Monday, October 29, 2012

Animal Photos Of The Week

  • BERLIN, GERMANY - OCTOBER 23: A mother toque macaque, which is a kind of monkey from Ceylon, holds her male baby at Zoo Berlin on October 23, 2012 in Berlin, Germany. The baby monkey was born on August 23. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

  • Bantu, a lion cub born in captivity two months ago, is seen at the zoo in Cali, department of Valle del Cauca, Colombia, on October 25, 2012. AFP PHOTO/Luis ROBAYO

  • Emma the Sumatran Orangutan holds her unnamed three-day-old infant, at Chester Zoo, in Chester, England, Monday Oct. 22, 2012. (AP Photo/ Peter Byrne/PA)

  • BERLIN, GERMANY - OCTOBER 23: A male baby toque macaque, which is a kind of monkey from Ceylon, clings to his mother at Zoo Berlin on October 23, 2012 in Berlin, Germany. The baby monkey was born on August 23. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

  • Bantu, a lion cub born in captivity two months ago, is seen at the zoo in Cali, department of Valle del Cauca, Colombia, on October 25, 2012. AFP PHOTO/Luis ROBAYO

  • BERLIN, GERMANY - OCTOBER 23: A mother toque macaque, which is a kind of monkey from Ceylon, holds her male baby at Zoo Berlin on October 23, 2012 in Berlin, Germany. The baby monkey was born on August 23. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

  • Grace, a search dog with the British army, is pictured during a photo-op, wearing a Dickin Medal, Britain's highest award for bravery by animals ? that was posthumously awarded to Theo, a bomb-sniffing army dog, following a special ceremony held at Wellington Barracks, in central London, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. Theo, a Springer Spaniel, worked alongside Lance Cpl. Liam Tasker, searching out roadside bombs in the Taliban stronghold of Helmand Province. Tasker was killed in a firefight with insurgents in March 2011, and Theo suffered a fatal seizure hours later. It is the highest award any animal can receive while serving in military conflict. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

  • Colin the Red Ruffed Lemur plays with a carved pumpkin at Bristol Zoo, Bristol, England Thursday Oct. 25, 2012. (AP Photo/Andrew Matthews/PA Wire)

  • Picture taken on October 26, 2012 in the Doue La-Fontaine zoo (western central France), of a baby Gibbon recently borned at the zoo and his mother. AFP PHOTO/ ALAIN JOCARD

  • Bantu, a lion cub born in captivity two months ago, is seen at the zoo in Cali, department of Valle del Cauca, Colombia, on October 25, 2012. AFP PHOTO/Luis ROBAYO

  • Picture taken on October 26, 2012 in the Dou?-La-Fontaine city zoo (western central France), of Sakassou, an african dwarf hippopotamus, borned on October 10, 2012 at the zoo and his mother Lea. AFP PHOTO/ ALAIN JOCARD

  • A polar bear shakes its head in its enclosure at the Zoo in Berlin, Germany, Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012. A monument to the polar bear Knut was unveiled at the zoo on Wednesday morning. Polar bear Knut became a global celebrity before his sudden death last year. (AP Photo/Michael Sohn)

  • Picture taken on October 26, 2012 in the DoueLa-Fontaine zoo (western central France), of Sakassou, an african dwarf hippopotamus, borned on October 10, 2012 at the zoo. AFP PHOTO/ ALAIN JOCARD

  • Picture taken on October 26, 2012 in the Doue La-Fontaine zoo (western central France), of a baby Gibbon recently borned at the zoo and his mother. AFP PHOTO/ ALAIN JOCARD

  • BERLIN, GERMANY - OCTOBER 23: A mother toque macaque, which is a kind of monkey from Ceylon, holds her male baby at Zoo Berlin on October 23, 2012 in Berlin, Germany. The baby monkey was born on August 23. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

  • Picture taken on October 26, 2012 in the Doue La-Fontaine zoo (western central France), of a baby Gibbon recently borned at the zoo and his mother. AFP PHOTO/ ALAIN JOCARD

  • BERLIN, GERMANY - OCTOBER 23: A mother toque macaque, which is a kind of monkey from Ceylon, holds her male baby at Zoo Berlin on October 23, 2012 in Berlin, Germany. The baby monkey was born on August 23. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

