Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Sun Valley View Homes for Sale | Arizona Real Estate, Agent

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Sun Valley View Homes for Sale are located in our Arizona Homes for Sale search area. Search yourself or call an Arizona real estate agent at RCP. You can e-mail or call us for showings on any property.
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Are you looking for Arizona land for sale?

Why is RCP the best place to find Arizona land for sale?

Arizona land for sale can be tricky, and with only approximately 15 percent of the total land in Arizona being privately owned, finding the perfect piece may be difficult. Finding Arizona land for sale can be made easier with the right tools. Using the website here at RCP can be the perfect platform for success. Log in to the custom search tool and create a search, save, and revisit properties you flag. Search for Arizona land for sale bordering state land or in the big city. If you are a horse owner, you will want to make sure that the zoning will permit horses and any livestock you may have. Arizona horse properties are some of the most desirable and sought after in Arizona. RCP also provides in depth service for commercial and residential purchases and sales transactions. Appraisals and BPO?s are also available by our agents and appraisers. We have agents specializing in creative financing, bank owned homes, and foreclosures in both Pinal and Maricopa counties. Whether it?s Arizona luxury homes, custom homes, commercial or land, come see why RCP is the best real estate company in Arizona.

RCP?s Arizona Real Estate Listings

Our website is bursting with Arizona real estate listings!

Welcome to RCP, your easy to use Arizona real estate listings resource. You can Search MLS listings to find the newest and up to date in real time Arizona homes for sale, condos, townhouses, land, commercial and investment properties. We have dedicated property search pages for Arizona real estate listings for Arizona communities, Arizona foreclosures, and luxury Arizona and custom homes. Our website also features stats and charts displaying the current trends and sales data. We try to keep our Arizona real estate listings charts as up to date as possible to give you the best web experience available. RCP Realtors are professional, knowledgeable, and dedicated. We are the Arizona real estate resource with years of experience.

Whether you are buying or selling a home, choosing the best real estate agent is one of the most important decisions you can make in your real estate experience. RCP?s agents are dedicated and trained to provide a professional full-service real estate experience, with representation for buyers and sellers, commercial and residential. We are experts in the Central Arizona real estate market and surrounding areas including Maricopa, Gold Canyon, New River, and Florence. If you would like assistance searching or viewing a home or office, just call or email us at RCP.

Mesa Investment Property

Buying Mesa Investment Property

Mesa investment property can be very rewarding. There are a few different types of Mesa investment properties depending on the type of investor you are. If you are out of the state or out of the country, you will probably want a property management company to handle the day to day items. If you are looking to buy and flip, there is no need for property management, however, you want to buy and sell for the right price and in record time. Mesa investment property is broken down into:

Single family: A regular house used as a rental, or bought to fix up or remodel and flip to a new buyer.

Multi-Family: More than one unit or building, i.e duplex, tri-plex (3-plex), four-plex, or bigger.

Commercial or Industrial: Retail, restaurants, office spaces, medical offices, etc.

There are many opportunities in Mesa investment property. Investors from Canada and right here in the states are buying in historic districts and other areas at a fraction of what their resale value is. After a considerable remodel, they sell these properties for top dollar. Other investors are buying Mesa investment properties for their rental value. The rental market in Mesa is strong and single family homes can make a good return. Some of the best deals are being found in investing in multi-family real estate. These properties can provide an amazing CAP rate for your portfolio. Call RCP to explore your options.

Source: http://www.rcpre.com/mesa-real-estate-homes-for-sale/sun-valley-view-homes-for-sale/

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District of Columbia abortion bill fails in House (reuters)

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USC picks up Penn State RB Silas Redd

FILE - This Oct. 29, 2011 file photo shows Penn State running back Silas Redd (25) rushing for 14-yards past Illinois defensive lineman Whitney Mercilus (85) during the first quarter of an NCAA college football game in State College, Pa. A pep band and more than 1,000 fans bearing signs and shouting their support for Penn State football turned out Tuesday morning, July 31, 2012 to greet players gathering for offseason workouts. The Jerry Sandusky sex abuse scandal could cost Penn State current players, most notably Redd, who visited Southern California during the weekend and didn't attend Tuesday's workout. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

