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<DIV><FONT size=2>In Saturday's New York Times (July 11th) there's an article
titled "The Rumors Grow: Rubin Will Leave." <FONT color=#000000
size=2>The writer says, "In fact, his aides try to dissuade reporters from
writing about the rumors of his departure at all, for fear that the articles
alone could uncork the Dow." Hmm. Maybe that's why the article is on page
A8? </FONT>One of the Secretary's Cabinet colleagues predicts "the week
after the midterm elections."</FONT></DIV>
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<DIV><FONT size=2>Hypothetically speaking, say I have a friend who has a 401k
plan and is planning to change jobs and companies between now and then. Would
one advise him or her to pull the money out, subjecting it to a tax penalty, or
put it in the new job's 401k thereby avoiding the tax?</FONT></DIV>
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<DIV><FONT size=2>Back to the Rubin article. I found the following paragraph
particularly interesting. "'Mr. Rubin has become the market,' one top
Japanese diplomat complained the other day during a visit to Washington, arguing
that the Secretary's thumbs up or down on Japan's latest economic contortions
was the only signal investors were looking for." I thought the beauty of
the free market is that it's free of ignorant government prognostications.
Hmm.</FONT></DIV>
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