In my very first immigration interview, the examiner wanted to know if
Canadian was my native language. In other situations I've been asked what
state is it in. Go figure.

larry

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Ian Skinner [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, June 17, 2004 6:37 PM
> To: CF-Community
> Subject: RE: 7 Myths of Outsourcing
>
>
> Maybe it's just that part of Central/South West Ohio, my
> friend was from Circleville just south of Columbus.
>  
> Ian
>  
> this seems to be an Ohio thing.
>
> When I registered my kids at a school in Carlisle Ohio (small
> town about halfway between Dayton and Cincinnati) their
> previous school was in Las Cruces New Mexico. The school
> secretary understood totally: "Sure," she said
> sympathetically, "you wanted them to get an education in this
> country."
>
> This was, yes, a symptom of the level of education provided,
> and we eventually moved on to homeschooling. I subsequently
> met a homeschooling  family that lived in Cinncinnati whose
> daughter was born in Albuquerque. The mom had a story about
> the census-taker who asked about the daughter's visa, since
> she was born in New Mexico...
>
> > "our bus line does not provide service outside the country".
>
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