  • Picture taken on October 26, 2012 in the Doue La-Fontaine zoo (western central France), of a baby Gibbon recently borned at the zoo and his mother. AFP PHOTO/ ALAIN JOCARD

  • Vila, who turns 55 this weekend and who keepers say is the third-oldest known western lowland gorilla in the world, gives the youngest member of the troupe, 1-year-old Monroe, a ride on her back at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park Friday, Oct. 26, 2012. Her keepers report that she is in remarkable condition and credit the climate of Southern California as one reason for Vila's exceptional health. Vila has served as a surrogate mother of several hand-raised gorillas and currently plays the role of "grandmother" Monroe. Vila was hand raised at the zoo and is notable not only for her age but for the contributions she's made to the understanding of this critically endangered species. She participated in a landmark six-year study on great ape intelligence, which contributed to the base of scientific knowledge that researchers now have on gorillas. (AP Photo/San Diego Zoo Safari park, Tammy Spratt)

  • A vet holds a new-born cheetah prior to weight it on October 18, 2012 at the Palmyre zoo in Les Mathes, western France. Three cheetahs were born at the zoo. AFP PHOTO / XAVIER LEOTY

  • In this Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012 photo provided by the Chicago Zoological Society, Isis, a 7-year-old female African lion, appears to be getting ready to pounce on one of the pumpkins she and her partner, Zenda, 6, received at Brookfield Zoo in Brookfield, Ill. During the fall season, many of the zoo?s other animals receive pumpkins also. Zoo guests can see some of the animals receiving pumpkins during the annual Boo! at the Zoo celebration this coming weekend, Oct. 27-28. (AP Photo/Chicago Zoological Society, Jim Schulz)

  • Grace, a search dog with the British army, runs towards a handler during a photo-opportunity, wearing a Dickin Medal, Britain's highest award for bravery by animals ? that was posthumously awarded to Theo, a bomb-sniffing army dog, following a special ceremony held at Wellington Barracks, in central London, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. Theo, a Springer Spaniel, worked alongside Lance Cpl. Liam Tasker, searching out roadside bombs in the Taliban stronghold of Helmand Province. Tasker was killed in a firefight with insurgents in March 2011, and Theo suffered a fatal seizure hours later. It is the highest award any animal can receive while serving in military conflict. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

  • In this Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012 photo provided by the Chicago Zoological Society, Jimma, a 27-year-old male rhino, enjoys a Halloween pumpkin treat at the Brookfield Zoo in Brookfield, Ill. During the fall season, many of the zoo?s other animals receive pumpkins also. Zoo guests can see some of the animals receiving pumpkins during the annual Boo! at the Zoo celebration this coming weekend, Oct. 27-28. (AP Photo/Chicago Zoological Society, Jim Schulz)

  • Rocky the Raccoon plays with a carved pumpkin at Bristol Zoo, Bristol, England Thursday Oct. 25, 2012. (AP Photo/Andrew Matthews/PA Wire)

  • A polar bear eats a pumpkin at the Detroit Zoo in Royal Oak, Mich., Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012. The polar bears along with snow monkeys, gorillas, rhinos, zebras, bison, wolverines and anteaters received treats as part of the annual Halloween-themed enrichment program at the zoo. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)

  • LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - OCTOBER 27: A red deer stag looks for food in a bracken thicket after sunrise in Richmond Park on October 27, 2012 in London, England. Richmond Park is the largest of the capital's Royal Parks and home to 630 red and fallow deer. (Photo by Dan Istitene/Getty Images)

  • KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA - OCTOBER 27: A crane holds a fish in its beak next to two crows on the 15th hole during day three of the CIMB Classic at The MINES Resort & Golf Club on October 27, 2012 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (Photo by Stanley Chou/Getty Images)

  • Cranes fly over a tree in Linum, Germany on October 26, 2012. Linum, a village in the eastern German state of Brandenburg is one of the greatest resting place for migrating birds in Europe. AFP PHOTO / JOHANNES EISELE

