that take away the upside of their gold
     investments.

     As the details of Ashanti's and Cambior's hedge books are disclosed,
the recklessness of gold hedging strategies foisted onto
     to them by their bullion bankers becomes all too apparent. Ashanti's
lead bullion banker, Goldman Sachs, is the subject of
     scathing comment, including allegations of serious conflicts of
interest. See, e.g., L. Barber & G. O'Connor, "How Goldman
     Sachs Helped Ruin and then Dismember Ashanti Gold," Financial Times
(London), Dec. 2, 1999, reprinted at
     www.egroups.com/group/gata/299.html. Clearly the most aggressive
bullion bankers have been caught completely wrong-footed
     and totally unawares by the Washington Agreement. Significantly, rumor
is that the agreement was hammered out secretly
     among the members of the EMU, the BIS and Switzerland, that the British
were given a chance to sign on after the fact, and that
     the U.S. was not informed until just before the Sunday announcement.
For references to European press commentary on the
     genesis of the agreement, see W. Smith, "Operation Dollar Storm,"
www.gold-eagle.com/editorials_99/wsmith111099.html.

     Besides the three provisions relating directly to central bank
activities in the gold market and one calling for review after five
     years, the Washington Agreement contains this statement: "Gold will
remain an important element of global monetary reserves."
     The ECB and 11 EMU nations hold collectively around 12,500 tonnes of
gold reserves (almost 1.4 ounces per citizen), making
     the EMU as a whole by far the world's largest official holder of gold.
What is more, unlike the U.S. which values its gold stock of
     about 8150 tonnes (under 1 ounce per citizen) at an unrealistic
$42.22/oz., the EMU marks its gold reserves to market quarterly.

     The notion, shared by many, that the EMU would forever acquiesce in the
trashing of its gold reserves by bullion banks operating
     in the largely paper gold markets of London, New York and Tokyo appears
in retrospect to have been incredibly naive. Indeed, a
     careful reading of the 69th annual report of the BIS issued in June
1999 suggests that European central bankers were already
     questioning the effectiveness and sustainability of Japan's low
interest rate policy, and were very concerned about the
     implications of the LTCM incident for the world payments system. With
the euro successfully launched, they quickly lost reason to
     continue capping the gold price and became much more concerned about
the increasingly parlous state of the gold banking
     system to which they were lending.

     Often referred to as the central banks' central bank, the BIS is not
only the principal forum for discussion and cooperation among
     the world's central bankers but also the world's top gold bank.
Established under international treaty in 1930 to facilitate payment
     of German war reparations, the BIS from its founding has kept its
financial accounts in Swiss gold francs, making conversions at
     designated or market rates as appropriate. It holds approximately 200
tonnes of gold for its own account and records on its
     balance sheet separate gold deposit and gold liability accounts in
connection with the banking services it provides to central
     banks and other international financial institutions. That the BIS in
early 1999 was not as aware as gold analysts in the private
     sector of the bullion banks' dangerously leveraged condition is almost
inconceivable.

     Fed Chairman Greenspan's letter to Senator Lieberman is highly
significant in that it tends to negate the impression many had,
     including myself, that a rift had developed between the Anglo-American
central banks and those of the EMU over gold. Rather,
     the Fed's position as expressed in the letter, together with the BOE's
position that the decision to sell British gold came from
     Her Majesty's Treasury, implies a rift not among the major central
banks, but between them and the British and American
     governments operating through their Treasury departments. In this
connection, the Fed and the BOE labor under a handicap that
     does not affect the Europeans, for whereas the central banks of the EMU
have direct legal responsibility for their nations' gold
     reserves, in both Britain and the U.S. this responsibility rest with
their Treasury departments.

     What is more, a quite plausible scenario now appears to explain the
British gold sales. Whether it is true or not, only a very few
     high officials in the British and American governments and their
bullion bankers are in a position to know for sure. But on known
     and reasonably inferred facts, the following hypothesis can be
constructed.

     The ESF was writing gold call options for certain bullion bankers,
principally those most active in selling futures and arranging
     forward sales: Goldman Sachs, Chase, et al. As of April 30, 1999, it
had outstanding a sizable position at strike prices in the
     $300 area. For writing these options in a generally falling market, it
had net earnings from premiums but these were not in
     context large amounts, at most a very few dollars per ounce. In the
ESF's monthly financial reports required to be filed with the
     Senate and House Banking Committees, these amounts were listed as
miscellaneous income.

     When gold threatened to explode over $300 in early May, and with IMF's
proposed gold sales in trouble, the ESF found itself in
     much the same position as that of Ashanti and Cambior after
announcement of the Washington Agreement. Gold call options
     previously sold for a few dollars an ounce threatened to cause losses
many multiples of these amounts if the gold price jumped
     by $50 to $75. If settled in cash, exploding volatility premiums would
add hugely to the loss, putting the effective strike price far
     above the nominal one. On the other hand, if settled in gold at the
strike price, the ESF would have to deliver gold from U.S.
     reserves or go into the market to cover, adding more upward pressure to
the gold price.