FILE - This Oct. 29, 2011 file photo shows Penn State running back Silas Redd (25) rushing for 14-yards past Illinois defensive lineman Whitney Mercilus (85) during the first quarter of an NCAA college football game in State College, Pa. A pep band and more than 1,000 fans bearing signs and shouting their support for Penn State football turned out Tuesday morning, July 31, 2012 to greet players gathering for offseason workouts. The Jerry Sandusky sex abuse scandal could cost Penn State current players, most notably Redd, who visited Southern California during the weekend and didn't attend Tuesday's workout. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

FILE - This July 13, 2012 file photo shows Penn State running back Silas Redd taking a break during a competition against the defense during the 10th annual Uplifting Athletes Lift for Life on the main campus of Penn State University in State College, Pa. A pep band and more than 1,000 fans bearing signs and shouting their support for Penn State football turned out Tuesday morning, July 31, 2012 to greet players gathering for offseason workouts. The Jerry Sandusky sex abuse scandal could cost Penn State current players, most notably Redd, who visited Southern California during the weekend and didn't attend Tuesday's workout. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

FILE - This Sept. 3, 2011 file photo shows Penn State running back Silas Redd (25) reacting after scoring a touchdown against Indiana State during the first quarter of an NCAA college football game in State College, Pa. A pep band and more than 1,000 fans bearing signs and shouting their support for Penn State football turned out Tuesday morning, July 31, 2012 to greet players gathering for offseason workouts. The Jerry Sandusky sex abuse scandal could cost Penn State current players, most notably Redd, who visited Southern California during the weekend and didn't attend Tuesday's workout. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

Southern California coach Lane Kiffin takes questions at the Pac-12 NCAA college football media day in Los Angeles, Tuesday, July 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

Penn State fans cheer during a pep rally of supporters for the Nittany Lions football team on their way to a morning workout outside the Lasch Football building on the Penn State main campus in State College, Pa., Tuesday, July 31, 2012. (AP Photo/Centre Daily Times, Christopher Weddle) MANDATORY CREDIT; MAGS OUT

(AP) ? Penn State's loss could turn into a big gain on the ground for Southern California.

Star tailback Silas Redd bolted Happy Valley to join the Trojans in a season of great expectations in Los Angeles. A 1,200-yard rusher, Redd will join heralded quarterback Matt Barkley on a team already favored to win the Pac-12 and return to the Rose Bowl.

It's a perk that Redd wouldn't have enjoyed at Penn State with the program burdened by stiff NCAA sanctions because of the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal. Among the penalties was a four-year postseason ban, as well as a scholarship reduction.

The NCAA also allowed players to seek new schools to play immediately this season, so long as they left by the start of Penn State training camp on Monday.

Since the sanctions were imposed last week, Nittany Lions coach Bill O'Brien has been trying to keep the team intact by stressing academics, family and the prospect of playing seven home games a year in front of a crowd of 108,000 strong at Beaver Stadium.

For the most part, it seems to have worked ? even though Redd's departure will be a serious blow to an offense being reconfigured by O'Brien, the former coordinator of the New England Patriots' high-powered attack.

Counting Redd, three players have left Penn State since the NCAA imposed its landmark sanctions on July 23. A fourth player, third-string quarterback Rob Bolden, was removed from the roster this week but had been granted permission to talk to other schools before the sanctions.

Otherwise, O'Brien hasn't lost any other starters or top backups so far. He had also said last week at Big Ten media days that more than 50 players had indicated they would stay. Six 2013 recruits have also reaffirmed their verbal commitments.

Penn State athletic director Dave Joyner wished Redd and the other transfers well. "I think that certainly we understand and it's within their purview," Joyner said in an interview Tuesday night with The Associated Press at an evening football function.

He added the low number of transfers was "a great testament to Bill O'Brien, and the kind of person he is, the kind of coach he is and the kind of players these are overall.

