gabriel_vieira
10-17 02:46 PM
i every one!!!
i have a question:
when i import the swf from swift 3d the backgrounf that i use in swift shows up in rhe swf, i want is,i export the swf whitout thr backgrund only the object!!!
thaknks!!1
i have a question:
when i import the swf from swift 3d the backgrounf that i use in swift shows up in rhe swf, i want is,i export the swf whitout thr backgrund only the object!!!
thaknks!!1
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chanduv23
09-16 10:23 AM
Do you know what is team spirit?
Each and everyone contributes for their own cause and collectively contributes for the cause of the community.
IV has built the great platform for you. IV has created all opportunities for you to stand up and speak for yourself.
Everyone can achieve results by working together as a team.
Please start looking beyond your cocoon - you must come out of your closets and show your soladirity.
Come on folks IV is nothing but you. You can make the difference
Each and everyone contributes for their own cause and collectively contributes for the cause of the community.
IV has built the great platform for you. IV has created all opportunities for you to stand up and speak for yourself.
Everyone can achieve results by working together as a team.
Please start looking beyond your cocoon - you must come out of your closets and show your soladirity.
Come on folks IV is nothing but you. You can make the difference
webm
09-24 12:13 PM
Its not a simple mistake,,that leads to lot of confusion for the readers..its unbelievable mistake..at least they should have corrected it by now as US Visa bulletin Oct09 released..:mad:
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validIV
03-17 01:04 PM
How many years have you been on H-1?
more...
immique
06-26 09:48 PM
I applied for extension of stay to California Sercice Center. But if I move to Texas, will be my case transfered to VSC??
Lelica
if it is an extension of B2 status, I don't think your case will be transferred to a different center if you move to a different state. you just have to inform the service center regarding change of address(I think you can send a AR-11 form) this is just my personal opinion. please check with the lawyer who filed your extension or other experts
Lelica
if it is an extension of B2 status, I don't think your case will be transferred to a different center if you move to a different state. you just have to inform the service center regarding change of address(I think you can send a AR-11 form) this is just my personal opinion. please check with the lawyer who filed your extension or other experts
dbonneau
10-03 01:52 PM
Hi, I recently got approved for I140 and am in the I485 pending.
Is it possible to add my parents as dependents when my pending I485 ? Thanks, db
Is it possible to add my parents as dependents when my pending I485 ? Thanks, db
more...
bond65
10-04 01:45 PM
My wife recently got her H4 extension approved. She got her I-797 approval form. While going for H4 stamping, Is she required to carry my original H1B I-797 also?
Thanks!!
Thanks!!
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Blog Feeds
10-04 11:10 PM
Senator Grassley corresponds with USCIS Director Mayorkas regarding fraud in the H-1B program. Issues such as the benefits fraud assessment and potential anti-fraud initiatives are suggested.
Continue Reading (http://ashwinsharma.com/files/4941-4844/__grassley_letter.pdf)
More... (http://ashwinsharma.com/2009/10/01/letter-from-senator-grassley-to-director-mayorkas-on-h1b-program.aspx?ref=rss)
Continue Reading (http://ashwinsharma.com/files/4941-4844/__grassley_letter.pdf)
More... (http://ashwinsharma.com/2009/10/01/letter-from-senator-grassley-to-director-mayorkas-on-h1b-program.aspx?ref=rss)
more...
Macaca
08-05 07:16 AM
The Congress So Far (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/04/AR2007080401272.html) An ugly finish to a rocky start, August 5, 2007
FORGET ABOUT November's bipartisan promises of civility and cooperation in Congress. At the time they seemed overly optimistic. Nonetheless, it is hard to believe that relations could have deteriorated so far so fast -- both between the new Democratic majority and congressional Republicans and between Democratic lawmakers and President Bush.
Thursday's late-night rumble on the House floor, when a vote was gaveled to what Democrats acknowledge was a premature close, epitomized the ugliness that has overtaken the entire legislative process. In the end, the 110th Congress headed for its August recess with civility in shreds and achievements sparse. Indeed, the only thing that might make August look pleasant is September, when lawmakers will return to resume the acrimonious debate over Iraq policy and confront the looming end of the fiscal year with spending bills unpassed and presidential vetoes in the offing.
There have been scraps of good news from the first seven months. Lawmakers managed to see two of their priorities become law: an increase in the minimum wage and passage of the recommendations of the Sept. 11 commission. Another major achievement, a lobbying and ethics reform bill that will make important changes in the way Washington does business, is awaiting Mr. Bush's signature. Both chambers passed versions of a measure to extend the health insurance program for children in low-income families.
But many other Democratic priorities -- and a big presidential one, immigration reform -- were snarled in the Senate. The 60-vote majority needed to overcome a filibuster proved to be as big an impediment for majority Democrats as the Democrats had made it when Republicans held power. The failure of immigration reform, of which there had been at least a hope of bipartisan achievement, was a particularly low note. Meanwhile, Democrats in both chambers chose to spend countless hours mired in a fruitless effort to compel an "end" to the war in Iraq.
One of the most disappointing recent developments has been the administration's apparent decision, in the aftermath of the immigration bill's failure, that there was not much to be gained from working with this Congress -- and something to gained by taking it on. This new belligerence has manifested itself in a blizzard of veto threats -- Democrats counted up 31 between May 1 and Aug. 1 -- the most regrettable of which involves the children's health insurance bill.
