Visit your local recruiting office and just be completely honest with them. Tell them exactly what you said here, and it shouldn't be a problem you have a record, but if it is, usually what happens is the recruiter will take you to see his commanding officer and will vouche for you that they think you'll be a good recruit and will get you in.
Iran ... the average of graduated people in their country is high comparing to their whole population ... i think the mayor of LA once announced that the most graduated immigrants to USA are iranians.
It depends on which country you studied in!
NO. Continental Academy has a solid program. I graduated in April 2010 and my brother graduated in May 2010. I'm currently enrolled at the Art Institute and my brother is serving our country in the U.S. Army.
If the person graduated from school in the US, nothing - a veterinarian must have a DVM (doctorate) degree to be called a veterinarian. If the person graduated from vet school in another country, he/she may be able to practice veterinary medicine depending on the curriculum in that country.
No, academic fields are not capitalized. The exception would be if it is describing a country "I am majoring in French"
I don't know which country does offer the best salary, but usually the ones that do offer the highest salaries also have the highest cost of living.
You have to be an adult and that age will vary depending on your state or country. In most places that means 18 years old. Some also require you to have graduated high school.
Lynn Anderson graduated in 1964 from Bella Vista High School in Fair Oaks, CA.
That depends on what time of year you were born, the country where you live, and your individual circumstances. For instance, some people skipped grades or entered school early. However, generally, people who were born in 1969 and who went to school in the United States graduated from High School in 1987 or 1988.
Yes he was in both of those films. He retired from acting when he was 18 in 2004 and decided to pursue a college education. He graduated from Brown University in 2008.
When she graduated from Tuskegee, she was the first African-American female veterinarian in the country. However, there have been hundreds of African-American female veterinarians trained since then.
No. You can not work or stay here legally. Your best option would be to look for an employer in your field (one according to your college degree if you graduated), who is willing to "sponsor you" (apply for an employment visa for you). You may have to leave the country (the USA) in order to come back in with your employment visa.