Monday, 17 October 2011

Algerian writer Sansal wins Frankfurt peace prize (AP)

BERLIN ? Algerian writer Boualem Sansal has won the top award at the annual Frankfurt Book Fair for his struggle for democracy in his homeland.

Sansal accepted the (EURO)25,000 ($35,000) Peace Prize in Frankfurt on Sunday, saying it will encourage the region's people who are trying to liberate themselves from "vicious and archaic dictatorships."

The German news agency dapd reports the author says he hopes the Arab Spring movement will eventually allow Algerians "to finally liberate themselves" and obtain a fully democratic state.

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle congratulated Sansal, saying "may his vision of a free and democratic society in Algeria become true."

Previous winners of the Bookseller Association's annual prize include Orhan Pamuk, Vaclav Havel and Susan Sontag.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111016/ap_en_ot/eu_germany_peace_prize

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Sunday, 16 October 2011

Plague bug not so fierce after all

DNA analysis shows bacterium was fairly ordinary but thrived in pestilent conditions of medieval Europe

Web edition : Friday, October 14th, 2011

Using methods that seem inspired by Frankenstein and Jurassic Park, scientists have reconstructed the entire DNA sequence of the ancient microbe responsible for the Black Death, the plague that killed half of Europe?s population between 1347 and 1351.

Using bits of the bacterium Yersinia pestis plucked from the teeth of four well-preserved skeletons of plague victims excavated from London?s East Smithfield cemetery in the 1980s, an international team of researchers found that the medieval microbe has nearly the same genetic code as modern strains of the bacterium. The scientists found no evidence that genetic mutations helped the 14th century strain of Y. pestis notch such a massive death toll.

?As to why this killed so many people across Europe in 1348, there is no particular smoking gun,? says geneticist Hendrik Poinar of McMaster University in Ontario, Canada, a member of the international team of anthropologists and evolutionary geneticists who published their findings online October 12 in Nature.

Instead, a variety of non-genetic factors that are difficult to control most likely helped the infectious disease spread and made it more lethal. ?The climate was beginning to dip,? says Poinar. ?It got very cold, very wet very quickly.?

More rain meant less food for people who were already poorly nourished. Crowded cities also played host to millions of rats, which provided the fleas that carry Y. pestis a warm ? and mobile ? home. Weakened by hunger and stressful living conditions, medieval Europeans? immune systems weren?t prepared to fight off the rodent-borne pathogen.

Though genetically similar to its ancestor, the modern strain of Y. pestis sticks almost exclusively to rodents and has trouble jumping from human to human. Antibiotics and other advances of modern medicine may have eliminated the need for a pied piper, but in the age of the bird flu and other animal-carried diseases, puzzling out why humans proved so susceptible to the ancient strain of Yersinia pestis is still important, researchers say.

Reconstructing genetic information about pathogens such as Y. pestis will play an important role in revealing the character of other kinds of infectious diseases, says Samuel Cohn of the University of Glasgow in Scotland. He notes, however, that understanding how a particular disease affects people takes more than knowledge of the microbe that causes it. ??A disease is a relationship between a pathogen and its host, and that relationship changes over time,? he says.

If that relationship happens to change again, and a pathogen dumps its animal host for a human body, Poinar says his team?s method of ancient DNA sequencing may help public officials stave off future pandemics by helping them predict how a life-threatening microbe will interact with the human immune system, treatments and even other microbes.


Found in: Body & Brain and Humans

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/335211/title/Plague_bug_not_so_fierce_after_all

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Militants assault US base in eastern Afghanistan (AP)

KABUL, Afghanistan ? Militants tried to blast their way into an American base in eastern Afghanistan on Saturday, striking before dawn with rocket-propelled grenades and a vehicle packed with explosives.

The attackers failed to breach the gate of the base in Panjshir province's Rakha district, though they did hit a security tower with a rocket-propelled grenade, said provincial Police Chief Gen. Mohammad Qasim Jangalbagh.

Three of the men attacked on foot, shooting, while a fourth detonated the explosives-laden vehicle outside the gate, Jangalbagh said. All four of the attackers were killed and two Afghan security guards were wounded, he said.

A NATO spokeswoman confirmed the attack but said there were no American deaths or injuries and no significant damage to facilities.

"There was a complex attack attempted, but it was repelled," Capt. Ebony Calhoun said. She said the guards' wounds were not life-threatening but they had been evacuated to a larger U.S. base for treatment. The base houses a provincial reconstruction team ? a mix of military and international civilians who work to improve provincial governance, services and infrastructure.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack in a text message sent to The Associated Press.

