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Holiday travel expected to be up this year
Posted by: | Comments
Holiday travel expected to be up this year
AAA projects a ten percent jump in travelers this year, estimating a little more than 34-million to go out of town. Last year, it was just more than 31-million.
Read more on KARE 11 Minneapolis-St. Paul
Are there any summer dance camps in Texas for this year 2010?
Posted by: | CommentsI’m a Senior in high school and I want to know if there are any summer dance camps in Texas for this year in 2010.
If you know about anything about that, please send me the link of website or a link of information about it. Appreciate it so much!
DANCE!<3
After all the optimism that us Chicago Bears fans once had, after all of the headlines that the Bears would be good this year, after all of the high hopes that the Bears would contend for the division title, on opening night, Cutler throws 4 interceptions, Forte couldn’t run the ball, Greg Olsen was lost in the lights of Lambeau, the Receivers were oblivious to the game, Vasher gave up yet another big play, and mainly, we lost Urlacher for the rest of the season, our heart and soul on defense. I never really realized how important he really was to this team, until I heard that he was gone for the season. It seems as if these last 24 hours have completely rotated 360 degrees. They looked like a 10 or 11 win team now they are looking like a 6 or seven win team. It makes me sick, I was completely happy during training camp, during the off season and when they got Jay, However yet again, the season starts and every sunday I am left with a feeling of despair. It doesnt help that I go to school in Wisconsin either. I just feel like never watching the Bears again. It pisses me off how inconsistant they are. One moment you think they are going to be great, the next they look totally hopeless…
swim training camps/teams/clubs FOR TEENS near N. ST. PAUL? Please help me find a place in Minnesota where I can get in shape and have practice in the summer for the start of high school swim team in the Fall.
What do you think about this lesson place?
Posted by: | CommentsIts In Northern Wisconsin
Its a 45 min. drive from where I live I think and its only $45 for 5 hours! (The lessons I currently take in town are $25 for a half hour!!!!!!!!!!!!!)
I want to go to this place for a day lesson (5 hours)
From what I can tell it looks good.
It starts with caring for the horse (mostly basic stuff: safety tacking up, feeding, grooming and managment ).
They teach English (which I do) and Western.
Teaches from beginner to more advanced from age 7 and up.
What do you think about this and in your opinion would you go to this place?
Heres the web site you can read more:
http://www.gnaco.com/kula/day_camp.php
OMG you seriously think I would be riding for 5 hours!!!!!!!!!
Did you even go to the website and read about it??!
I would be doing a lot of other stuff that has to do with hourse its not just ONE lesson!
Yeah, It is also a summer camp thing too.
As I said above I know I won’t be riding for 5 full hours!
What is the weight of this pop-up camper?
Posted by: | CommentsThe Flagstaff 2005 pop up camper. The model number 226D. Whats the weight? Thanks!
Sorry this is long, but please read it’s VERY important to me.?
Posted by: | CommentsWhen I was 9 my family moved into a trailer park we own. There was a boy who was 8 named Cory who lived there. He and I became best friends. He use to have a crush on me, he told me when he did. When I was 13 I moved far away and didn’t see him for a year. When I came back to visit I didn’t arrive until 4 in the morning. He stayed up all night just so he could see me when I arrived. I visited for 2 weeks and we were inseparable. While we visited we decided to travel 5 hours to the beach and my parents said he could come. We rode in the trailer behind the truck. We were laying on my parents bed in the trailer and i fell asleep and somehow managed to lay on his chest. When I woke up he was still asleep and I was still on his chest and he had his arm around me. We would flirt A LOT so I thought. Then I had to leave to go back home to the far away place. It was another year until I saw him again. We moved back to the trailer park when I was 15. I am 15 now. He moved 20 minutes away. He came over a lot, and called me almost everyday. Now he NEVER calls me, he ignores me when I see him. When we would talk we use to be like by love you. Now he won’t say love you and he won’t hug me. What went wrong?
I have known him and been best friends with him for 7 years. I would like to think he wouldn’t just throw me away would he?
what should i bring for this camping trip?
Posted by: | Commentsok my dad and i are planning a DIRT bike riding camping trip in the dirt hills up high in the mountains and my dad came up with this one thing of looking online to see if there is a checklist but i can only find like motorcycling check list for like Harleys so we are camping in a tent for a weekend or one night and i want to see if anyone can find a website or can make a really good one. like
(ex:)
.gas (for the dirt bikes)
.water
……………………… and so on
thanks
What is your opinion on this Activists blast Mexico’s immigration law?
Posted by: | CommentsBy all means skip this if you cannot read..TULTITLN, Mexico — Arizona’s new law forcing local police to take a greater role in enforcing immigration law has caused a lot of criticism from Mexico, the largest single source of illegal immigrants in the United States.
But in Mexico, illegal immigrants receive terrible treatment from corrupt Mexican authorities, say people involved in the system.
And Mexico has a law that is no different from Arizona’s that empowers local police to check the immigration documents of people suspected of not being in the country legally.
“There (in the United States), they’ll deport you,” Hector Vázquez, an illegal immigrant from Honduras, said as he rested in a makeshift camp with other migrants under a highway bridge in Tultitlán. “In Mexico they’ll probably let you go, but they’ll beat you up and steal everything you’ve got first.”
Mexican authorities have harshly criticized Arizona’s SB1070, a law that requires local police to check the status of persons suspected of being illegal immigrants. The law provides that a check be done in connection with another law enforcement event, such as a traffic stop, and also permits Arizona citizens to file lawsuits against local authorities for not fully enforcing immigration laws.
