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The Jeff

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  1.  

    I'm not quite sure I understand. A Chinese child born in the US will have to provide an original and a copy of a birth certificate in order to obtain a Chinese visa? Wouldn't that make him or her an American Child? Chinese children need Chinese passports, not visas right?

     

     

    No - anyone with an American passport - Chinese, American, or anywhere else - will need a visa.

     

    Some Chinese-Americans have (originally) Chinese passports, and do not need visas, unless they have become American citizens.

     

    A child born in the US to Chinese citizen parent(s) may get a Chinese (or American) passport. Anyone born in the US is an American citizen by birth and may get an American passport.

     

     

     

    Regardless, Chinese Americans are still just Americans, right? So a Chinese American Child would have to provide a birth certificate to obtain a visa whereas a non Chinese American would not?

  2. Yep, this is what I have been reading at the various visa services, as well as the Chinese Embassy website.

     

    5. An applicant who was born in China is required to submit his /her Chinese passport or last foreign passport with a Chinese visa when he/she applies for a Chinese visa with a new foreign passport. A Chinese child born in US shall provide the original and copy of his/her birth certificate for the first time of applying for a visa.
    http://www.china-embassy.org/eng/hzqz/zgqz/t84246.htm

     

    3. An applicant born in China who applies for a Chinese visa with a new foreign passport is required to submit his /her Chinese passport or last foreign passport with a Chinese visa.
    http://www.oasischinavisa.com/tourist_visa.html

     

     

    I'm not quite sure I understand. A Chinese child born in the US will have to provide an original and a copy of a birth certificate in order to obtain a Chinese visa? Wouldn't that make him or her an American Child? Chinese children need Chinese passports, not visas right?

  3. Our experience:

     

    1. Oldest daughter. BA in English, MA in Library Science from UCLA. Has worked as a archivist in a Presidential Library and is now working for a think tank associated with a major university. Makes peanuts; not happy.

     

    2. Son. Computer Engineering degree from UCI and finishing a Masters in System Engineering at USC. Works for a major aerospace company, loves his job, making a ton of money.

     

    3. Chinese daughter. In a two year college heading for a UC. Wants to work in the entertainment industry, my bet is she'll wind up changing her mind a few times.

     

    4. Youngest daughter. Will start a 5 year nursing program at Sonoma State University in the fall. My bet is that she'll stick with it and be pretty successful.

     

    As others have said you've got to find your niche. Students can take general courses for the first year and avail themselves of all the counseling and testing offered by any good school. The first summer they should try to find a summer job in their now chosen field; if they don't like it they have time to change.

     

    Ain't easy ...

     

     

    I agree. Do your first two years at a community college. It's not only cheaper, but it gives you time to find out what the best major for you would be. Community colleges offer the same classes in general education that universities offer. They also tend to be easier (at least in California), with no +- grade qualifications. This basically means that an A- is the same as an A+. In the long run, it can improve your GPA by quite a margin, which increases your chances for getting into a good University.

     

    During those first two years, take some business classes that fulfill general education requirements (Economics, Statistics, etc). A business major is a good general degree if you don't know exactly what you want to get into.

     

    And when you eventually transfer to a university, you still have a year to declare a major.

  4. hmmm...separate bank accounts, eh? Well, I suppose it all depends on your culture and background. If you want her to share, why not just put all your money into her bank account. That way she'll have more money to use. You might also get her to do all the bills, that way she'll know more about American life. You could then have more time to pursue your hobbies. When you give her all of your money, it also serves to build trust and evidence for if/when you decide to file for citizenship.

     

    Anyway, good luck to whatever you decide.

  5. Right now it is becoming increasingly difficult to obtain tourist visas in Hong Kong because of the upcoming Olympics. The best thing to do would be to just get your business visa extended. If you are in major cities like Beijing, Shanghai or Guangzhou, you can hire agencies that will do all the work for you.

  6. http://www.google.com/search?q=site:/candl...m+Chinese%2BIME

     

    You'll need to install an Input Method Editor, then choose the proper character set that she knows how to use.

     

    I had the same problem with a laptop I brought to my wife in China, finally I learned the name of the proper input method that SHE understood (there are at least 6 available) , and then she could use the laptop.

     

     

    That is totally true. Every person is different in what they can use. My wife is only comfortable with pinyin input, while most of her friends like (wu bi). For this reason, I only know how to use pinyin input as well.

  7. Also FYI, remember to have them date it with letters for the month of the date that it is notarized. For example, 5/2/2008 should be May 2nd, 2008. I had a problem when I was married because the local marriage office interpreted the date as February 5th, and told me to get a new paper because it had expired. This was of course untrue, but it involved flying to Guangzhou and spending about $800 anyway.

     

    Good luck and congratulations on your new life!

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