The attack in Panjshir followed on the heels of violence Friday which left at least 30 dead across the country.

NATO reported Saturday that 23 insurgents were killed in five separate operations throughout the east. In the largest strike, seventeen insurgents were killed in an airstrike in Kunar province. The remaining six deaths were in operations in Wardak, Kunar and Ghazni provinces.

In southern Afghanistan, a suicide bombing killed three Afghan border police officers and one civilian. The bomber blew up his explosives-packed car Friday afternoon while it was being inspected at a checkpoint.

The explosion happened in Spin Boldak, near the Pakistani border, in the early evening, said Gen. Abdul Raziq, the head of the border police in the south.

The checkpoint had been set up because of an intelligence warning that an attack was imminent, provincial government spokesman Zalmai Ayubi said.

Three NATO service members were also killed Friday in separate attacks, according to statements from the military coalition, making 11 killed so far this month and at least 464 since the beginning of the year.

___

Associated Press writer Amir Shah contributed to this report from Kabul.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/usmilitary/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111015/ap_on_re_as/as_afghanistan

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Saturday, 15 October 2011

Conn. man convicted in deadly '07 home invasion

FILE - This March 14, 2011 file photo released by the Connecticut Department of Correction shows Joshua Komisarjevsky, convicted Thursday, Oct. 13, 2011 of capital felony killing and other charges related to the beating of Dr. William Petit Jr., and the killing of his wife Jennifer Hawke-Petit and their two daughters in a July 2007 home invasion in Cheshire, Conn. The same jury will later decide whether he should be sentenced to death or life in prison. (AP Photo/Connecticut Department of Correction, File)

FILE - This March 14, 2011 file photo released by the Connecticut Department of Correction shows Joshua Komisarjevsky, convicted Thursday, Oct. 13, 2011 of capital felony killing and other charges related to the beating of Dr. William Petit Jr., and the killing of his wife Jennifer Hawke-Petit and their two daughters in a July 2007 home invasion in Cheshire, Conn. The same jury will later decide whether he should be sentenced to death or life in prison. (AP Photo/Connecticut Department of Correction, File)

FILE - This June 2007 file photo provided by Dr. William Petit Jr., shows Dr. Petit, left, with his daughters Michaela, front, Hayley, center rear, and his wife, Jennifer Hawke-Petit, on Cape Cod, Mass. Dr. Petit was severely beaten and his wife and two daughters were killed during a home invasion in Cheshire, Conn., July 23, 2007. Joshua Komisarjevsky was convicted Thursday, Oct. 13, 2011 of capital felony killing and other charges related to the beating of Dr. William Petit Jr., and the killing of his wife Jennifer Hawke-Petit and their two daughters. The same jury will later decide whether he should be sentenced to death or life in prison. (AP Photo/William Petit, File)

FILE - A July 23, 2007 file photo provided by the Connecticut State Police shows Joshua, Komisarjevsky, convicted Thursday, Oct. 13, 2011 of capital felony killing and other charges related to the beating of Dr. William Petit Jr., and the killing of his wife Jennifer Hawke-Petit and their two daughters in a July 2007 home invasion in Cheshire, Conn. The same jury will later decide whether he should be sentenced to death or life in prison. (AP Photo/Connecticut State Police, File)

Dr. William Petit Jr., left, and his sister, Johanna Chapman, arrive at Superior Court in New Haven for jury deliberations in the trial of Joshua Komisarjevsky on Thursday, Oct. 13, 2011, in New Haven, Conn. Petit is the sole survivor of the 2007 Cheshire, Conn., home invasion where his wife, Jennifer Hawke-Petit, and their daughters, Hayley and Michaela, were murdered. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

Judge Jon C. Blue leaves Superior Court during lunch break on the second day of jury deliberations in trial of Joshua Komisarjevsky in New Haven, Conn., Thursday, Oct. 13, 2011. Komisarjevsky is charged with killing of Jennifer Hawke-Petit and daughters, Hayley and Michaela in a 2007 home invasion. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

(AP) ? A man was convicted Thursday of murdering a woman and her two daughters in a gruesome 2007 home invasion in which family members were tied up, molested, doused in gas and left to die in a fire. He now faces a possible death sentence.