"This team has a lot of unity."

But it won't have Redd. Sophomore Bill Belton, a converted wideout, is next on the Penn State depth chart, and that could prove to be a roadblock as O'Brien tries to transform the offense on the fly.

Out west, Redd joins a team that finished 10-2 and No. 6 in the final AP poll last season despite its own NCAA sanctions ? bowl ineligibility and a smaller roster. After Barkley and safety T.J. McDonald decided in December to return for their senior years, USC signed a top-flight recruiting class led by elite quarterback prospect Max Browne.

Redd could make the Trojans even better.

"We welcome Silas Redd to the Trojan Family," USC athletic director Pat Haden said in a statement. "He is an outstanding student and athlete."

USC had been sanctioned for rules violations committed during the 2004 and '05 seasons.

"At USC, we've seen both sides of this issue, having lost a number of players to transfer due to our NCAA sanctions in 2010. But Lane Kiffin and his coaches would not be doing their job if they did not try to improve our team every single day," Haden said. "There is a specific need here for a player like Silas Redd, so Lane and our coaches recruited him within the guidelines set up in this instance by the NCAA."

An early-morning rally and last-minute social media campaign couldn't keep Redd from leaving Penn State. He took a weekend visit to USC before delivering the news to Nittany Lions coaches at the team headquarters ? about 12 hours after Tuesday's "Rise and Rally" community event to rouse the players at morning workouts.

Penn State said later Tuesday that tight end Kevin Haplea was also no longer with the team. It was unclear where the junior, who started one game last year, was headed. Backup safety Tim Buckley, a former walk-on, was the first player to leave Penn State in the wake of the sanctions. He joined North Carolina State this week.

And then, there is the case of Bolden, the former starting quarterback, who pondered leaving last year, as well. LSU has shown an interest in Bolden, yet he has not chosen a new destination.

Most players interviewed after the rally and voluntary workout said they hoped Redd and others would stick around, but would honor their decisions regardless.

"Each player came here for different reasons and with different objectives," tight end Garry Gilliam said. "When it comes down to it, I'd like them to stay, but if they don't, I'll respect their decisions."

Linebacker Khairi Fortt ? like Redd, a junior from Connecticut ? has considered Cal, Florida State and Kansas, his father, Guy confirmed in an email to The Associated Press. The Stamford Advocate first reported details of Fortt's recruitment.

The younger Fortt, a top reserve for Penn State, liked his visit to Cal but loves his Nittany Lions coaches, his father said. His decision could come Wednesday.

The rally was evidence of the Penn State community's resolve to stand behind the Nittany Lions that remain. With the pep band playing, at least 2,500 blue-and-white backers, alumni and local business owners cheered outside the football building Tuesday in support of the players caught in the middle of one of the worst episodes ever in college athletics.

Fans lined the sidewalks to slap high-fives and shake hands with the Nittany Lions as they snaked their way to the workout. The scene resembled the team entrance to home games at Beaver Stadium on fall Saturdays.

Inspirational quotes from Winston Churchill, Thomas Paine and Vince Lombardi were posted in the windows of the building. "It isn't whether you get knocked down. It's whether you get back up," read one quote attributed to Lombardi, the Hall of Fame NFL coach.

"It was so cool. I couldn't believe how loud it was," fullback Michael Zordich said. "This just goes to show why we're still here and why we're going to fight this thing through."

Former player Keith Conlin, a local businessman and online radio show host who helped organize the event said he wanted current team members "to know that we have their backs."

"These kids, they've been fighting an uphill battle for eight months, and it's nothing that they did," he said. "We're not going to leave them and run away."

Most downtown businesses are displaying "Proud to Support Penn State Football" signs on windows. Some stores have started selling shirts with the slogan "Billieve," playing off of O'Brien's first name.

After much deliberation, Redd will not be a part of this revival.

Instead, he's going to chase a title with the Trojans.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-08-01-Penn%20State-Players/id-6e5a82779bc949479a5f1273b4b9ba9a

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Legal Scholarship Blog: Copyright in the ?Cloud? ? Kyoto, Japan




This blog features law-related Calls for Papers, Conferences, and Workshops as well as general legal scholarship resources. If you would like to have an event posted, please contact us at legalscholarshipblog|at|gmail.com.

This blog is managed by faculty and staff at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law and the Gallagher Law Library of the University of Washington School of Law

This blog seeks to facilitate the legal academy's development and dissemination of scholarship, and so does not feature events such as Continuing Legal Education programs or regional bar association meetings.

Source: http://legalscholarshipblog.com/2012/07/30/copyright-in-the-cloud-kyoto-japan/

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Aquaman voice, actor Norman Alden dies at 87

Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images

Norman Alden, shown here in the 1965 film "Andy."

By Mike Barnes, The Hollywood Reporter

Norman Alden, a character actor who piled up a prodigious number of credits during his five decades in film and television, died July 27 of natural causes at an assisted living facility in Los Angeles, his family reported. He was 87.

Alden appeared in several hundred television episodes, commercials and films (his family put the number at 2,500) but rarely had a regular gig, frequently playing tough guys and authority figures one show and one character at a time. Perhaps his most recognizable role was as Lou the mechanic in a series of AC Delco commercials.

PHOTOS: Hollywood's Notable deaths of 2012

Alden provided the voice of Aquaman in two "Super Friends" animated series in the 1970s, played outlaw Johnny Ringo in 1961 in "The Life and Legend" of Wyatt Earp?opposite Hugh O'Brian and was Coach Leroy Fedders on seven episodes of "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman" in the mid-1970s. His character drowned face-first in a bowl of Mary's (Louise Lasser's) chicken soup.

The native of Fort Worth, Texas, got his start on "The Bob Cummings Show" in 1957 and would appear in scores of TV series like "Honey West," "Electra Woman and Dyna Girl," "Fay," "My Three Sons," "My Favorite Martian," "The Big Valley," "The Streets of San Francisco," "The Rookies," "Adam-12," "Combat!," "Charlie's Angels," "JAG" and "Batman," where he played one of the Joker's henchmen.

On film, Alden voiced Sir Kay in Disney's "The Sword in the Stone" (1963), was roller derby skater "Horrible" Hank Hopkins in?Raquel Welch's "Kansas City Bomber" (1972)?and had roles in "Tora! Tora! Tora!" (1970), "I Never Promised You a Rose Garden" (1977), "Semi-Tough" (1977), "Back to the Future" (1985), "They Live" (1988), "Ed Wood"(1994), "Patch Adams" (1998) and "K-Pax" (2001).

VIDEO: "Back to the Future": Eric Stoltz as the original Marty McFly

Following a tour of duty in Europe during World War II, Alden attended Texas Christian University and worked at KXOL Radio as a disc jockey. He left Fort Worth in his early twenties to go to New York, won Arthur Godfrey Talent Scouts and moved to Los Angeles.

Survivors include his children Brent and Ashley, his grandson Zooey and his longtime life partner, Linda Thieben.

A celebration of his life will be held in Los Angeles in August and in Fort Worth in September. The family asks that in a donation in Alden's name be made to TCU's drama department; to the department of cardiology at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles; or to the Frostig Center in Pasadena.

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Source: http://todayentertainment.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/07/30/13031910-aquaman-voice-character-actor-norman-alden-dies-at-87?lite

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House Report: Eight Blamed for Fast And Furious

A Republican-authored House investigation places a great portion of the blame for the Fast and Furious gun-walking scandal on five agents at the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and three Justice Department officials, according to CBS News.

CBS obtained a draft report of the findings from the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, which lays a great portion of the blame on William Newell, the special agent in charge of the Phoenix office at the center of the scandal, calling his actions ?reckless.?

The report, which was prepared by staff for Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif, and Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, also singles out the former acting head of ATF, Kenneth Melson, for weak leadership, and calls for strengthening the agency, according to The Hill.

