Like, what makes you "go wild". For me, it's some fingerin' and hearing her squirm with pleasure, then striiping clothing little by little or at once and being passionate.
The Centre for Tax Law was established, with support from the Chartered Institute of Taxation, the International Fiscal Association and KPMG, in 2000 as a centre for research and teaching within the field of tax law. The Centre, which is located within the Law Faculty building, provides a valuable resource of literature and expertise and promotes the study of the law of taxation as an intellectual as well as a practical discipline. The law of taxation is a complex and multi-faceted subject, and, perhaps because of its inter-disciplinary nature, involving economic and political theory as well as accountancy and business studies, it has been sorely under-represented as a specialisation within the academic legal community. The Centre for Tax Law has set about redressing this. The Centre has two main activities. One is the organisation of a series of one day workshops, usually comparative, on matters of current concern. In 2002-3 this series was devoted to examining the way in which business profits are determined in other countries and enabled us to participate in the consultation process arising from the Government's Consultative Document on this topic. For details of the 2003-04 programme see below. The other activity is to promote the modern history of tax law in the U.K. This project brings together historians, lawyers, accountants and tax experts. The first conference was held in September 2002; the second will be held in July 2004 (Monday 5th and Tuesday 6th). The papers for the first conference are being published by Hart Publishing of Oxford - http://www.hartpub.co.uk/