Joshua Komisarjevsky, whose accomplice is already on Connecticut's death row, stood and faced jurors as they declared him guilty of all 17 charges he faced, including capital felony killing, kidnapping and sexual assault. After the verdict was read he sat back in his chair, rocked slightly back and forth and glanced briefly at the jury. He yawned as he was led out of the courtroom.

The only survivor of the attack, Dr. William Petit, bit his lip and closed his eyes as the verdict was read.

"I thought from the beginning that he was a lying sociopathic personality and probably at this moment he doesn't think he is guilty of anything," he told reporters outside the courthouse.

The New Haven Superior Court jury deliberated for about eight hours over two days before delivering a verdict and will decide later whether Komisarjevsky, 31, should be executed or sentenced to life in prison. The penalty phase will conclude the second and final trial in a case that unsettled suburb dwellers across the country and bolstered efforts to retain the death penalty in Connecticut.

Komisarjevsky's co-defendant, Steven Hayes, was sentenced to death last year after he was convicted of raping and strangling Jennifer Hawke-Petit and killing her daughters, 11-year-old Michaela and 17-year-old Hayley, who died of smoke inhalation.

The two paroled burglars spotted Hawke-Petit and her youngest daughter at a grocery store on July 22, 2007, and followed them back to the house, where they beat Petit with a baseball bat and tied up his wife and daughters. The night of terror drew comparisons to Truman Capote's "In Cold Blood," which documented the brutal murders of a farmer and members of his family.

Hayes forced Hawke-Petit to withdraw money from a bank before he raped and strangled her in the family's Cheshire home.

The girls, who had pillowcases placed over their heads, died after the house was doused with gas and set on fire.

During more than two weeks of testimony, prosecutors played an audiotaped confession in which Komisarjevsky spoke matter-of-factly and laughed occasionally. He admitted beating Petit and molesting his younger daughter and taking photos of her, but insisted Hayes wanted to kill the family because he was worried about his DNA at the scene.

Prosecutor Gary Nicholson said in his closing argument that Komisarjevsky was motivated not just by money but by his interest in 11-year-old Michaela. He was convicted of sexually assaulting her.

"Michaela Petit, he was interested in her from the moment he saw her," Nicholson said.

Petit said he always felt the case was partly about sexual predation upon women, and the focus on Michaela made Komisarjevsky's trial particularly difficult.

"I thought a thousand times what would have been different if I had two sons instead of two daughters," he said.

He said he was sickened by claims Komisarjevksy made in his confession to police that he had a kind of connection with Michaela.

"She was incredibly shy around men," Petit said. "To hear a statement that they locked eyes and there was some kind of bond was really nauseating and beyond the pale."

Komisarjevsky said Hayes poured the gas and lit the fire, but test results showed he had gas on his clothes. They also showed the girl he molested had bleach on her clothes, undermining his claim that only Hayes was worried about DNA.

Jurors saw grim evidence, including charred beds, rope used to tie up the family and autopsy photos. Gas was poured on Hayley's bed and on her sister, according to testimony. Jurors also heard testimony that Hayley likely took up to several minutes to die and it was unclear if burns found on her body occurred before or after she died.

William Petit left the courtroom for some parts of the testimony but took the stand to describe how he fell, crawled and rolled in his frantic escape to a neighbor's house to get help.

Attorneys for Komisarjevsky said he never intended to kill anyone. They played a part of Komisarjevsky's confession in which he claims he told Hayes, "No one is dying by my hand today."

One of the attorneys, Walter Bansley III, said the defense hopes the verdict helps the family with their pain. He said they have confidence in the jury system as they shift their attention to sparing their client from the death penalty.

"We have no doubt the jury will view the evidence with compassion and mercy," he said.

Komisarjevsky was sexually abused as a child and suffered multiple concussions and later turned to drugs, according to defense lawyers. A psychologist hired by the defense said that history increased his likelihood of criminal activity ? an argument defense lawyers are likely to stress during the penalty phase, which is set for Oct. 24.

Connecticut's death penalty has only been implemented once in the past 51 years, when serial killer Michael Ross was executed in 2005.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-10-13-Home%20Invasion/id-947c36186fb94bcbac449eb00d751c49

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JPMorgan Q3 net falls; bank readies pink slips (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? JPMorgan Chase & Co's quarterly earnings fell 25 percent, excluding an accounting gain, as the European debt crisis pushed investment banking clients to the sidelines.

The results are the first for the third quarter from a major U.S. bank and underscore how market turmoil has clobbered underwriting and merger advisory fees. JPMorgan shares were down 5.5 percent in midday trading Thursday, pulling down other big bank stocks.

