—Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Ira Gammerman, J.), entered March 15, 1996, which granted defendant’s motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a cause of action, unanimously affirmed, with costs.
All four of plaintiffs’ causes of action are based upon defendant’s statements, made in enrollment materials and during class meetings of defendant’s self-improvement / lifestyle course known as "The Conversation”, that he would "provide, by embodying 'The Vocabulary of The Conversationan example of executive capacity at self-government in action”. Upon the basis of this statement and others to like effect, plaintiffs allege not defendant’s failure to teach The Conversation, but his promise to demonstrate the "strategies, tactics and formulations” for learning it, as described in the abstract of course materials and in class, by revealing his private life in order for students to use same as an example, and a representation of fact that defendant’s private life conformed to those strategies. To the extent such a promise was made, it is too vague to be enforced as a contract (cf., Paladino v Adelphi Univ.,
