Denver buying
September 5th, 2008Denver buying
Buying and selling a business
Author: Gregory A Kearns
Unknown Binding: 77 pages
Company: Program of Advanced Professional Development, University of Denver College of Law] (1980)
List Price:
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Unknown Binding: 77 pages
Company: Program of Advanced Professional Development, University of Denver College of Law] (1980)
List Price:
Amazon Price:
(more...)
Get the Best Deal When Selling Your Home: Denver, Colorado Edition
This book will describe how to get the best deal when selling your home. A guide to choosing the right Realtor, using the internet to market your home, how to prepare your home for sale and much more.
Author: Debbie Moore; Ken Deshaies
Paperback: 162 pages
Company: Partners Publishers Group (2004-10-01)
ISBN: 1891689401
List Price: $18.95
Amazon Price: $15.35
Used Price: $2.93
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This book will describe how to get the best deal when selling your home. A guide to choosing the right Realtor, using the internet to market your home, how to prepare your home for sale and much more.Author: Debbie Moore; Ken Deshaies
Paperback: 162 pages
Company: Partners Publishers Group (2004-10-01)
ISBN: 1891689401
List Price: $18.95
Amazon Price: $15.35
Used Price: $2.93
(more...)
Denver area homebuyer's guide
Author: Stephen Travers
Unknown Binding: 20 pages
Company: Denver Regional Council of Governments (1980)
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Unknown Binding: 20 pages
Company: Denver Regional Council of Governments (1980)
List Price:
Amazon Price:
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Real Estate in Denver, Colorado, Buying, Selling, Relocating ...
Real Estate in Denver, Colorado, Buying, Selling, Relocating & Property Listings, MLS Search ... To zoom into an area, click on "Click Here To Zoom", then click on the map once ... (more...)
Buying Denver Real Estate
One stop shopping for buying a home in Denver or the suburbs. Luxury home virtual tours, MLS seach for Denver Real Estate and free relocation information. (more...)
Vital New Home Buying Information
I have been selling New Homes here in the Metro Denver Area for the last 11 years and I have decided to publish this article about vitally important things to be aware of when ... (more...)
Denver Real Estate and Relocation ~ Frequently Asked Questiosn
for easy navigation, click on the link to go to the explanation) © Copyright Kristal Kraft 1. ... (more...)
Buying a Denver Condo or Loft | Denver Real Estate
Guide to buying a condo or loft in Denver, CO. ... Nicole Winsauer, Denver REALTOR Call 800-577-4919 ext. 712 (more...)
Metro Denver Home Buying
Looking to buy a home in the Metro Denver area. Here's a handy guide to neighbohroods and real estate in Denver. (more...)
Denver Colorado Real Estate - Highlands Ranch Homes
3 clicks to search Denver Real state - local agent proudly serving nice folks in Denver since 1985, including Littleton, Lone Tree, Englewood, Castle Rock, Greenwood Village ... (more...)
Buying Your Denver Home
Discover Denver with Kelli Lanphere & The Denver Team - Selling Hilltop-Crestmoor and Fine Denver Luxury Homes Since 1984! (more...)
Your source for buying Denver, Colorado HUD homes, foreclosures and ...
A wealth of information on buying Denver HUD homes, foreclosures, bank owned repos and auction properties. (more...)
Home Buying Process
Understanding the home buying process is the first step in becoming a satisfied home owner. ... Home Buying Process. Whether you have decided to purchase a home in the Denver metro ... (more...)
Open Question: Where can I buy an Entire Season of MTV's The Real World?
I really want a complete season and I'v looked before but all I ever find is the first season or Las Vegas the ones I really want are Denver, Hollywood, and Key West. All where can I watch them if I cant buy them.
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Open Question: good place to buy single house in denver?
what are some good places to buy single houses around denver colorado, zipcode 80221. I looked online but all houses coming up are wooden houses but i am looking for brick houses.Any help?????
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Voting Question: Whats a bus company that will take me to CO to NE?
Need a bus, perferably a LINK to a bus station that will take me to Colorado Denver area to North Platte, Nebraska ONE WAY. I bought a car off eBay and need to pick it up in the next few days. I looked up greyhound but they said I needed to call??? (confused) Thanks!
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Resolved Question: WHERE IN DENVER, COLORADO CAN I BUY DOG FOOD IN BULK?
I AM LOOKING TO BUY DOG FOOD IN BULK AND WHEN I SAY BULK I MEAN LIKE 200 POUNDS OF DOG FOOD RIGHT NOW I BUY THE 50 POUND BAGS AND GOING TO THE STORE FOR MY 4 DOGS EVERY 3 WEEKS I AM LOOKING FOR ANY KIND OF DOG FOOD MY DOGS WILL EAT ANY KIND I ALWAYS SWITCH THE BRAND OF FOOD
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Voting Question: What do you think about this essay? Please help me! =] Greatly appreciate it everyone....yay!!! ?