"There were some very strong headwinds for JPMorgan," said Marshall Front, chairman of Front Barnett Associates LLC.

JPMorgan Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said the company will cut 1,000 jobs in its investment bank over the next 18 months. Banks globally are laying off staff as new regulations squeeze potential profits and as stock and corporate credit markets weaken. But Dimon said JPMorgan's cuts are mainly due to increased use of automation.

The bank did post 1 percent loan growth, which Dimon said was a positive for the economy. The bank's return on equity, a measure of profitability, was 9 percent, close to the 10 percent that some analysts view as a likely long-term average for major banks under new regulations and capital rules.

JPMorgan posted quarterly earnings of $4.3 billion, or $1.02 per share, down from $4.4 billion, or $1.01 per share, in the same quarter last year.

The results were muddied by adjustments for the market value of the bank's debt, which gave it a $1.9 billion pre-tax gain. When the bank's debt weakens relative to U.S. Treasuries, it can record an accounting gain because it could profit from buying back debt.

FALLING FEES

Despite the weak environment in investment banking, JPMorgan bought back $4.4 billion of stock during the quarter, and its diluted outstanding shares fell about 3 percent.

"We have a tremendous amount of capital," Dimon said in a conference call with reporters.

Said David Dietze, chief investment strategist at Point View Wealth Management in Summit, New Jersey, "They are putting their money where their mouth is.

"(The buyback) shows a degree of confidence. They don't see a cash crunch. The takeaway here is to be more optimistic about regional bank results but not be jumping up and down about the prospects of Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs."

Dimon has complained publicly and in private meetings with regulators that capital surcharges for the biggest banks are unfair and will stymie lending and economic growth.

Shares of Bank of America Corp, Citigroup Inc, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs Group Inc were down between 4 percent and 5.5 percent. All are due to report third-quarter results next week.

JPMorgan took a valuation adjustment for its widening bond spreads that amounted to 29 cents a share after taxes in the third quarter, it said. Given the company's share count, that amounts to $1.1 billion. Stripping out that figure from the quarterly earnings shows a profit decline of 25 percent from a year earlier.

Further complicating the calculation, the bank generated losses from this same item in last year's third quarter.

The third quarter was rough for investment banks, as the U.S. stock market, as measured by the S&P 500 index, dropped 14 percent. Investment-grade corporate bond spreads widened by more than 50 percent, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes, an eye-popping move.

With markets gyrating that much, many companies are reluctant to acquire rivals or issue securities. JPMorgan said its fees for underwriting and merger advisory were down 31 percent from a year earlier to $1 billion in the quarter. Revenue from stock and bond trading was down 14 percent, not counting the accounting gain.

"Obviously, the worse Europe gets, the worse it is for us, but we think it is something we can handle, just like we handled 2008," Dimon said.

Staffing in the investment bank fell to 26,615 in the quarter from 27,716 in the second quarter. Dimon said many of the coming job cuts in the investment bank would be from attrition.

The bank reported a private equity loss of $347 million during the quarter, compared with net income of $344 million a year earlier, and $1 billion of litigation expense, mainly for mortgage-related items, down from $1.3 billion last year.

The report from JPMorgan comes as the industry struggles to hold onto recent profits after losing tens of billions of dollars in the financial crisis.

Shares of JPMorgan have fallen with other bank stocks, losing 22 percent their value this year through Wednesday, compared with a 3.5 percent drop in the S&P 500.

(Reporting by David Henry in New York, additional reporting by Clare Baldwin; editing by John Wallace)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111013/bs_nm/us_jpmorgan

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Friday, 14 October 2011

Harvard Cancer Expert: Steve Jobs Probably Doomed Himself With ...

Harvard Cancer Expert: Steve Jobs Probably Doomed Himself With Alternative MedicineSteve Jobs had a mild form of cancer that is not usually fatal, but seems to have ushered along his own death by delaying conventional treatment in favor of alternative remedies, a Harvard Medical School researcher and faculty member says. Jobs's intractability, so often his greatest asset, may have been his undoing.

"Let me cut to the chase: Mr. Jobs allegedly chose to undergo all sorts of alternative treatment options before opting for conventional medicine," Ramzi Amri wrote in an extraordinarily detailed post to Quora, an online Q&A forum popular among Silicon Valley executives. "Given the circumstances, it seems sound to assume that Mr. Jobs' choice for alternative medicine has eventually led to an unnecessarily early death."

