[Abel-tasman] Get out of Tax Debt!

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Sat Aug 31 19:40:02 CEST 2013


Notice to Relieve Tax Debt

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 d-picked" 
instructors.Schneiderman is suing the program, Trump as the university chairman, 
and the former president of the university in a case to be 
handled in state Supreme Court in Manhattan. He accuses them of engaging 
in persistent fraud, illegal and deceptive conduct and violating federal 
consumer protection law. The $40 million he seeks is mostly to pay 
restitution to consumers.He dismissed Trump's claim of a political motive."The 
fact that he's still brave enough to follow the investigation wherever it 
may lead speaks to Mr. Schneiderman's character," Schneiderman spokesman 
Andrew Friedman told AP.State Education Department officials had told Trump 
to change the name of his enterprise years ago, saying it lacked 
a license and didn't meet the legal definitions of a university. In 
2011 it was renamed the Trump Entrepreneur Institute, but it has been 
dogged since by complaints from consumers and a few isolated civil lawsuits 
claiming it didn't fulfill its advertised claims.Schneiderman's lawsuit 
covers complaints dating to 2005 through 2011. Students paid between $1,495 
and $35,000 to learn from the Manhattan mogul who wrote the best 
seller, "Art of the Deal" a decade ago followed by "How to 
Get Rich" and "Think Like a Billionaire."Scheiderman said the three-day 
seminars didn't, as promised, teach consumers everything they needed to 
know about real estate. The Trump University manual tells instructors not 
to let consumers "think 
  James Dean's romantic co-star in 
"East of Eden" (1955), and had rolls in such films as "Requiem 
for a Heavyweight" (1962), "The Haunting" (1963) and "Reflections in a Golden 
Eye" (1967).Yet Harris' biggest successes and most satisfying moments have 
been on stage. "The theater has been my church," the actress once 
said. "I don't hesitate to say that I found God in the 
theater."The 5-foot-4 Harris, blue-eyed with delicate features and reddish-gold 
hair, made her Broadway debut in 1945 in a short-lived play called 
"It's a Gift." Five years later, at the age of 24, Harris 
was cast as Frankie, a lonely 12-year-old tomboy on the brink of 
adolescence, in "The Member of the Wedding," Carson McCullers' stage version 
of her wistful novel.The critics raved about Harris, with Brooks Atkinson 
in The New York Times calling her performance "extraordinary -- vibrant, 
full of anguish and elation.""That play was really the beginning of everything 
big for me," Harris had said.The actress appeared in the 1952 film 
version, too, with her original Broadway co-stars, Ethel Waters and Brandon 
De Wilde, and received an Academy Award nomination.Harris won her first 
Tony Award for playing Sally Bowles, the confirmed hedonist in "I Am 
a Camera," adapted by John van Druten from Christopher Isherwood's "Berlin 
Stories." The play later became the stage and screen musical "Cabaret." 
In her second Tony-winning performance, Harris played a much more spiritual 
charact
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