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Filmlover
Kurra Bewarse Username: Filmlover
Post Number: 3292 Registered: 01-2013 Posted From: 75.133.162.225
| Posted on Monday, July 04, 2016 - 3:24 pm: |
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CBN runamafi type lo vundi ee scheme.Implementation lo twists chaala vuntayi okavela chesina kudaa.. Not a palanquin bearer....
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Ajaatasatru
Pilla Bewarse Username: Ajaatasatru
Post Number: 384 Registered: 04-2016 Posted From: 106.51.240.227
| Posted on Saturday, July 02, 2016 - 3:45 pm: |
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Blazewada:
anta ee rule vaste.. daniki kuda malla queue,waiting vachestadi kada.. desis ki desis e dushman annatuu... ee rule implement cheyadam asalu impossible emo. One good thing with Brexit and weak US data, dovish Fed is that there are gud chances of Fed easing in near future as well - which means less recessionary possibility.. last 2 cycles of Fed rate incr, they backfired badly, and had to ease right away. So ee cycle chala slow ga veltunaru... so lets expect i land in there with lots of Fed easing and easy placement i was reading quora posts regarding MS in US - ee db lo evaraina MS cands unara, who can give genuine info - general mkt conditions, placement oppur etc. okataithe unanimous ga cheptunar .. pre-MS prep strong ga undali ani .. so ippati nunche paarayanam modaletta |
Blazewada
Celebrity Bewarse Username: Blazewada
Post Number: 27812 Registered: 08-2008 Posted From: 116.88.66.65
| Posted on Saturday, July 02, 2016 - 1:02 pm: |
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Ajaatasatru:chuddam
sastry annai, 1 year lo bayarea lo meedi mee chetilo ettestundi baamma. meeru direct gaa with GC tho placement ae. gaa aithe जिसको ढूंढे बाहर बाहर - वो बैठा है भीतर छुप के
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Ajaatasatru
Pilla Bewarse Username: Ajaatasatru
Post Number: 383 Registered: 04-2016 Posted From: 106.51.240.227
| Posted on Saturday, July 02, 2016 - 12:40 pm: |
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chustu unte idedo pedda biscuit la undi if bamma does it... may bamma win for this only cause.. but tough to implement emo.. chuddam.. |
Krishna_jilla
Kurra Bewarse Username: Krishna_jilla
Post Number: 2582 Registered: 04-2015 Posted From: 68.38.180.185
| Posted on Saturday, July 02, 2016 - 12:37 pm: |
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Blazewada:Clinton wants to ‘staple’ green cards on STEM grads' diplomas
annai e discussion 2012 nundi undi.. obama gaadi sollu ni baama continuing.. |
Fanno1
Yavvanam Kaatesina Bewarse Username: Fanno1
Post Number: 8879 Registered: 03-2004 Posted From: 68.109.27.99
| Posted on Saturday, July 02, 2016 - 12:12 pm: |
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Blazewada:
Bokka le...ee sollu enthina cheptharu..inka 100 years ki kooda yee rule implement kadu. Feasible kooda kaadu. Ippudu OPT ki pettinattu, STEM grads, genuine ga job chesina vallaki EAD ivvamanu chaalu.. Ina GCs isthe only employees ki profit. ivvaka pothe companies ki, vendors ki, ki lawyers ki, lobbyists ki andarikee profit kada..its just a simple maths.. |
Blazewada
Celebrity Bewarse Username: Blazewada
Post Number: 27811 Registered: 08-2008 Posted From: 116.88.66.65
| Posted on Saturday, July 02, 2016 - 12:00 pm: |
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kummuesaru gaa. hillary bamma meeku automatic greencard istundanta gaa. Clinton wants to ‘staple’ green cards on STEM grads' diplomas As president, Hillary Clinton would support the automatic granting of green cards, or permanent residency, to foreign students who earn advanced STEM degrees in the U.S. Clinton, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, said she wants the U.S. to "staple" green cards to the diplomas of non-citizens who earn master's or Ph.D. degrees in STEM fields (science, technology, engineering or math) "from accredited institutions." Clinton outlined her plan in a broader tech policy agenda released today. This agenda is big on improving computer science education and is modeled after some of President Barack Obama's efforts, such as training 50,000 computer science teachers in the next 10 years. But the topic that may get the most focus is immigration. Clinton's "staple" idea isn't a new. It's what Mitt Romney, the 2012 GOP presidential nominee, supported. It has had bipartisan support in Congress. Broadly, a diploma/green card policy would allow new graduates to bypass temporary H-1B work visas and move from student visas to green cards. The graduates will need to have jobs lined up in order to qualify, and the proposals may require a waiting period. Clinton's plan has no specifics. Even so, the idea is controversial. Critics will say the provision would be hard to control, could foster age discrimination and is likely to put pressure on IT wages. Ron Hira, a public policy professor at Howard University, testified earlier this year that such a program "will create perverse incentives in both the labor and educational markets." Employers, he said, "will be incentivized to replace their older incumbent workers with cheaper fresh graduates, fueling age discrimination." If a "staple" policy went into effect, colleges would likely recruit foreign students into advanced degree programs with the promise of green cards. "Given that master's [programs] are short in duration (as little as 12 months), and have little oversight from outside bodies (no specialized accreditation process for most), this provision will make it inexpensive for foreigners to purchase green cards from a variety of universities," said Hira during Senate testimony delivered earlier this year. Former U.S. CTO Todd Park argued for a staple provision while at the White House. "Today's advanced STEM graduate could be tomorrow's world-class, world-changing scientist," he wrote in a blog post. The tech agenda unveiled by Clinton doesn't address the H-1B visa program. Clinton has been silent on what she would do about the temporary work visa; her comprehensive immigration plan doesn't address it either. Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, has said in his platform that before green cards are issued to foreign workers "there will be a pause where employers will have to hire from the domestic pool of unemployed immigrant and native workers." But Trump, during a GOP presidential debate in Detroit in March, seemed uncertain about how to handle international students who graduate from U.S. schools. Foreign students will go to Harvard, Stanford and Wharton and "as soon as they're finished they'll get shoved out," Trump said. "They want to stay in this country. They want to stay here desperately, they're not able to stay here. For that purpose, we absolutely have to be able to keep the brain power in this country." Norman Matloff, a computer science professor at the University of California at Davis and a longtime H-1B critic, said: "It is a shame that both Trump and Clinton have bought into the industry lobbyist line of a STEM labor shortage. There is no data evidence for that, and anyone can see wages have been flat, counter to the claim of a shortage." Matloff argued that a staple law "would reduce job opportunities and wages for new graduates and especially for older workers." जिसको ढूंढे बाहर बाहर - वो बैठा है भीतर छुप के
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