Amri went on to say that, even after entering conventional medical care, the Apple CEO seemed to eschew the most practical forms of treatment. Addressing the period when Jobs began to visibly shed weight, Amri wrote, "it seems that even during this recurrent phase, Mr. Jobs opted to dedicate his time to Apple as the disease progressed, instead of opting for chemotherapy or any other conventional treatment."

When we contacted Amri at his Harvard Medical School email address to verify the post was his?he's a researcher in the department of surgery at the medical school and research fellow at Massachusetts General Hospital?Amri emphasized, "I wrote that on a PERSONAL title and it's my PERSONAL opinion." On Quora, Amri expressed his "profoundest respect" for Jobs and that "I do not pretend to know anything about the case on a personal level and I never participated in the care of Mr. Jobs. I base all my cancer figures on my own research or sources from biomedical research known to me... I have done 1.5 years of research on the type of tumor that affected Steve Jobs and have some strong opinions on his case."

According to a 2008 Fortune article, Jobs for nine months pursued "alternative methods to treat his pancreatic cancer, hoping to avoid [an] operation through a special diet." The Buddhist vegetarian took this approach from the time he was diagnosed in October 2003 until at least the end of July 2004, when he underwent surgery at Stanford University Medical Center.

Harvard Cancer Expert: Steve Jobs Probably Doomed Himself With Alternative MedicineBy then the cancer was so far along Jobs had to lose his pancreas and duodenum in a "Whipple procedure." The cancer also spread to all the major parts of his liver. "The only reason he'd have a transplant," wrote Amri, "would be that the tumor invaded all major parts of the liver, which takes a considerable amount of time." Amri said the Whipple procedure and liver transplant were clear signs the cancer was out of control and should have been stopped earlier.

The condition might have been nipped in the bud if Jobs had acted right away. Jobs's cancer manifest in neuroendocrine tumors, which are typically far less lethal than the "pancreatic adenocarcinoma" that make up 95 percent of pancreatic cancer cases. Amri said neuroendocrine tumors are so "mild" that...

"In my series of patients, for many subtypes, the survival rate was as high as 100% over a decade... As many as 10% of autopsied persons in the general population have been reported to have one of these without ever having had any symptoms during their life. Up to 30% of detected GEP-NETs are so well differentiated they're strictly not cancers."

But even "the most innocent cancer" needs to be removed quickly, which is why older men are always being lectured about colon cancer screenings; colon cancer tumors are thought to begin as removable polyps. In Jobs's case, surgical removal may well have saved him if performed early enough, Amri implies. He wrote:

"In many cases, a simple enucleation (just cutting out the tumor with a safe margin around it) is enough and leaves no residual side-effects."

The cancer researcher made his comments about Jobs because he was looking for a lesson in his case. Doctors routinely face the ethical conundrum of being unable to treat patients because they've exercised their freedom to reject sound medical science.

But there is also, thankfully, a much clearer and easier lesson for patients in Jobs's experience: Do not waste time. Don't waste time by ignoring advice to get screened; don't waste time by drowning yourself in research about your condition; and don't waste time by delaying medically recommended treatment in the hops that something else will work.

Harvard Cancer Expert: Steve Jobs Probably Doomed Himself With Alternative Medicine"We saw the tumor slowly draining the life out him," Amri wrote of Jobs. "It was a horrible thing to see him lose weight and slowly turn into a skin and bones form of himself."

That, in the end, may prove the most compelling reason to forgive the brilliant CEO his many faults: Of all the people who suffered on the dark side of his headstrong, iconoclastic decisionmaking, it was Jobs himself who appears to have paid the biggest price.

[Photos via AP]

Source: http://gawker.com/5849543/harvard-cancer-expert-steve-jobs-probably-doomed-himself-with-alternative-medicine

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Thursday, 13 October 2011

Encino Real Estate for Sale

by paris911 on October 12, 2011

All of the homes, condo?s and town-homes that are for sale in Encino California are all poupulating the map below. ?Below the map you will see the property listings that load with the newest additions first.