     Worse, unlike the modest premium income from sales of options, huge
losses could not be hidden from Congress in the monthly
     financial reports to the House and Senate Banking Committees. Not to
panic. The ESF, being under the direct control of the
     Secretary and the President, has an option not available to others.
Call the British Prime Minister and arrange for a very public
     official gold sale designed to kill the incipient gold price rally. And
for God's sake don't let the BOE or the Fed know what is
     really afoot. If some of their inflation hawks knew the real situation
in the gold market, they might be more inclined to raise
     interest rates.

     The plan worked, sort of. The immediate crisis was bridged. By now,
depending on the maturity schedule of its options, the ESF
     may have substantially worked off its position. Indeed, a reduction in
call options available from the ESF after the BOE's
     announcement may be what pushed the bullion banks to be so aggressive
in trying to secure similar options from mining
     companies in the hedging panic that ensued. But if that was the
strategy, the Washington Agreement undid it and left the bullion
     banks in dire peril. For an excellent discussion of their continuing
exposure, see John Hathaway's latest essay, "Rich on Paper,"
     at www.tocqueville.com/brainstorms/brainstorm0055.shtml.

     If the foregoing hypothesis is correct, there will be time enough at a
later date to analyze the full implications of a scandal of such
     magnitude. To do so now would be to get too far ahead of the story.
Probably only an investigation by the U.S. Congress or
     possibly the British House of Commons could really uncover the truth.

     But whether the hypothesis about manipulation of the gold price by the
ESF is correct or not, the incredible over-extension of the
     bullion banks is a fact that ultimately will have to be faced.
Currently the European central banks through the BIS and within the
     limits of the Washington Agreement are engaged in a tightly controlled
feed of modest amounts of gold into the market. Of the
     335 remaining tonnes under the Washington Agreement, 300 tonnes at a
rate of 100 tonnes annually over the next three years
     were allocated to the Dutch on December 6, of which 65 tonnes have
already been sold. Where this gold is going and to whom
     is unknown, but most assume it is being used in large measure to
alleviate critical shortages among the bullion banks. Some of
     these banks are divisions of very large and important commercial or
investment banks, and thus may enjoy "too big to fail"
     protection.

     Plainly too, the American and British governments have put pressure on
friendly gold holding countries outside the Washington
     Agreement to supply gold to the market. Kuwait, for example, publicly
announced that it was making its entire official reserve of
     79 tonnes available to the BOE for lease into the market. Soon
afterwards further new U.S. military aid to the country was
     disclosed. With regard to the Kuwaiti announcement, a top BIS official
observed that it was so far outside normal practice as to
     permit only one conclusion: someone was trying to manipulate the gold
market.

     The bottom line is that whether as the result of greed, stupidity,
breach of public trust, or some combination thereof, the fate of
     the bullion banks and the gold banking system itself has passed outside
not only the bankers' control but also the power of the
     American and British governments. They are all hostages now: hostages
to the continued goodwill of the European central
     banks, who could bury the exposed bullion banks tomorrow should they
choose to do so; and hostages to events over which they
     have no control, whether as major as a stock market crash or as minor
as a blockbuster bid at the next British auction.

     Given a sharp spike to $370/oz. or thereabouts, many believe the gold
banking crisis would spiral out of control. Each periodic
     British auction is for 25 tonnes (803,750 ounces). At $370/oz., an
entire auction could be had for less than $300 million, a trifling
     sum in modern finance. That may seem like a large premium to current
prices of around $280-$290, but many gold analysts peg
     the true equilibrium price of gold today at between $500 and $600. Add
in rumors of difficulty finding physical gold in size, and
     25 tonnes of deliverable physical gold at $370 could almost look like a
bargain.

     In any event, anyone -- friend or foe -- with a spare $300 million who
cares to bid $370/oz. for the full amount of the next British
     auction could more than likely crash the gold banking system with
consequences far more serious than those threatened by the
     failure of LTCM. Not long ago Marc Faber publicly suggested to Bill
Gates the investment merits of switching his almost $100
     billion of Microsoft shares into gold. M. Faber, "An Investment Tip for
Bill G.," Forbes, Nov. 29, 1999, p. 248, also
     www.forbes.com/forbesglobal/99/1115/0223099a.htm. My advice to Bill G.
would be a little different: Start buying gold, leak that
     you are doing so, watch the price rise and governments sweat, bid early
and high at the next British auction, and wait for a
     settlement offer you really like. No reason not to have both Microsoft
shares and gold. Since the government likes free,
     unfettered markets, give them one -- in gold.

     The next auction is March 21, 2000, a date perhaps uncomfortably close
to the ides of March for bullion bankers and would be
     Caesars.

     Reg Howe
     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
     http://www.goldensextant.com

     4 February 2000


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