In the final hours before recess, it was hard to know which was more shameful: the administration's use of the looming vacation to bully Democrats into accepting its overbroad rewrite of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act or Democrats' spinelessness in caving to this strong-arming.
On the House side, a major disappointment was the failure of Democrats to live up to their pledge to treat the new Republican minority better than Democrats were treated when Republicans held power. Democrats promised a new, more open House, with adequate time for members to digest complex legislation and ample opportunity for the minority to offer amendments on the floor; instead, they, too, often used the same hardball tactics to muscle through legislation that Republicans had employed. That might have been understandable in the Democrats' "first 100 hours" that the new Congress was in session, but it is unfortunate that it persisted until the recess. That's no way to do business, and Democrats know it.
FORGET ABOUT November's bipartisan promises of civility and cooperation in Congress. At the time they seemed overly optimistic. Nonetheless, it is hard to believe that relations could have deteriorated so far so fast -- both between the new Democratic majority and congressional Republicans and between Democratic lawmakers and President Bush.
Thursday's late-night rumble on the House floor, when a vote was gaveled to what Democrats acknowledge was a premature close, epitomized the ugliness that has overtaken the entire legislative process. In the end, the 110th Congress headed for its August recess with civility in shreds and achievements sparse. Indeed, the only thing that might make August look pleasant is September, when lawmakers will return to resume the acrimonious debate over Iraq policy and confront the looming end of the fiscal year with spending bills unpassed and presidential vetoes in the offing.
There have been scraps of good news from the first seven months. Lawmakers managed to see two of their priorities become law: an increase in the minimum wage and passage of the recommendations of the Sept. 11 commission. Another major achievement, a lobbying and ethics reform bill that will make important changes in the way Washington does business, is awaiting Mr. Bush's signature. Both chambers passed versions of a measure to extend the health insurance program for children in low-income families.
But many other Democratic priorities -- and a big presidential one, immigration reform -- were snarled in the Senate. The 60-vote majority needed to overcome a filibuster proved to be as big an impediment for majority Democrats as the Democrats had made it when Republicans held power. The failure of immigration reform, of which there had been at least a hope of bipartisan achievement, was a particularly low note. Meanwhile, Democrats in both chambers chose to spend countless hours mired in a fruitless effort to compel an "end" to the war in Iraq.
One of the most disappointing recent developments has been the administration's apparent decision, in the aftermath of the immigration bill's failure, that there was not much to be gained from working with this Congress -- and something to gained by taking it on. This new belligerence has manifested itself in a blizzard of veto threats -- Democrats counted up 31 between May 1 and Aug. 1 -- the most regrettable of which involves the children's health insurance bill.
In the final hours before recess, it was hard to know which was more shameful: the administration's use of the looming vacation to bully Democrats into accepting its overbroad rewrite of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act or Democrats' spinelessness in caving to this strong-arming.
On the House side, a major disappointment was the failure of Democrats to live up to their pledge to treat the new Republican minority better than Democrats were treated when Republicans held power. Democrats promised a new, more open House, with adequate time for members to digest complex legislation and ample opportunity for the minority to offer amendments on the floor; instead, they, too, often used the same hardball tactics to muscle through legislation that Republicans had employed. That might have been understandable in the Democrats' "first 100 hours" that the new Congress was in session, but it is unfortunate that it persisted until the recess. That's no way to do business, and Democrats know it.
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a_paradkar
10-05 01:07 PM
I heard from my collegue that if your company is doing Lay Off's, then your 485 processing stops automatically.
is that true? can anybody confirm it.
My PD is Aug 2005, I40 Approved and 485 was filed in Set 2005.
Thanks
is that true? can anybody confirm it.
My PD is Aug 2005, I40 Approved and 485 was filed in Set 2005.
Thanks
more...
sri2005_05
09-17 11:53 AM
Hi,
Next year i have my h1b extension with approved i-140 .I am worried about current year pay roll which will be 25k less than mentioned in LCA.Will it be any problem while applying for my extension?
Next year i have my h1b extension with approved i-140 .I am worried about current year pay roll which will be 25k less than mentioned in LCA.Will it be any problem while applying for my extension?
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immivoice123
01-12 10:54 AM
technically you r eligible for 3 years
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ajitskhare
06-11 06:09 PM
My lawyer notified that he has received an RFE for incorrect info on the I-485 Biographic info form. The last entry in the "last 5 years in the US" address list contains a start date of when i was not even in the US. Apparently his assistant goofed up with a typo. He is recommending that i prepare a signed affadavit explaining to the CIS that it was an honest mistake. Would that be enough? Can the G-325 be resubmitted ?
Thanks!
Thanks!
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gc.4desi
03-29 08:04 PM
any inputs please?:confused:
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Blog Feeds
04-30 10:20 AM
MALDEF, the American Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU of Arizona and the National Immigration Law Center (NILC) have announced that they will hold a news conference tomorrow morning on the steps of the State Capitol in Phoenix to announce they will sue to overturn SB1070. The groups will challenge the law on constitutional grounds.
More... (http://blogs.ilw.com/gregsiskind/2010/04/advocacy-groups-announce-plans-to-sue-arizona.html)
More... (http://blogs.ilw.com/gregsiskind/2010/04/advocacy-groups-announce-plans-to-sue-arizona.html)
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nhfirefighter13
June 10th, 2004, 10:13 PM
Looks good to me, but I'm clueless about portraiture.
Heh...me too.:o
Heh...me too.:o