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N-400 part 6.A & 6.B

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Iran
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Hi Guys,

I have asked 2 days off at work to finish my N-400 form instead of paying $1400 to an attorney ( i just met him today).It is worth it? isn't it?

believe me for my last question that unfortunately noone knew the answer, i searched at least 6 hours at VJ and i just found relatively 2 cases like mine

http://www.visajourney.com/forums/topic/313580-living-out-of-country-for16-monthsbut-traveled-inbetween-2-times-before-six-month-rule-passescan-i-apply-for-citizenship/

here is my question about N-400 Part 6.A & 6.B

1-I had several trips abroad within 5-month duration and in G-325a that i filled out once (for my husband) as it was instructed I just put the U.S.address that i had (as mailing address which i filled out in my AR-11) and never it was required to put the address of the foreign country(which is my husband address)

1-Here In Part 6.A. I see the word country, do you advise me to just put all the AR-11 addresses, or i put the foreign address that i resided in? if i put the foreign address, they can say that why in my AR-11 for that time interval, i didn't give the foreign address.Right?

2-in part 6.B I have been at school and at the same time worked as an intern.But the dates of e.x.beginig of the school semester and the work don't coincide. so if i want to put them both it will be very messy.what is your idea? i can make 2 tables on for the school and one for work,with their related time gaps. but in part 6.B what are USCIS guys looking for? a chronoligical order of work, school, or a mixed of them?

Also,should i write foreign schools or 5-month job that i had?

3-Regarding part6.B I studied one semester outside of the U.S.and I had an academic internship in the smae foreign country for 5 months (it was required by a foreign school for me to have a diploma, and that's why i was out so many times from the U.S.)I don't like to write it down in my form, because then they can ask me how much i earned and if it is eaxtly reflected in my tax transcript( i payed that country's taxes from my wage).

Should i write just the U.S. school and jobs or i have to add the others?

Thanks for any input and dorry if it was long. please let me know if it's vague

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Filed: Other Timeline

First off, until you are close to mentally retarded, you would be plain stupid as wood to pay an attorney $1,400 for filing out a simple form online and putting a few documents in an envelope and dropping it off at the post office. My 11 year-old Chihuahua can do that, and she' almost blind.

As a lawful permanent resident, you are required to reside in the US, so even if you enjoyed the North Pole for 3 months and lived in a tent in the Himalayas for 5 more months, you never resided there. The USCIS is not interested in your vacation addresses, trust me on that one.

Don't worry about messy when filling out the form. If it will be too messy for your taste, mark the field and attach a separate sheet. Don't try to figure out what the USCIS people want. Some of them are like Mother Theresa, others like Hitler's younger brother. Since you don't know which one will adjudicate your petition do what they want and let them worry about what they want, or not want.

You list your absence from the USA even for the 5-months school gig truthfully under trips made. You don't list it under work and schools. If asked by the I.O. during the interview what you were doing abroad for 5 months, you truthfully answer that you attended a school. That's perfectly fine.

Did I explain that okay or was I too vague?

There is no room in this country for hyphenated Americanism. When I refer to hyphenated Americans, I do not refer to naturalized Americans. Some of the very best Americans I have ever known were naturalized Americans, Americans born abroad. But a hyphenated American is not an American at all . . . . The one absolutely certain way of bringing this nation to ruin, of preventing all possibility of its continuing to be a nation at all, would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities, an intricate knot of German-Americans, Irish-Americans, English-Americans, French-Americans, Scandinavian-Americans or Italian-Americans, each preserving its separate nationality, each at heart feeling more sympathy with Europeans of that nationality, than with the other citizens of the American Republic . . . . There is no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American. The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.

President Teddy Roosevelt on Columbus Day 1915

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Iran
Timeline

Hi justBob

Thanks very much for your answer. you weren't vague at all, you meant

1-Country is always U.S.

2-Work and School which was done in the U.S.

I wasn't concerned at all about Country in Part 6.A untill i reached a thread last night about N-400 part6 with someone making it bold.

then those questions came to my mind.

Thnaks

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