1. Please give me a few brief sentences summarizing what the selection was about (4-5 sent)
2. What is the author?s main purpose? (4-5 sent)
3. Who is this writing intended to reach? (2-3 sent)
4. Technical Information: How does the author achieve his or her purpose? Jot down notes and examples about the rhetorical techniques the author uses, and examples. (at least 5 ideas)
5. Personal response: What did you think of this selection? Is there anything in it you would like to use in your own persuasion presentation?
Why I stopped being a vegetarian
Until a few of months ago, I had been a vegetarian for 15 years. Like most people who call themselves vegetarians (somewhere between four and ten percent of us, depending on the definition; only one percent of Americans are vegans, eating no animal products at all), I wasn't strict about it. I ate dairy products and eggs, as well as fish. That made me a pesco-ovo-lacto-vegetarian, which isn't a category you can choose for special meals on airlines. About a year ago, in Italy, it dawned on me that a little pancetta was really good in pasta, too, and after failing to convince myself that pancetta was a vegetable, I became a pesco-ovo-lacto- pancetta-vegetarian, with a "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy about chicken broth. It was a slippery slope from there.
Nevertheless, for most of those 15 years, hardly a piece of animal flesh crossed my lips. Over the course of that time, many people asked me why I became a vegetarian. I came up with vague answers: my health, the environment, the impracticality and heartlessness of killing animals for food when we can survive perfectly well on soy burgers. It was political, it was emotional, and it made me special, not to mention slightly morally superior to all those bloodthirsty carnivores out there.
The truth is, I became a vegetarian in college for two reasons. One was that meat was more expensive than lentils, and I was broke, or broke enough to choose to spend my limited budget on other classes of ingestibles. The other was that I was not a lesbian. This is not to say that all lesbians are carnivores; in fact, there's probably a higher percentage of vegetarians among lesbians than most other groups. But there was a fair amount of political pressure to be something in those days, and since, as a privileged white girl from suburban Denver, I couldn't really identify with any oppressed minority group, I was faced with becoming a lesbian in order to prove my political mettle. I had to decide between meat or men, and for better or worse, I became a vegetarian.
The identity stuck, even though the political imperative for my label faded. It wasn't an identity that ever really fit: my friends thought it odd that such an otherwise hedonistic woman should have that one ascetic streak. It was against my nature, they said. But by then, I'd started to believe the other arguments about vegetarianism.
First was health. There's a lot of evidence that vegetarians live longer, have lower cholesterol levels, and are thinner than meat-eaters. This is somewhat hard to believe, since for the first few years of not eating meat, I was basically a cheesetarian. Try leafing through some of those vegetarian recipe books from the early '80s: you added three cups of grated cheddar to everything but the granola. Then vegetarianism went through that mathematical phase where you had to figure out which proteins you had to combine with which in order to get a complete protein. Since many nutritionists will tell you people don't need that much protein anyway, I gave up, going for days and days without so much as contemplating beans or tofu.
For whatever haphazard combination of proteins I ate, being a vegetarian did seem to have a stunning effect on my cholesterol level. This, of course, could be genetic. But when I had a very involved physical exam once at the Cooper Institute for Aerobic Fitness in Dallas, my total cholesterol level was a super-low 135, and my ratio of HDL (good) cholesterol to LDL (evil) was so impressive that the doctor drawled, "Even if you had heart disease, you would be reversing it." This good news, far from reassuring me that I could well afford a few barbecued ribs now and then, spurred me on in my vegetarianism, mainly because my cholesterol numbers effectively innoculated me against the doctor's advice that I also needed to lose 15 pounds. "Why?" I asked. "Don't you lose weight to lower your cholesterol?" He couldn't argue with that. Whether or not most vegetarians are leaner than carnivores, in my case I was happy to more than make up the calories with carbohydrates, which, perhaps not coincidentally, I always craved.
After the health rationale came the animal rights one. Like most vegetarians, I cracked Peter Singer's philosophical treatise on animal rights, and bought his utilitarian line that if you don't have to kill animals, and it potentially causes suffering, you shouldn't do it (Singer, now at Princ
now at Princeton, has recently come under attack for saying that if a human being's incapacitated life causes more suffering than good, it is okay to kill them.) It's hard to know where to stop with utilitarianism. Do I need a cashmere sweater more than those little shorn goats need to be warm themselves? Do animals really suffer if they have happy, frolicking lives before a quick and painless end? Won't free-range do?
My animal rights philosophy had a lot of holes from the start. First of all, I excluded fish from the animal kingdom-- not only because fish taste delicious grilled with a little butter and garlic, they make it a lot easier to be a vegetarian when you go out to restaurants. Now that's utilitarian. Besides, as soon as you start spending your time fretting about the arguments that crowd the inner pens of animal rights philosophy--Do Fish Think?--then you know you're experiencing a real protein deficiency. I rationalized the fish thing by telling myself I would eat anythi
rationalized the fish thing by telling myself I would eat anything I would kill myself. I had been fly fishing with my dad and figured a few seconds of flopping around was outweighed by the merits of trout almondine (notice that I, not the fish, was doing the figuring). But who was I kidding? If I were hungry enough, I'd kill a cow in a heartbeat. I'd practically kill a cow just for a great pair of shoes.