  • LONDON, ENGLAND - OCTOBER 25: A dog is teased with some dog treats outside The Houses of Parliament during the Westminster Dog of The Year competition in Victoria Tower Gardens on October 25, 2012 in London, England. The annual competition was won by Charlie Elphicke, Conservative MP for Dover and Deal with his Norfolk Terrier Star, who was among the 24 dogs entered into the competition which is run by Dog's Trust and the Kennel Club. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

  • A female Southern Darter dragonfly, <em>Sympetrum Meridionale</em>, is pictured in kibbutz Netiv Haasara, in southern Israel, along the Mediterranean coast on October 24, 2012. AFP PHOTO / JACK GUEZ

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/28/animal-photos-of-the-week_n_2034609.html

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    Friday, October 26, 2012

    Insight: Bomb blast brings Lebanon's party capital to juddering halt

    BEIRUT (Reuters) - Luxury yachts line the glitzy seafront marina of Beirut's Zaytouneh Bay where owners would sip champagne at sunset before stepping out for dinner - spoilt for choice between going Italian at Signor Sassi or French at Cro Magnon.

    Across the street, the Whisky Mist night club at the Intercontinental Phoenicia Hotel would normally be swinging with Beiruti night clubbers. Gulf Arabs would head for the oriental Awtar night club at the Monroe Hotel for a belly dancing show.

    The real estate market, meanwhile, defies not just the laws of economics but geopolitical gravity. "How people can ask for $100,000 in rent when the country is on the edge of the abyss I find extraordinary," said Michael Karam, a wine writer.

    Lebanon would seem to have it all: a cosmopolitan society, beach resorts, mountains, friendly weather, good food and wine, and buzzing bars.

    The party capital of the Arab world, Beirut is a freewheeling city where Gulf Arabs, expatriates and Lebanese ?migr?s fly in to enjoy its luxury hotels. But under the veneer of modernity lie sectarian demons coiled to strike.

    The car-bomb assassination last Friday of intelligence chief Wissam al-Hassan - an attack almost universally blamed on Syria and its local allies - brought the merry-go-round to a juddering halt.

    Gunmen and protesters filled the streets, reflecting the antagonisms fuelling the conflict in next-door Syria and reviving memories of the sectarian hatreds that sunk Lebanon into its 1975-90 civil war, a conflict whose wounds have far from healed.

    It is not just the sectarian poison - reflecting the regional struggle between Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims and, in Lebanon, the Christians split into alliances with both sides - but the shocking social contrasts that lie beneath the surface.

    'MANY LEBANONS'

    Not far from the glamour of the Beirut seafront lie shanty towns where destitute people fight for daily survival.

    Two apartments in the gleaming skyscrapers overlooking Zaytouneh Bay sold only a few months ago for $18 million and $14 million. Apartments for rent were non-negotiable a month ago at a price of $100,000. Real estate agents claimed demand was high from rich Syrians fleeing the conflict at home, but now they admit they may not see such fat deals for some time.

    "There are many Lebanons. We live in a true disconnect. This place is on a respirator. We live in a bubble within the bubble," said Maria, 47, an interior designer who left Lebanon aged 9 and returned after 17 years abroad.

    Even before last Friday's blast, the spillover from Syria had started to have a knock-on effect in Lebanon.

    Security was deteriorating as the rule of law crumbled. Bank robberies and kidnappings for ransom picked up and sectarian rumblings between Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims heightened as Lebanon's main Muslim factions lined up with the opposing sides of the Syrian conflict.

    Tourists who come for the Roman ruins stayed away this year, leaving frightened Lebanese to contemplate another round of sectarian strife.

    The Christian-Muslim bigotry that triggered Lebanon's own war is now buried within the overarching Sunni-Shi'ite struggle convulsing the region. The battle lines in Syria are drawn between the heterodox Shi'ite Alawite minority underpinning Bashar al-Assad and the rebellious Sunni majority, with minorities such as Christians and Druze caught in the crossfire.

    Like other Lebanese, Karam has had enough. He will leave the country in which he married, had children and lived through three wars and a popular revolution.

    "What prompted me to say this summer that it is time to go is the fact that Syria is in crisis. I am not for one second one of those people who say the Assad regime has to stay, No, but I think while Syria is in crisis Lebanon will be in a more dangerous situation," he said.

