Posted by admin | Posted in Educational Toys | Posted on 25-12-2008
Tags: hunt, i spy treasure hunt answers, i spy treasure hunt download, i spy treasure hunt game, spy, spy treasure hunt, spy treasure hunt game, stumble, tags, videos
Spy Treasure
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LEAPSTER Game I SPY Treasure Hunt NEW NIB $12.00 |
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4 NIP I SPY TREASURE HUNT COMPUTER GAMES-HIDDEN OBJECTS $17.99 |
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I Spy Pirate Treasure by Dan Marzollo (2003, Paperback) $1.00 |
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Leapster 2 LMax I Spy Treasure Hunt Game *New* *Sealed* $14.95 |
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Lot of 2 Leapster 2 game I Spy Treasure, Star Wars Math $31.00 |
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Leapster I Spy Treasure Hunt Game Cartridge 1st-3rd $3.25 |
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2 SCHOLASTIC I SPY BOOKS FANTASY & TREASURE HUNT NEW $1.99 |
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I SPY ~ 1999 HC Book Of Picture Riddles ~ TREASURE HUNT $7.50 |
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I Spy Treasure Hunt (I Spy), Jean Marzollo~Walter Wick~ $5.15 |
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Leapster 2 LMax Game Scholastic I SPY Treasure Hunt $7.50 |
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I Spy Treasure Hunt, Jean Marzollo, New Book $3.29 |
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I Spy Treasure Hunt by Jean Marzollo (1999, Reinforc… $1.99 |
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I Spy Treasure Hunt (I Spy) by Jean Marzollo, Walter Wi $6.95 |
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I Spy Treasure Hunt DVD Game 5 Book LOT Mystery Riddles $14.99 |
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NEW I Spy Treasure Hunt Leapster Game $2.25 |
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I Spy Treasure Hunt Leapster Game – gently used $2.25 |
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NIP I SPY TREASURE HUNT COMPUTER GAME-HIDDEN OBJECTS $4.99 |
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I Spy Treasure Hunt, Jean Marzollo, Good, Corners bumpe $4.99 |
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I Spy Treasure Hunt, Jean Marzollo, Good, Corners bumpe $4.99 |
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Leapster I SPY TREASURE HUNT **NEW IN BOX** $7.00 |
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New Scholastic I Spy Treasure Hunt Computer Games $3.95 |
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Leapster Leap Frog I SPY TREASURE HUNT Game $14.95 |
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I Spy Memory Game NIB + I Spy Treasure Hunt Book – NEW $7.99 |
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I Spy Treasure Hunt by Jean Marzollo (1999, Reinforc… $1.99 |
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NIP I SPY TREASURE HUNT COMPUTER GAME-HIDDEN OBJECTS $4.99 |
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I SPY TREASURE HUNT SCHOLASTIC EDUCATION CD PC GAME LOT $0.99 |
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Leapster Learning Game: I Spy: Treasure Hunt Leapfrog $12.99 |
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NEW I Spy Treasure Hunt: A Book of Picture Riddles -… $8.51 |
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Leapster 2 Game- I spy Treasure Hunt $1.54 |
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NIP I SPY TREASURE HUNT COMPUTER GAME-HIDDEN OBJECTS $4.99 |
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Explosive: The Best of Bond $10.73 No Description AvailableNo Track Information AvailableMedia Type: CDArtist: BONDTitle: EXPLOSIVE: BEST OF BONDStreet Release Date: 06/28/2005… |
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Beggar’s Opera / Polly $19.98 … |
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Austin Powers – The Spy Who Shagged Me (New Line Platinum Series) $1.99 Dr. Evil is back…and has invented a new time machine that allows him to go back to the 60’s and steal Austin Powers’s mojo, inadvertently leaving him “shagless”…. |
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Beyond Justice $0.75 An explosive saga of intrigue, treachery and betrayal. Hauer is an ex-CIA operative hired to rescue the son of a mysterious tycoon from the cluches of bloodthirsty international terrorist. He is plunged into a murky world of espionage where his only hope of survival lies with an enigmatic beauty who may or may not be on his side…. |
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LeapFrog Leapster Learning Game Scholastic ISPY Treasure Hunt $15.60 Discover treasures left behind by three legendary pirates! Reveal pieces of their treasure maps while playing games and solving riddles that build thinking and vocabulary skills. Leapster 2 players can connect online for extra activities and rewards. And with the LeapFrog Learning Path, parents can see what their child is learning. Compatible with Leapster Learning System and Leapster 2 System, so… |
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Wild Planet Spy Gear Micro Spy Kit X-4 $12.88 Wanna be a spy? Better start with the Spy Gear Micro Spy Kit X-4. It includes an electronic motion alarm that protects your stuff, a finger light for pinpoint illumination, a pen that writes invisible messages and reveals them with UV light, and a disc shooter with two discs. Requires two “AAA” batteries, not included…. |
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Eyeclops Bionic Eye SE $9.99 Something BIG is going on, but its too small to see with the human eye. Enter the EyeClops® world with the award-winning Bionic Eye! Plug into any TV to turn it into a microcosm of eye-popping wonder! Everyday objects look amazing at 200x magnification. Salt looks like blocks of ice! Hair looks like twisted rope! Your own skin looks like something out of a science fiction movie! Requires 5 AA Bat… |
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Scholastic I Spy Mystery $10.98 You 6 to 10 year old child will have fun while sharpening his problem solving and critical thinking skills with this SPY Mystery software…. |
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I Spy Treasure Hunt $8.00 Playing I SPY riddles cleverly reveals pieces of three mysterious treasure maps. Once assembled, they lead you on a hunt to discover treasures left behind by legendary pirates…. |
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I SPY Treasure Hunt [Old Version] $5.23 Brain Building Games for Kids! Product Information What is I Spy? I Spy, created by Jean Marzollo and Walter Wick, is anaward-winning series of books, software, jigsaw puzzles, and games for children.I spy combines intriguing photographs of familiar objects with rich rhymingriddles to create bran-testing puzzles that kids can’t resist. Each time kidsplay I Spy, they discover clever o… |
Patriot Act still unconstitutional
By Michael Webster Syndicated Investigative Reporter:
Last week, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted to reauthorize three expiring provisions in the USA PATRIOT Act. While the bill they passed allegedly strengthened civil liberties in reality, the Committee failed to make any meaningful improvements to the Patriot provisions that violate citizen’s basic rights. Strangely, the Obama Administration played a significant behind the scene role in opposing stronger civil liberties protections, directly contradicting Obama’s positions as a Senator.