Which brings me to the leather exception. As long as other people are eating cow, I decided, I might as well recycle the byproducts and diminish the harm by wearing leather jackets and shoes. When everyone stopped eating meat, I'd stop buying leather jackets and shoes. In the meantime, better stock up.
Then there's the environmental rationale. There is no doubt, as Frances Moore Lappe first pointed out in her 1971 Food First book, that there is a huge loss of protein resources going from grain to meat, and that some animals, especially cattle and Americans, use up piggish amounts of water, grain, and cropland. But the problem really isn't meat, but too much meat--over-grazing, over-fishing, and over-consumption. If Americans just ate less meat--like driving cars less often--the problem could be alleviated without giving up meat entirely. That approach has worked for centuries, and continues to work in Europe.
All my deep vegetarian questioning was silenced one day when a friend ordered roasted rosemary chicken for two. I thought I'd try "just a bite," and then I was ripping into it like a starving hyena. Roasted chicken, I realized, is wonderful. Meat is good.
From a culinary point of view, that's obvious. Consider that most vegetarians live in America and England, places tourists do not visit for the food. You don't find vegetarians in France, and rarely in Italy. Enough said.
As for health, if nutritionists are always telling you to "listen to your body," mine was definitely shouting for more meat. One roasted bird unleashed 15 years' worth of cravings. All of a sudden I felt like I had a bass note playing in my body to balance out all those soprano carbohydrates. Forget about winning the low-cholesterol Olympics. For the first time in a long time, I felt satisfied.
As a vegetarian, not only had I denied myself something I truly enjoyed, I had been anti-social. How many times had I made a hostess uncomfortable by refusing the main course at a dinner party, lamely saying I'd "eat around it?"
How often did my vegetarianism cause other people to go to extra trouble to make something special for me to eat, and why did it never occur to me that was selfish? How about the time, in a small town in Italy, when the chef presented me with a plate of very special local sausage, since I was the American guest--and I refused it, to the mortification of my Italian friends? Or when a then-boyfriend, standing in the meat section of the grocery store, forlornly told a friend, 'If only I had a girlfriend who ate meat.' If eating is a socially conscious act, you have to be conscious of the society of your fellow homo sapiens along with the animals. And we humans, as it happens, are omnivores.
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Resolved Question: Have you resold NFL tickets?
I'm in San Diego. For the 1st time I had 3 extra tickets to the Denver game that I threw on CL and almost immediately got double face. (they were good tickets)
So since I waited in line for tickets to the Indy game and had the option of buying more- I bought what I thought was a conservative amount- 4 extras for a quick buck. The game did sell out in two days leaving 3 1/2 days to get rid of the tickets. I still have them. It seems as if the buyers want below face.
I understand supply and demand and obviously the amount of tix on CL, stub hub, and eBay show a lot of people had the same idea I did. But isn't the playoffs typically very profitable for brokers and the guys on the street- gameday?
Becuse of the ticket glut- did the buyers just get so used to seeing great deals and now that there's not that many around- still refuse to pay above face becuse they were so cheap?
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Resolved Question: Are you an experianced NFL ticket reseller?
I'm in San Diego. For the 1st time I had 3 extra tickets to the Denver game that I threw on CL and almost immediately got double face. (they were good tickets)
So since I waited in line for tickets to the Indy game and had the option of buying more- I bought what I thought was a conservative amount- 4 extras for a quick buck. The game did sell out in two days leaving 3 1/2 days to get rid of the tickets. I still have them. It seems as if the buyers want below face.
I understand supply and demand and obviously the amount of tix on CL, stub hub, and eBay show a lot of people had the same idea I did. But isn't the playoffs typically very profitable for brokers and the guys on the street- gameday?
Becuse of the ticket glut- did the buyers just get so used to seeing great deals and now that there's not that many around- still refuse to pay above face becuse they were so cheap?
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Voting Question: Is StubHub a reliable place to buy tickets?
Also, what does floor seating mean? And would it be better to have floor seating over lower level seating at a The Killers concert at the University of Denver Mangess Arena?
Magness*, I meant.
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Resolved Question: what is the cheapest way to cross USA?
one day i'd like to go to USA and cross if from NY to LA passing through many wonderful places with no problem of time, with some friends.
but i don't have too much money. what do you advice me? buses and hotels? trains? car and hotel(how much is to rent a car or buy a c.r.a.p.py one? tell me your experiences.
p.s.
my route: for sure NY, toronto detroit chicago, some cities till denver colorado, and i want to see some desert and the grand canyon before reaching california.
and what about by caravan?
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Resolved Question: Posting "Panic at the Disco live in Chicago" vids?
Well for Christmas I got the "Panic at the Disco Live in Chicago" CD/DVD. I noticed on youtube that people posted vids from their previous CD/DVD, "Panic! at the Disco live in Denver" I'm pretty sure it was on youtube from the that CD/DVD. So I was wondering could I post some of those videos from my new CD on youtube without getting into copyright stuff? I mean I did buy the CD/DVD so I'm not sure...Help?
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