| MidAtlantic Real Estate And Development Completes Construction On The ...
RALEIGH, N.C. Jason Stegall, president and managing partner of MidAtlantic Real Estate and Development, a general brokerage that locates sites, space and development opportunities throughout North Carolina, has announced the firms completion of construction on The Magnolia, a home located at 2319 Lake Drive, inside Raleighs Interstate-440 Beltline. The Magnolia is an elaborate Greek Revival and Georgian style home with an approximate area of 10,400 square feet in four levels, and it sits on a 1.17-acre lot with formal gardens. Facing the street is the formal faade, a two story veranda with six square Tuscan columns and large entablature. The home offers five bedrooms, five full bathrooms and two half-baths. Jerry Stoltz of Divine Stoltz Development, LLC in Raleigh built the home, and Jorge Andres Abad of Smith Sinnett Architecture in Raleigh served as architectural designer and attributes his influence for the home to Louisiana architect A.
Zell Miller to visit Arkansas
Ol' Zell will fire'em up for bigotry like no one else. Is the divorce rate 50%? If it is, whose fault is it? Gays? Nah. It's because of straight people, not because of gays. Gays can't even get involved. The only way letting gays marry could affect straight marriage is if straight people protested gay marriage by getting divorces. I have to echo what someone else said. Conservatives can raise tent thumpin' hell about sex. And then give you all the particulars...gory details...etc. Beats anything I've ever seen. I'll lay wager GetReal and his ilk knows more in rumor than any gay man about what goes on in a gay bedroom. They hear it from their "straight" buddies. All the particulars...gory details. Marriage is a legal institution, not a religious one.
Renovated homes are strongest sellers in N.O. market
Jon Luther, executive vice president of the Home Builders Association of Greater New Orleans, said it has become more expensive for owners to repair shattered property since the state adopted stringent building codes in 2006 designed to protect residents from the ravages of future storms. He expects it will become more affordable to abide by the new codes once builders become more comfortable with them, but in the meantime, the cost has helped steer buyers to homes in move-in condition. "People saw there was a lot of work involved just to get them back to the status quo," Luther said. "When somebody has gone out and already repaired a home, it gets a buyer through the process without all of the mind-numbing minutiae involved in trying to recover." If homeowners like Lyons have had difficulty unloading flooded property, overall sales in eastern New Orleans began a dramatic rebound in the second half of 2007.
Open Thread
She was a senoir in high school which would have helped with all the bucks that parents must shell out for a free edeucation especially when they are senoirs. "May God have mercy upon my enemies, because I won't." General George S. Patton. .
January 2003
Attorney Mark M. Trapp reads Roe v. Wade and it's supporting documentation, something few people have apparently bothered to do, and discovers something interesting Fighting for freedom while losing our freedom: Once again American soldiers stand ready to defend their nation's interests and free a people from tyranny. Alan Caruba says it's a shame no one cares about the diminishing freedom of Americans Problems for the Axis of Weasel: Jackson Murphy says that world events are rapidly illustrating the irrelevance of nations like France and Germany Walking on thin ice: All the protests and UN posturing doesn't change a fact, says Henry Lamb, Saddam Hussein is on the thin edge of the wedge and it's going to be George W. Bush to give him a shove America's non-resolve to fight evil: Even as American soldiers prepare themselves for a seemingly inevitable war against Iraq Ed Cline says the United States is fighting the war against terrorism halfheartedly Does the US have a double standard with regards to North Korea and Iraq?: David T.
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