    GREAT CITY

    Karam moved to Lebanon from London in 1992, two years after the war ended and the rebuilding of Beirut by former premier Rafik al-Hariri, a billionaire construction tycoon, started.

    The first tremor under this resurrected Beirut shook the city in 2005, when Hariri was killed by a massive bomb. The attack was blamed on Syria and its Lebanese ally Hezbollah.

    "Now my kids are 15 and 14. They want to go out and I don't want them going out because I don't want to worry every time they go out," said Karam.

    Maria, the interior designer, has already sent her two sons to school abroad. A Sunni Muslim with Shi'ite kids, she said sectarianism was embedded in Lebanese life and she did not want her children to subscribe to this culture.

    "For me it is a personal choice but for them they have no place in this society. They don't subscribe to the grammar of this place," said Maria.

    Beirutis are in a state of shock at the renewed violence, which is reviving memories of the civil war which claimed more than 150,000 lives.

    RESILIENT CITY

    Like many others Karam believes that unless the Lebanese rebuild a state not based on religion, tackle the security vacuum and revive the comatose economy, the country will lurch from periods of growth and prosperity to periods of instability.

    Syria is the epicenter at the moment. Sectarian hostility is on the rise across the region. It began in Iraq after the fall of Saddam Hussein, a Sunni Muslim, and the takeover of power by majority Shi'ites. This shift in the balance of power reinforced the influence of Shi'ite Iran and revived historic tensions in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Lebanon and Syria.

    That ugly side was on display last week after the car bomb that killed Hassan, a Sunni Muslim opposed to the Syrian leadership.

    In Sunni neighborhoods, gunmen set up roadblocks of burning tires, stopping passers-by and asking whether they were Sunni or Shi'ite - a chilling throwback to the civil war.

    A Reuters cameraman was asked about his religion. Despite confirming he was Sunni he was prevented from filming because he was told he had a "Shi'ite beard".

    Sectarian anger boiled over, with protesters chanting slogans insulting Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah. "The blood of Sunnis is boiling," they said.

    Yet despite all its troubles, there is a resilience to Beirutis, whose city could scarcely have survived without it.

    "Beirut has tremendous energy, it is a city that picks itself up in few hours. It is like a very ugly woman with lots of charm and lots of character, extremely imperfect," said Maria.

    "As imperfect as it is with all these people trying to live together, for better or for worse, they attempt to," she said.

    (Editing by Giles Elgood)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/insight-bomb-blast-brings-lebanons-party-capital-juddering-153836105.html

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    Thursday, October 25, 2012

    Novartis does not expect further sales bans of flu vaccines

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    Pablo Picasso: 10 quotes on his birthday

    Pablo Picasso was born on Oct. 25, 1881 in Malaga, Spain. His father was an artist who taught his son to draw and paint from an early age. By the time he was 13, Picasso had surpassed his father. Despite his youth his extraordinary application won him a place at Barcelona's prestigious School of Fine Arts. At age 16 he moved to Madrid to attend the Royal Academy of San Fernando, but spent much of his time skipping classes and wandering the city to paint. When he moved back to Barcelona in 1899, Picasso joined a group of artists and intellectuals. He began to move away from classical painting methods in which he had been trained and began to experiment and innovate in his art. In 1907 Picasso painted "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon,"?the painting which many point to as the forerunner of and inspiration for Cubism. Picasso went on to become one of the most celebrated and influential painters of the 20th century. A revolutionary artist, Picasso had the vision and the courage to try things that had never been done before and he was not afraid to keep changing. As Picasso himself explained it: ?Whenever I wanted to say something, I said it the way I believed I should."?

    - Elizabeth Drake,?Monitor contributor

    1. All children are artists

    "All children are artists. The problem is how to remain an artist once he grows up."

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/ZSH11MMPJ_I/Pablo-Picasso-10-quotes-on-his-birthday

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    ?One pass? for RMWB sports facilities a possibility with new ...

    Council has given the green light to creating a new not-for-profit corporation to handle sports and recreation facilities in the whole municipality.

    It would be modeled after the Macdonald Island Park corporation, and Mayor Melissa Blake says it could mean the same kinds of successes in new places as new facilities are built.