The USA PATRIOT Act only benefits Wall Street, the banks, large corporations and the U.S. Government, not mainstream America or the working class much less those of us who cannot afford legal representation. The Patriot Act broadly expands law enforcement’s surveillance and investigative powers and represents one of the most significant threats to civil liberties, privacy and democratic traditions in U.S. history. The act in its current form gives sweeping search and surveillance to domestic law enforcement and foreign intelligence agencies and eliminates checks and balances which had been the difference between the free world and the suppressed.
That difference previously had given courts the opportunity to ensure that those powers were not abused. PATRIOT and follow-up legislation now in development threaten the basic rights of millions of Americans and has turned America into a suppressed state.
A new bill introduced in this 110th Congress is designed to extend the USA Patriot Act allowing what many experts say are illegal provisions which will continue to allow the FBI, DEA, ICE, ATF, U.S. Military and other federal agencies to spy on investigate and arrest innocent Americans.
The law because of the act allows for violations of Americans constitutional rights that our fore Fathers did not intend. House Resolution 1467 Constitutional lawyers all across America say the Patriot Act should be repealed not reinstated.
President Bush signed into law the earlier renewal of the controversial Patriot Law on December 30, 2005 as the provisions were due to expire they were extended with Public Law 109-160 that pushed the date from December 31, 2005 until February 3, 2006. The date of expiration was again changed from February 3, 2006 until March 10, 2006 with Public Law 109-170. (Feb. 3, 2006
The original Patriot Act was passed into law on October 24, 2001 by the Congress of the United States, just 45 days after the September 11 attacks, with few Congressman even reading it and virtually no debate. There are significant flaws in the Patriot Act, flaws that threaten your fundamental freedoms by giving the government the power to access your medical records, tax records, information about the books you buy or borrow without probable cause, and even worse the power to break your door down at your home at any time of the day or night and conduct unconstitutional searches and seizures or if your lucky and are not home they can search your home or business in secret without telling you for weeks, months, or even indefinitely.
According to Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) the law dramatically expands the ability of states and the Federal Government to conduct surveillance of American citizens. The Government can monitor an individual’s web surfing records, use roving wiretaps to monitor phone calls made by individuals “proximate” to the primary person being tapped, access Internet Service Provider records, and monitor the private records of people involved in legitimate protests.
PATRIOT is not limited to terrorism EFF writes on their web site. They point out that the Government can add samples to DNA databases for individuals convicted of “any crime of violence.” Government spying on suspected computer trespassers (not just terrorist suspects) and all of this and more requires no court order. Wiretaps are now allowed for any suspected violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, offering possibilities for Government spying on and monitoring any computer user’s searches, e-mails and in fact record every stroke on any computer.
Foreign and domestic intelligence agencies can more easily spy on Americans. Powers under the existing Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) have been broadened to allow for increased surveillance opportunities. FISA standards are lower than the constitutional standard applied by the courts in regular investigations. PATRIOT partially repeals legislation enacted in the 1970s that prohibited pervasive surveillance of Americans.
PATRIOT eliminates Government accountability. While PATRIOT freely eliminates privacy rights for individual Americans, it creates more secrecy for Government activities, making it extremely difficult to know about actions the Government are taking.
PATRIOT authorizes the use of “sneak and peek” search warrants in connection with any federal crime, including misdemeanors. A “sneak and peek” warrant authorizes law enforcement officers to enter private premises without the occupant’s permission or knowledge and without informing the occupant that such a search was conducted.
The Department of Justice, with little input from Congress and the American people, is developing follow-on legislation – the Domestic Security Enhancement Act (nicknamed Patriot II) — which would greatly expand Patriot’s already sweeping powers.
