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...QEAT4 LLC. With their principals scattered across the country, the companies have the appearance of being tax-avoidance devices, just like the synfuels scheme. What, if anything, does Earthco's synfuel process do? Calls for information to Earthco and its employees were fruitless. When TIME reached Slusser, he promptly hung up the telephone after hearing the writer identify himself. A call to Earthco's office in Las Vegas proved equally unproductive. A woman who identified herself as Susan Trimboli said any questions would have to be answered by a Jim Scott in Sacramento, Calif. He turned out to be James...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Great Energy Scam | 10/13/2003 | See Source »

...exhibiting. With her husband Bill Giles, an artist disillusioned with the scene, she eventually retreated full time to a Pennsylvania farmhouse and the natural world she had loved since her childhood in Westchester County, N.Y. She raised a daughter--and a lot of vegetables. A few of her pieces hung in prominent museums, but in the standard accounts of postwar art, her name dropped out of the indexes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Return-Trip Ticket | 10/13/2003 | See Source »

Kristin J. Hung ’04, who works at the front desk of OCS, said the office does try to suit the diverse needs of students...

Author: By May Habib and Nicole B. Urken, CONTRIBUTING WRITERSS | Title: Job Fair Caps Off Career Week | 10/10/2003 | See Source »

...world and should be legalized. It would provide the government a means of taxation, and I think it would drastically reduce venereal disease and also the amount of sexual assault and rape cases. But no one in politics wants to talk about legalized prostitution. They’re all hung up on whatever their core morality beliefs...

Author: By Dan Rosenheck, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Larry Flynt Exposed | 10/2/2003 | See Source »

...Associated Press photo, brandishing a placard that proclaimed, “NO ESPRESSO TAX!” His ire was directed at a 10-cent tax on espresso drinks that would have paid for an early childhood education program. I wondered, for a moment, why someone would get so hung up about a miniscule tax that would have funded such an impeccably good cause. But of course, this was a tax on coffee, a sacred cow in the cradle of Starbucks, and this man, a cafe owner, took advantage of that sentiment to protect his profits. People like him managed...

Author: By Eoghan W. Stafford, | Title: Bush's Distorted Economics | 10/1/2003 | See Source »

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