A few other things to keep your Real Estate Searches happy:

Showing properties 1 - 25 of 274. See more Encino Real Estate.
(all data current as of 10/12/2011)

  1. 3 beds, 3 full baths

    Home size: 1,768 sq ft

    Lot size: 3.68 ac

    Year built: 1966

    Parking spots: 2

    Days on market: 1

  2. 3 beds, 2.0 baths

    Home size: 2,302 sq ft

    Lot size: 18,150 sq ft

    Year built: 1958

    Days on market: 1

  3. 2 beds, 2 full baths

    Home size: 990 sq ft

    Lot size: 9.33 ac

    Year built: 1971

    Parking spots: 4

    Days on market: 2

  4. 3 beds, 1 full bath

    Home size: 1,079 sq ft

    Lot size: 5,249 sq ft

    Year built: 1948

    Parking spots: 1

    Days on market: 2

  5. 3 beds, 1 full, 2 part baths

    Home size: 2,202 sq ft

    Lot size: 5,742 sq ft

    Year built: 1948

    Parking spots: 2

    Days on market: 2

  6. 5 beds, 3 full, 1 part baths

    Home size: 3,219 sq ft

    Lot size: 17,886 sq ft

    Year built: 1953

    Parking spots: 6

    Days on market: 5

  7. 4 beds, 3.0 baths

    Home size: 4,191 sq ft

    Lot size: 8,250 sq ft

    Year built: 1949

    Days on market: 5

  8. 2 beds, 1 full bath

    Home size: 783 sq ft

    Lot size: 5,595 sq ft

    Year built: 1949

    Parking spots: 1

    Days on market: 6

  9. 3 beds, 2 full, 1 part baths

    Home size: 2,308 sq ft

    Lot size: 15,987 sq ft

    Year built: 1962

    Days on market: 6

  10. 4 beds, 2 full, 2 part baths

    Home size: 4,561 sq ft

    Lot size: 29,527 sq ft

    Year built: 1962

    Parking spots: 3

    Days on market: 6

  11. 4 beds, 3 full, 1 part baths

    Home size: 3,451 sq ft

    Lot size: 39,204 sq ft

    Year built: 1962

    Parking spots: 4

    Days on market: 7

  12. 2 beds, 2 full, 1 part baths

    Home size: 2,017 sq ft

    Lot size: 5.05 ac

    Year built: 1973

    Parking spots: 4

    Days on market: 8

  13. 4 beds, 5 full baths

    Home size: 5,820 sq ft

    Lot size: 18,433 sq ft

    Year built: 1976

    Parking spots: 3

    Days on market: 9

  14. 4 beds, 4 full, 1 part baths

    Home size: 4,657 sq ft

    Lot size: 9,586 sq ft

    Year built: 1953

    Parking spots: 8

    Days on market: 9

  15. 1 bed, 1 full bath

    Home size: 864 sq ft

    Lot size: 1.00 ac

    Year built: 1970

    Parking spots: 2

    Days on market: 10

  16. 9 beds, 5 full baths

    Home size: 6,402 sq ft

    Lot size: 17,946 sq ft

    Year built: 1931

    Parking spots: 4

    Days on market: 11

  17. 3 beds, 2 full baths

    Home size: 1,212 sq ft

    Lot size: 5,700 sq ft

    Year built: 1949

    Parking spots: 2

    Days on market: 12

  18. 3 beds, 2.5 baths

    Home size: 2,768 sq ft

    Lot size: 12,375 sq ft

    Year built: 1946

    Days on market: 12

  19. 6 beds, 6 full, 1 part baths

    Home size: 5,934 sq ft

    Lot size: 12,502 sq ft

    Year built: 1989

    Parking spots: 9

    Days on market: 12

  20. 2 beds, 3 full baths

    Home size: 1,952 sq ft

    Year built: 1975

    Days on market: 13

  21. 5 beds, 5 full, 1 part baths

    Home size: 5,100 sq ft

    Lot size: 9,271 sq ft

    Year built: 2003

    Parking spots: 2

    Days on market: 13

  22. 5 beds, 4 full, 1 part baths

    Home size: 3,628 sq ft

    Lot size: 24,001 sq ft

    Year built: 1962

    Parking spots: 2

    Days on market: 14

  23. 1 bed, 1 full bath

    Home size: 819 sq ft

    Lot size: 2.37 ac

    Year built: 1971

    Parking spots: 4

    Days on market: 15

  24. 2 beds, 1.0 baths

    Home size: 802 sq ft

    Lot size: 5,320 sq ft

    Year built: 1949

    Days on market: 15

  25. 4 beds, 5 full baths

    Home size: 4,149 sq ft

    Lot size: 16,552 sq ft

    Year built: 1986

    Parking spots: 3

    Days on market: 15

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Source: http://relocation.paris911.com/2011/10/12/encino-real-estate-for-sale/

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