The federal government has turned American freedoms into a world wide mockery with their unchecked spying on ordinary Americans, part of a broad pattern of the executive branch using “national security” and or “suspected terrorism ” as an excuse for encroaching on the privacy and free speech rights of Americans without adequate oversight. It eliminates many protections against unlawful imprisonment and now many rights in U.S. legal system are absent — such as the important right of habeas corpus Consortiumnews.com
As written the act violates due process for all Americans. All the president has to do is call a citizen an “enemy combatant,” or “suspected terrorist” and the person’s due process rights disappear. The US Government says that U.S. citizens can be detained and then tried in secret trials – in absentia, and can use secret evidence that the accused cannot see or challenge. If evidence is obtained by coercion, or torture government lawyers contend that it should still be allowed as a basis for conviction, there by erasing 300 years of Anglo-American jurisprudence.The shameful demise of due process – Editorials & Commentary …
You should be very uncomfortable with the collection of your records by the government which are using the Patriot Act to demand your social security number and other private financial or medical information by order of secret courts and the muzzling of those citizens who receive such orders from speaking publicly about them. This is a violation of both the 1st and 4th amendment. You should also oppose the collection of both private and business records by banks, pharmacies and other businesses which are using the Patriot Act to demand your social security number and other private financial or medical information.
Criticism of former President Bush’s admission that he had received warnings only weeks before September 11th has made it more important to understand the origins of the act. There has never been a more urgent need to preserve fundamental privacy protections and our system of checks and balances than the need we face today. As illegal government spying, provisions of the Patriot Act and government-sponsored torture and rendition programs transcend the bounds of law and our most treasured values in the name of national security and just the allegation of suspected terrorist activity be it true or not.
The current Act that was extended and updated you can read online at this site: www.epic.org.
Financial Transactions
The sections of the Patriot Act that deal with financial transactions fall under Title III, which is also known as the International Money Laundering Abatement and Financial Anti-Terrorism Act of 2001. It stands on its own as a separate act of Congress as well as being part of the Patriot Act, and is an amended version of the 1986 Money Laundering Control Act and the 1970 Bank Secrecy Act. The earlier acts tended to focus on preventing money laundering and international cash flow as it related to the drug trade, or to gambling, smuggling, and other types of criminal activity. In the 2001 version, the focus has shifted towards money laundering as a means of financing international terrorism.
The current act encourages financial institutions to collect certain data to identify customers and their transactions in case any of the activity should be flagged as “suspicious” by a government agency. “Suspicious” in most cases means involving any foreign nationals or corporations. The Patriot Act considers any such accounts or transactions worthy of intense scrutiny. (Although the scrutiny will, of course, be more severe for certain nationalities than for others.)
What if you are a US-born, US citizen, do not have any arrest record, and are not involved in any type of criminal activity? If you’d just like to open a bank account or engage in another banking transaction, can a bank force you to provide your social security number? How about fingerprinting you? Is either of these strictly required by law? Not exactly – although if you do not wish to provide your social security number you will have to obtain an alternate taxpayer identification number. This information (along with your name, address, and date of birth) is used as part of the required Customer Identification Program (CIP) used to verify customer identity (and to compare customer information with lists of known terrorist suspects). Such information may also be required by other money service businesses such as currency exchanges. All having the effect of the financial institution acting as agent to and for the US Government.
Fingerprints are not a requirement of the Patriot Act, and they are certainly not required by all financial institutions – so if your bank insists on this procedure, you may wish to take your business elsewhere.
Cash Transactions
Cash transactions are certainly not prohibited, but they bring more government scrutiny, and they are now more inconvenient for certain vendors to process. If you deposit, withdraw, or make a purchase involving more than $10,000 in cash in one day, the other agency involved has to file a Currency Transaction Report (CTR) with the IRS that reports details such as your name, address, and taxpayer identification number.
If you purchase over $3,000 of traveler’s checks, money orders, or cashier’s checks, such a transaction will also be reported to the IRS via a Monetary Instrument Log (MIL). And should you engage in any activity that indicates you may be engaged in money laundering or otherwise violating the law, your transaction may even trigger your being put on the no fly list and on the Suspicious Activity Report (SAR). The SAR will be filed without your knowledge – it is, in fact, against the law for you to be informed of the SAR as your knowledge would compromise the subsequent investigation.
If you want the Patriot Act to be repealed you should immediately write your Congressperson and express your concerns, if you and millions of others don’t America’s leadership in freedom and many of our own freedoms and liberties will be a thing of the past.
Read more at: www.lagunajournal.com www.usborderfirereport.com
About the Author
America’s leading authority on Venture Capital/Equity Funding. A trustee on some of the nations largest trade Union funds. A noted Author, Lecturer, Educator, Emergency Manager, Counter-Terrorist, War on Drugs and War on Terrorist Specialist, Business Consultant, Newspaper Publisher. Radio News caster. Labor Law generalist, Teamster Union Business Agent, General Organizer, Union Rank and File Member Grievances Representative, NLRB Union Representative, Union Contract Negotiator, Workers Compensation Appeals Board Hearing Representative. Investigative Reporter for print, electronic and on-line News Agencies.