    ?If you consider one sport and recreation board or commission that has the overarching view about how we create facilities, whether it?s something on the north side in the urban area, or if it?s places like Fort Chip or Anzac, if we can get a synergy, we simply transfer it from one place to another,? she explained.

    Blake says having everything under the same umbrella could mean people buying one pass for everything.

    ?If you have an entity that?s working with all of the sport and recreation facilities, and they can come to an agreement about how they might be able to offer wider access, I think that?s a real benefit,? she said.

    ?So if I can get visitors from Fort Chipewyan that have a Fort Chip pass, come to McMurray and be able to participate at Macdonald Island or something new, that?s just a huge benefit for all of our residents.?

    Blake says the new corporation could be what spearheads a new rec centre on the north side.

    ?Population is the dictator on everything,? she summarized. ?And if you contemplate the population on the other side of the river, you may find that the facility has to be as significant [as Macdonald Island], maybe different amenities that are part of it.?

    ?I don?t need two fifty-metre swimming pools that are really fast and fabulous, but I sure need some swimming pools up on the other side [of the river].?

    The corporation is planned to eventually merge with the Macdonald Island Park corporation.

    October 25, 2012

    Source: http://www.mymcmurray.com/one-pass-for-rmwb-sports-facilities-a-possibility-with-new-corporation/

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    Wednesday, October 24, 2012

    Shining Star: University High's Kayleigh Valley

    VALLEY SS PIC
    Spokane Valley -

    Duck and cover... that's probably your safest bet every time Kayleigh Valley attacks the net.

    "I don't know the adrenaline starts pumping," Valley?said.? "It feels like you're actually going to win the match, that you got that set, so it's kind of exciting."

    Kayleigh's also been exciting to watch on the basketball court, which is where she will continue her career at the next level.

    "I've actually made a commitment to play basketball at the University of Montana," said Valley.

    ?"A kid that can go play division one in either sport, volleyball or basketball, it doesn't happen very often,?" said Titans head coach Mark Weis. "We've had a few of them come through University, but for me, this is my first one."

    That wasn't the only tough decision Kayleigh had to make.? She was also responsible for selecting the team shoes, a choice that stood out in the GSL.

    "At the beginning of the season I picked those out? and just thought it would be fun to go out as seniors having crazy shoes." Valley said.

    "I'm telling you what, that was a great call, " Weis said.?"At first people were like coach are you really going to let them do that? I said 'hey it's their call, its their season. Its synonymous with us just being different and wanting to have fun."

    Now, U-High's hoping those same qualities help them make a post-season push.

    ?"Our whole team goal is to make it to state and to do well there," said Valley.

    "To get there we obviously have to get through districts and regionals and just keep playing the way we play."

    Which is exciting, in crazy shoes.

    Source: http://www.kxly.com/sports/Shining-Star-University-High-s-Kayleigh-Valley/-/100918/17106140/-/ocw1uw/-/index.html

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    Santa Clarita foreclosures and their updates ? Santa Clarita Short ...

    Foreclosure Resources for Santa Clarita Valley cities. ?You can obtain all of the current foreclosure, auction, pre foreclosure and bank owned data for each one of the Santa Clarita Cities by heading over to our Main SCV Real estate website and typing into the MaCboX the words ?Foreclosure Radar?(minus the quotes).Santa Clarita foreclosures and the data

    When you do you will be faced with a Foreclosure Search engine unlike any other. ?You can either enter a Southern California city name or a So Cal Zip code. ?In either case, the renderings will be the same. ?You will be able to choose either Bank Owned, pre foreclosures and properties heading to the auction. ?When you see something that fits your criteria ? click on the ?inquire? link and we will get you the data asap. ?After you see the complete data regarding the property you inquired about, we will explain the next step and potential to use our exclusive ?One Party Show?.

    Here is Today?s market research for Foreclosures. ?This is relevant to the Cities in the Santa Clarita Valley. ?You will see the newest bank owned inventory, the pre foreclosures, sold to thirds and auctions below.

    We just completed our Santa Clarita real estate updates for the Cities of Valencia and Stevenson Ranch. ?The rest of the SCV cities will follow tomorrow ? everything has just been posted at our Sellers Resource blog for Santa Clarita real estate sellers.

