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Jul 13, 2014 15:09:50   #
Violameista= I finally got page 7 and 8 thanks to you. I did format the card and now my mind is relieved. I suppose you play Viola If I am reading your avatar correctly. I am a trombone player and just finished my career with a local Sym. band and Symphony after 42 years. In regards to the FZ200 I am in awe of this thing. Its just that its got so many bells and whistles that it is baffling when things don"t go right. I shot canon for years and could pick up any model and have it working quickly. I did not realize that I purchased a computer that also takes pictures on the side. Again, Many thanks.
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Jul 12, 2014 21:40:01   #
Thanks Warhawk but I have done that and still no results.
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Jul 12, 2014 15:22:59   #
I purchased this camera recently and have had some issues with it.

1. I cannot bring up in the menu page 7 and 8.
2. I purchased the 1.7 Tele converter and does not magnify any more then regular optical Zome.
I need page 7 in the menu because thats where format is and on page 8 there is the reset program. If you have this camera, let me know what you think. Thanks for you help.
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Jun 26, 2014 21:38:08   #
dirtpusher wrote:
http://online.wsj.com/articles/immigrant-stash-houses-thrive-along-texas-mexico-border-1403715958

Immigrant 'Stash Houses' Thrive Along Texas-Mexico Border
Some Smugglers Cram 100 or More Migrants Into a Decrepit House


By ANA CAMPOY CONNECT
Updated June 25, 2014 5:22 p.m. ET
View Slideshow

Immigrants' possessions are still strewn around this former stash house, from toothbrushes to playing cards to clothes. It is becoming more common for smugglers to hold migrants captive for days as they seek to extort more money out of their relatives or friends, law enforcement officers say. Ilana Panich-Linsman for The Wall Street Journal
SAN JUAN, Texas—Sgt. Rolando Garcia sat in a surveillance van earlier this month, staking out a white wooden house surrounded by sprawling cactus in this city of 35,000 residents near the U.S.-Mexico border.

He wasn't looking for signs of drugs or weapons, but for evidence that it was a stash house packed with illegal immigrants, the hottest illicit commodity for smugglers on the Texas border.

Human smuggling is nothing new along the U.S.-Mexico boundary, but federal, state and local officials report a rise in Texas in recent months, as thousands of Central Americans sneak into the country—including many unaccompanied children. The migrants are overwhelming authorities along the Rio Grande.

The criminal networks being uncovered in Texas involve large groups of immigrants—and increasingly brazen smugglers. They often hold migrants hostage and threaten them with brutality if their friends or relatives don't produce extra money to release them, authorities said. Sometime, they kidnap migrants from rival smuggling gangs.

Earlier this month, San Juan police found 43 people trapped inside one suspected stash house. The migrants claimed that their captors threatened to electrocute them if they tried to escape, according to a criminal complaint filed in federal court.


"We don't enforce immigration law, but we're obligated to intervene," said Sgt. Garcia, who said his department is now getting five to six calls a day about suspected stash houses. It has busted 21 such houses in the past nine months, four more than in the previous 12 months.

Sen. John McCain (R., Ariz.) said Wednesday that President Barack Obama should make a broader case to Central Americans not to attempt to come to the U.S.

"The president of the United States has to openly say, 'If you come here and you enter this country illegally you're going to go back,'" Mr. McCain said at a Wall Street Journal breakfast gathering in Washington. "That is not the message that's being put out on television and radio in Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala."

The rise in smuggling and related violence in Texas hasn't reached the proportions that plagued Arizona last decade, when that region was the hot spot for illegal immigrant traffic into the U.S., but authorities say they are concerned that it is worsening.

"We are hoping that we don't find ourselves in the same place as Arizona did," said Janice Ayala, a special agent in charge with Homeland Security HOMS -4.01% Investigations, part of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Smuggling is becoming a threat to public safety in Texas, some local law-enforcement officials say. They report a rise in high-speed pursuits by authorities as more immigrant-laden vehicles pass through the area, and an increase in car thefts as smugglers seek vehicles to transport the migrants.

Last week, Texas Gov. Rick Perry and state legislative leaders authorized $1.3 million in extra funding a week for the rest of 2014 to allow the Texas Department of Public Safety to mount a counterattack to the jump in illegal immigration, arguing that federal officials were failing in their duty to secure the border.

"Texas can't afford to wait for Washington to act on this crisis and we will not sit idly by while the safety and security of our citizens are threatened," Mr. Perry said in a statement.

The U.S. Border Patrol didn't respond to requests for comment for this article, or provide regional statistics on stash- house busts. But according to recent Texas Department of Public Safety reports seen by The Wall Street Journal, there were approximately 17 stash-house busts in the region between May 7 and June 4, resulting in the apprehension of more than 400 immigrants.

"At the end of the day we can't allow the crimes that are being committed, so we have to do something," said Steve McCraw, the head of the Texas Department of Public Safety.

Recently, some migrants have been turning themselves in to authorities shortly after they cross the river, mindful that they likely would be released pending deportation proceedings due to a shortage of detention space in Texas. But many continue to pay to be smuggled past the river to cities such as Houston and Dallas, law-enforcement officials say.

The demand for stash-house space, which smugglers usually rent, has grown so much that authorities recently discovered an outdoor encampment of makeshift huts in the outskirts of McAllen, Texas, near the border.

