Alice George Team 600 Germantown Pike, Lafayette Hill, PA 19444 (215)7201993 (Phone), (215)7201994 (Cell), (267)4192905 (Fax)
Experience:
16 years
Description:
Whether you are buying or selling a home.......we are here to help. Your Local Real Estate Connection not only serving Roxborough, Manayunk, East Falls, Lafayette Hill, Plymouth Meeting, Conshohocken and Blue Bell but all of Philadelphia and the surrounding counties. As full time Real Estate professionals, we will guide you step by step through the home buying/selling process. Explaining each step to you so that you can confidently make decisions. Our knowledge and commitment will ease the confusion that most people feel when making what may well be the largest purchase/sale of their lives. We recognize the value of customer service and will work diligently to meet your needs throughout the entire process. We have partnered together as a real estate team to provide the best possible experience to our clients. Remember that by using The Alice George Team you are getting the services of not only one but three professional Realtors. It is our hope that this exemplary TEAM service will prove superior and you will continue to rely on our knowledge and experience to guide you through of your future real estate transactions.
Endovascular Today and Cardiac Interventions Today
Jan 2007 to 2000 Senior Editor
Education:
The Pennsylvania State University, Brandywine Campus Media, PA Dec 2006 Bachelor of Arts in English LiteratureThe American Academy Bryn Mawr, PA Jun 2002 High School DiplomaRosemont College Rosemont, PA English & Publishing Program
Skills:
Proficient in most Microsoft Office applications. Adept in In-Design and Quark; self-taught, beginner-level skills in Adobe Photoshop and other photo-editing software. Photography, illustration, and calligraphy skills.
Alice George, author of a social history of the crisis, says its memory was diminished by subsequent traumas, especially the assassination of Kennedy a year later. And the end of the Cold War two decades ago deprived the crisis of its doomsday context.It was Day 12 in the crisis. With the Soviet missiles in place, says Alice George, "everyone in America got a taste of death row." The nation's southeastern quarter, including Greenville, was in range of warheads 70 times more powerful than the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima.