Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Housing slump spawns winners and losers
Posted on Sun, Oct 04, 2009
Pascale Phaeton is dipping her toes into the still-choppy sea of real estate. Phaeton, 34, a legal assistant, sold her $90,000 West Virginia townhouse and moved to Glen Mills two years ago, hoping the schools here would be better for her autistic son, Julius, now 12.
»Read story: Housing slump spawns winners and losers
 
Couple remakes colonial into personal retreat


9 comments
Comments  (9)
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  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:11 PM, 10/04/2009
    cosrivron2 you have no right to tell this woman where to live with her child.who are you to say that he child does not deserve a quality education? Autism is not something a parent wants their child to have.I know because my son has it.
    mizzbryant
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:40 PM, 10/04/2009
    West Virginia schools must be really, really bad for the lady to come here to school her kid. Wow, I can't imagine how bad their schools are after seeing shootings, stabbings, and beatings in Philly schools on a regular basis. ......... I wonder why her kid has a different last name than she??? ;~)
    Ralph 1
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 7:49 AM, 10/05/2009
    Cos and Ralph - oh, your racism is so clever! Pathetic. There are bad school districts everywhere - especially if your child needs extra help. She is doing the smart thing by taking her time and looking, not in Philadelphia Ralph (read the article, don't just look at the pictures)but in Chadds Ford. Beautiful homes and great schools. I wish her great luck and I hope the market does bounce back.
    lulu
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