    Here is an actual For Sale Now foreclosure in Castaic CA ? Be Safe and Search Well!

    Showing properties 1 - 1 of 2. See more Castaic Foreclosures.
    (all data current as of 10/23/2012)

    1. 4 beds, 3 full baths

      Home size: 2,326 sq ft

      Lot size: 4,981 sqft

      Year built: 2000

      Parking spots: 3

      Days on market: 69

    Listing information deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Read full disclaimer.

    Your New Foreclosures alert, All Santa Clarita Cities ? NOD filings ? Updated, found a match.

    Stage Radar ID Street City Zip State Type Sq Ft Beds Baths Sale Date Est. Value Est. Bid

    Preforeclosure 517065122 28001 LOST SPRINGS RD SANTA CLARITA 91387 CA SFR 2100 3 3.00 02/13/2013 $274,879.00 $461,207.00

    Preforeclosure 517361505 27790 SUMMER GROVE PL 71 SANTA CLARITA 91354 CA CND 1603 3 3.00 02/13/2013 $269,448.00 $348,843.00

    Preforeclosure 512747519 27037 LANGSIDE AVE CANYON COUNTRY 91351 CA SFR 1522 3 2.00 02/13/2013 $291,048.00 $226,489.00

    Preforeclosure 311106 20001 CANYON VIEW DR SANTA CLARITA 91351 CA COM 1240 3 2.00 02/12/2013 $165,122.00 $126,875.00

    Your New Foreclosures alert, Paris911?s Santa Clarita Bank Owned Real Estate Alert, found a match.

    ?

    Stage Radar ID Street City Zip State Type Sq Ft Beds Baths Sale Date Est. Value Est. Bid

    Bank Owned 516973873 19230 AVENUE OF THE OAKS C NEWHALL 91321 CA CND 666 1 1.00 10/22/2012 $73,513.00 $54,037.00

    Bank Owned 214630 25959 STAFFORD CANYON RD G STEVENSON RANCH 91381 CA CND 1127 2 2.00 10/22/2012 $216,945.00 $292,644.51

    Your New Foreclosures alert, Paris911?s Sold to Third Alert for Santa Clarita Valley CA, found a match.

    ?

    Stage Radar ID Street City Zip State Type Sq Ft Beds Baths Sale Date Est. Value Est. Bid

    Sold to 3rd 503458777 25621 SALCEDA RD VALENCIA 91355 CA CND 1330 3 2.00 10/22/2012 $350,679.00 $335,000.00

    Your New Foreclosures alert, Paris911?s Auction Alert for Santa Clarita Valley, found a match.

    ?

    Stage Radar ID Street City Zip State Type Sq Ft Beds Baths Sale Date Est. Value Est. Bid

    Auction 43663158 17374 DOVE WILLOW ST CANYON COUNTRY 91387 CA SFR 3446 5 4.00 11/08/2012 $449,851.00 $686,093.00

    Auction 520590460 23609 BIG HORN WALK 59 VALENCIA 91354 CA CND 982 2 2.00 11/07/2012 $203,184.00 $437,200.00

    Auction 509560950 26127 MCBEAN PKWY 35 SANTA CLARITA 91355 CA CND 1537 2 2.00 11/07/2012 $331,616.00 $312,534.00

    Auction 311106 20001 CANYON VIEW DR SANTA CLARITA 91351 CA COM 1240 3 2.00 11/08/2012 $165,122.00 $192,864.00

    Auction 23796480 22136 PLACERITOS BLVD NEWHALL 91321 CA SFR 2247 4 3.00 11/08/2012 $476,861.00 $781,857.00

    ?

    - Paris and Connor MacIvor chose REMAX of Santa Clarita back in the late 1990's. ?They soon founded their own Brand within the Number one real estate brand in real estate. ?Today, amongst their clientele they are known as "The Paris911 Team" of Realty Professionals. They write all of the articles contained on this Distressed real estate blog about Short Sale expert negotiation and Foreclosure Activity.

    Source: http://santaclaritarealestate.paris911.com/2012/10/23/santa-clarita-foreclosures-and-their-updates/

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