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More often than not, however, the IRS is sending you a notice because they want more information from you or they have determined that there is a problem with your return.
FORBES: Taxes From A To Z (2013): N Is For Notice Of Deficiency
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What they are more likely to notice is how sleek and stylish the car looks, with its curved and creased body panels and just the right amount of chrome.
FORBES: Test Drive: 2013 Nissan Altima
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That's why, if you spend sufficient time listening to these Panglosses or Cassandras, you'll notice that more often than not, they're entirely wrong - most spectacularly so in their failure to anticipate the financial collapse of 2008.
BBC: A Point of View: And all shall worship money
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Staff will in future have to give eight weeks notice of when they intend to return to work, more than double the current requirement.
BBC: A baby
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Men, next time you're on a dinner date, notice how women take home more food for their dog than they eat themselves.
NPR: U.S. Obesity Epidemic Hits Pets, Too
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But usually, the IRS sends you a notice asking for more support (documentation, for example) before they ding you.
FORBES: Ask the taxgirl: Medical Expenses and Income Adjustments
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Some research shows consumers are more likely to notice ads on their phones, in part because they still are novel.
WSJ: Twitter's Mobile Ads Begin to Click
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The GT2 looks more extreme, but most people don't really notice 911s--they see them too often.
FORBES: Vehicles Feature
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More and more people are starting to look under the covers and ask, as they find it hard not to notice that the statistics reported by government agencies paint a picture that matches neither common experience nor privately collected and analyzed information.
FORBES: Distorted Government Statistics Endanger Our Economic Health
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Doty, and his fellow PCAOB Board members, are keeping a busy travel schedule, putting the word out about what they do and why they do it, opening up new lands to inspections, holding more open meetings and, putting auditors on notice that changes are coming.
FORBES: Auditors and Audit Reports: Is The Firm's "John Hancock" Enough?