CONTROL: Obama to send 1,200 troops to U.S.-Mexico border
CENSUS: Ariz. immigration law makes Census count tougher
OPINION: To end illegal immigration, hit employers with high fines
Mexico’s Foreign Ministry said the law “violates inalienable human rights” and Democrats in Congress applauded Mexican President Felipe Calderón’s criticisms of the law in a speech he gave on Capitol Hill last week.
Yet Mexico’s Arizona-style law requires local police to check IDs. And Mexican police freely engage in racial profiling and routinely harass Central American migrants, say immigration activists.
“The Mexican government should probably clean up its own house before looking at someone else’s,” said Melissa Vertíz, spokeswoman for the Fray Matías de Córdova Human Rights Center in Tapachula, Mexico.
In one six-month period from September 2008 through February 2009, at least 9,758 migrants were kidnapped and held for ransom in Mexico — 91 of them with the direct participation of Mexican police, a report by the National Human Rights Commission said. Other migrants are routinely stopped and shaken down for bribes, it said.
A separate survey conducted during one month in 2008 at 10 migrant shelters showed Mexican authorities were behind migrant attacks in 35 of 240 cases, or 15%.
Most migrants in Mexico are Central Americans who are simply passing through on their way to the United States, human rights groups say. Others are Guatemalans who live and work along Mexico’s southern border, mainly as farm workers, as maids, or in bars and restaurants.
The Central American migrants headed to the United States travel mainly on freight trains, stopping to rest and beg for food at rail crossings like the one in Tultitlán, an industrial suburb of Mexico City.
On a recent afternoon, Victor Manuel Beltrán Rodríguez of Managua, Nicaragua, trudged between the cars at a stop light, his hand outstretched.
“Can you give me a peso? I’m from Nicaragua,” he said. Every 10 cars or so, a motorist would roll down the window and hand him a few coins. In a half-hour he had collected 10 pesos, about 80 U.S. cents, enough for a taco.
Beltrán Rodríguez had arrived in Mexico with 950 pesos, about $76, enough to last him to the U.S. border. But near Tierra Blanca, Veracruz, he says municipal police had detained him, driven him to a deserted road and taken his money. He had been surviving since then by begging.
Abuses by Mexican authorities have persisted even as Mexico has relaxed its rules against illegal immigrants in recent years, according to the National Human Rights Commission.
In 2008, Mexico softened the punishment for illegal immigrants, from a maximum 10 years in prison to a maximum fine of $461. Most detainees are taken to detention centers and put on buses for home.
Mexican law calls for six to 12 years of prison and up to $46,000 in fines for anyone who shelters or transports illegal immigrants. The Supreme Court ruled in 2008 that the law applies only to people who do it for money.
For years, the Mexican government has allowed charity groups to openly operate migrant shelters, where travelers can rest for a few days on their journey north. The government also has a special unit of immigration agents, known as Grupo Beta, who patrol the countryside in orange pickups, helping immigrants who are in trouble.
At the same time, Article 67 of Mexico’s immigration law requires that all authorities “whether federal, local or municipal” demand to see visas if approached by a foreigner and to hand over migrants to immig
Will you answer this question pretty please?
Posted by: | CommentsDo oyu think this is okay to read infront of class???for a project at school
*Write 3 Vignettes(short litterary scene sketch or something)
There’s no place like home
I remember when I first watched the Wizard of Oz; I loved it so much that my dad got me the movie on tape. “There no place like home” click, click, click poof! and Dorothy was back in Kansas again. In first grade or was it kindergarten? I don’t remember when but I remember trying it, click, click, click.Poof! I was in Kansas too. It happened so fast just after my cousin promised too teached me to cheer and dance. She didn’t get the chance. My Dad came home from boot camp, basic training, and before I knew it he was a soldier for the U.S Army. I was only 7 and I couldn’t really comprehend what was happening but I took it with excitement. I know that sometime after we moved into a cozy underground/basement apartment, I popped my favorite tape into the VCR. Dorothy clicked her heels three times and I did the same. Poof! She was in Kansas, and I was too. “Oh Toto! There’s no place like home” I tried I again, closed my eyes…and I was still in Kansas.
*
Kansas
Kansas wasn’t so bad. I started to like it a lot actually. Every one was mostly nice and loved holidays. My teacher Mrs. Langvart let us visit her family’s farm once, and I remember the ostriches and the chickens.Oh! And the time she brought an incubator and an egg from the farm to show us the life cycle of a chicken, when the egg hatched she let us name it and we all decided to name her Jazzy. During Halloween The computer teacher, Mrs. C let us watch Ghoosebumps.and every year would read us this story that started like this “ There once was a house in the deep, deep, dark forest”. One Halloween in after school program we all learned how to carve pumpkins and tasted roasted pumpkin seeds. There was also my second grade teacher Mr. Packet that used to read us Harry Potter under the big oak tree. I remember school was really fun, maybe one of the best parts for me, but I’ll never forget the snow. The snow in Kansas was beautiful sometimes even heavenly. My window was ground level like a lot of apartments and I woke up every morning in winter to see the ground outside, everything was sparkling, like thousands of diamonds. One of the prettiest things I’d ever seen.
*
Homebound
I didn’t really expect to come back to Georgia, but life’s just surprising like that. Infact, everything is like a blur now, after moving back. No more fourth of July parades, Halloween parades, Christmas lights decorating every store in town, it’s weird like there’s a holiday spirit deficiency, but it’s home. I never really appreciated Kansas. I mean there was only a Wal-Mart and a Dillard’s for grocery shopping, and the PX if you had a military pass. When I first got there it was pretty bad, but eventually I met the sweetest people who called soda “Pop” instead of soda and lollipops “suckers”. And teachers who told us that saying “dang” was a bad word. “There’s no place like home”