It can be a lucrative business. Smuggling fees range from $3,000 to $5,000 a person for Central Americans, and can go above $10,000 for migrants coming from places farther away such as China.

Two brothers were recently sentenced to more than 30 years in prison after pleading guilty to kidnapping immigrants from a stash house to extort them. Ms. Ayala of Homeland Security Investigations said it took almost a year to wrap up that case, adding that others that go to trial can take much longer.

The cases can involve dozens of witnesses that investigators have to interview, said Ms. Ayala. They ultimately have to be prosecuted by a U.S. attorney's office, which also has limited resources to handle the work.

It requires "a lot of tenacity for our investigators to pursue these cases and ultimately get people apprehended and charged for their participation," she said.

—Reid Epstein contributed to this article.

Write to Ana Campoy at ana.campoy@wsj.com
http://online.wsj.com/articles/immigrant-stash-hou... (show quote)


Talk, Talk, Talk and not say anything. I live in this area and I see and hear everyday the talk about doing something about the problem. The Talk makes politicos feel good but you see, its just talk as no one is doing anything to alleviate the situation. In fact it gets down right funny at times. Reminds me of little kids trying to look and feel important. So talk, talk, talk, yap, yap yap and feel good.
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Jun 25, 2014 06:43:15   #
gym wrote:
Three photos focused on three different directions around the pond.


Wish I could be there. Nice shots!
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Jun 14, 2014 17:52:49   #
James Shaw wrote:
Is that a real working solution? Maybe. But don't you think they would be right back at the border the next day?


James. We have been told by these ill eagles that they had had to borrow as much as $8000.00 bucks to make the trip. Not any time soon.
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Jun 13, 2014 21:21:01   #


Get ready. They are headed your way.
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Jun 13, 2014 21:19:42   #
rmalarz wrote:
Grand Paw is sitting in the big white house on the hill. Go ask him about the gate.
--Bob


Talking to Obuma would be like talking to a door knob.
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Jun 13, 2014 21:16:55   #
SteveR wrote:
Gate left open? I have to wonder who's giving these kids the bus rides.


Get ready Steve. They are headed your way.
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Jun 13, 2014 13:31:08   #
ConnieLynn wrote:
we need to spend less money and time trying to take care of these kids and more money and time trying to work with their countries to get them back home with their own parents. I truly believe the best thing the US government can do for them is return them to their country. I'm sure it's not as easy as I may think but it has to be easier than trying to rear 100's of thousands of orphan children.


Connie, They could put these kids on air planes and send them back to their country. If we can fly politicos all over the place, why can't we do this with the kids. Might even borrow the Presidents plane. We need to put the bite back on each country and let them take care of the kids. But see, it takes guts to take action and we don't seem to have that anymore.
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Jun 12, 2014 22:38:58   #
SteveR wrote:
Just funny


Flushing the toilet would be a better message.
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Jun 12, 2014 22:28:54   #
When I was a kid on the farm there was one rule you obeyed or you butt would suffer the most horrible pain. Grand Pa's rule---always close the gate behind you. This week there has been many news reports about the invasion from Mexico. Clearly, the gate is open. In my city of McAllen, the Hispanics, much to their credit, have banded together and are furnishing water, food, clothes and money (and bus tickets). The invaders are sent on their way with a hug and a kiss and I am sitting here wondering when more then 50 thousand kids enroll in school in Sept. how the schools will handle the influx. I am wondering what will happen in the future when these invaders begin to think about making a living. Will they be competing against the children of the folks who are working hard to feed these invaders? What a dilemma. Before you call me a racist let me tell you that I have so many friends who are hispanics and in my immediate family we have two Daughters -in -laws that are hispanics. Cream of the crop. For 42 years I have taught hispanics in my chosen field of Music. You could not ask for better students. So, I think my problem is wondering why we are in this mess. Why is Mexico not taking care of its southern border? Why can't we secure our own border? Why can't the government send troops to the border to help with this problem? If these were German kids or Irish kids or Canadian kids, makes no difference as they are here illegally and unless I have been living in a cave---there are laws against this. No, its not much the displeasure with the kids but displeasure with our government permitting this to happen. I know how difficult it is to turn people away. They have to understand that we have the right to make our laws and we the right to see that they are enforced. Sorry for the rant but Grand Paw would be up set. The gate has been left open.
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Jun 10, 2014 22:44:54   #
Lots of things flying around in the brush in the spring. Here are just a few. Thanks as always for viewing.


(Download)


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Look close. a bug or a bee--whatever

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Hope he makes it.

(Download)
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Jun 10, 2014 22:09:18   #
dirtpusher wrote:
http://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/too-many-too-fast-border-children-swamping-agents-n126751


So sad. You and I know that these kids are here forever. Can you believe what this is going to do to our schools. Are supporters aware of the problems when these kids start having babies and the hospitals will have to stand the cost of delivery? Have latinos who are U.S. citizens thought about the competition they are going to have in the future because of the influx now going on? Has anyone thought about maybe putting troops on the border and turning these people around and make them go back to Mexico.? Has Mexico thought about stopping them on their southern border? Seems we have a law that says that you cannot enter this country illegally. Simply law. Problem is that we do not have a government that has a enough gumption to say enough is enough and start showing some common sense.
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May 31, 2014 07:22:39   #
carlysue wrote:
the spathe of the iris, now dead, looked so delicate, a remembrance of a beautiful life. 3 images.


WOW! Captured so very well.
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