Fast and Furious was a failed attempt by federal officials to track guns that were making their way from the U.S. into the hands of Mexican drug cartels. A gun linked to the program was connected to the death of Brian Terry, a U.S. border patrol agent.

This is the first of three expected reports from the committee. Future reports are expected to focus on the Justice Department and Attorney General Eric Holder. Last month, the House voted to hold Holder in contempt of Congress for withholding documents related to the scandal.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/house-report-eight-blamed-fast-furious-102805357.html

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Rope a Dope: Drug Testing in Sports Enters a More Aggressive Era

Features | Health

Unusual variations in an athlete's blood could determine guilt, even if no illegal substances are found


doping in sportsCAT AND MOUSE: Will regulatory agencies ever be able to get ahead of dopers and drug cheats? Image: ? Sezer Yadigar/iStockphoto

Showcasing more than fifty of the most provocative, original, and significant online essays from 2011, The Best Science Writing Online 2012 will change the way...

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For thousands of world-class athletes, a passport is something they can't forget to pack before heading off to London for the summer Olympic games. But for a few athletes, a different kind of passport is keeping them out of competition entirely.

A new anti-doping program known as the athlete biological passport (ABP), which looks for indirect evidence that an athlete has cheated, is being implemented by several international sports authorities. Already the testing scheme, developed by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), has ensnared world-class athletes?and survived a challenge to its validity.

The London Olympics mark the first summer games in which the ABP will be in use alongside traditional drug screenings. And for competitors in sports that have taken up the program, such as cycling and track and field, dreams of Olympic glory will depend on their test results?past and present.

Rather than screening an athlete's blood or urine samples for traces of banned substances right before or after a competition, testers using the ABP scheme compare samples with an athlete's baseline profile, as determined by multiple tests over time. In the absence of a legitimate physiological explanation, such as an illness or a natural response to changing altitude, variations in an athlete's biological samples can reveal wrongdoing even if the specific doping agent or process remains undetected. For instance, a sudden change in the number of reticulocytes, or immature blood cells, might provide indirect evidence that an athlete has used erythropoietin (EPO), a hormone that stimulates the generation of red blood cells and boosts the oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood. Similar tests can assess levels of the respiratory pigment hemoglobin, which can also reveal instances of blood manipulation to enhance oxygen transport.

"In this way, the athlete becomes his own reference point," says WADA medical director Alan Vernec. "Otherwise you're forever chasing after new types of substances or agents that are being developed."

So far the biological passport has been applied primarily to detect instances of blood doping, but the same strategy could be used on urine samples to identify users of anabolic steroids. Nevertheless, the ABP is unlikely to supplant conventional testing schemes that detect prohibited molecules, such as steroids or human growth hormone, in blood and urine. Anti-doping experts view the passport approach as a complement to such tests, which continue to catch athletes breaking the rules.

Indeed, conventional testing still plays a significant role in cycling, the first major sport to sign on to WADA's passport approach. In the highest-profile recent case, Spanish cyclist Alberto Contador was issued a two-year suspension and stripped of his 2010 Tour de France win after a sample that year tested positive for clenbuterol, which WADA classifies as an anabolic agent.

The International Cycling Union (UCI), suffering from a severe credibility problem, adopted the ABP in 2008, collecting about 10 blood samples each from more than 800 riders over the course of the year. But implementation of the ABP has not been without twists and turns. Cyclist Franco Pellizotti, who raced for Italy in the 2008 Olympics, was suspended in 2010 for irregularities in his blood profile that indicated "enhancement of oxygen transfer." But the rider was soon exonerated by the Italian Olympic committee, which held that the evidence against Pellizotti was insufficient to prove his guilt.

The cycling union appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) in Switzerland, which last year overturned the Italian committee's decision and reinstated Pellizotti's two-year ban from cycling. The court also upheld a two-year ban for Italian rider Pietro Caucchioli; the cyclist's variations in hemoglobin concentration over a span of several months, the court ruled, "could not be considered as physiological" and hence demonstrated doping to enhance the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=ac5b936dc6aab836953febd5342b8728

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