GREENCARD 2008-ima li srecnika
-
extra boy
- Posts: 4
- Joined: 15/06/2008 23:28
#26 Re: GREENCARD 2008-ima li srecnika
Istina JE...Sto je bilo bilo je!!!Greencard vise nema
-
melb26sa
- Posts: 2454
- Joined: 28/04/2006 10:40
- Location: SAD/SA
- Contact:
#27 Re: GREENCARD 2008-ima li srecnika
A ti to znas kako? Iz prve ruke?extra boy wrote:Istina JE...Sto je bilo bilo je!!!Greencard vise nema
- ladyblue18
- Posts: 22380
- Joined: 24/12/2006 22:57
- Location: You don't have to like me, I'm not a facebook status
#28 Re: GREENCARD 2008-ima li srecnika
I mene interesujemelb26sa wrote:A ti to znas kako? Iz prve ruke?extra boy wrote:Istina JE...Sto je bilo bilo je!!!Greencard vise nema
-
melb26sa
- Posts: 2454
- Joined: 28/04/2006 10:40
- Location: SAD/SA
- Contact:
#29 Re: GREENCARD 2008-ima li srecnika
http://www.usariseup.com/article.cfm?ar ... ectionId=1
Ima i prica zene koja je dosla iz BiH preko zelene karte, Jasmina Sinanovic - 3 prica.
The Foundation of a Nation - America is built by immigrants
A ten-minute drive through Hazleton, Pa., reveals as much about the history of immigration as it does the gastronomical tastes of a changing population, with menus boasting pierogies and pizza alongside eateries dishing up tamales and tostones.
Like polka dots on an all-white background, Hispanic businesses like La Mexican Grocery and Crystal Barbeque compete along the same pockmarked thoroughfares as town staples like Vesuvio Pizzeria and Jimmy’s Quick Lunch, where a dish of kraut and mash sells for $4.60.
“This is the land of opportunity. We all come for the same thing,” says Vesuvio co-owner Sofia Renaud, who immigrated to the former coal town from Italy with her parents 33 years ago. Today, the North Wyoming Street pizzeria sits in a largely Hispanic neighborhood once dominated by Italian, Polish and German-owned businesses.
“My mother used to say, ‘You never forget where you come from, but you have to pick up the traditions and values of your adopted country,’ ” says Renaud. ...
Ima i prica zene koja je dosla iz BiH preko zelene karte, Jasmina Sinanovic - 3 prica.
The Foundation of a Nation - America is built by immigrants
A ten-minute drive through Hazleton, Pa., reveals as much about the history of immigration as it does the gastronomical tastes of a changing population, with menus boasting pierogies and pizza alongside eateries dishing up tamales and tostones.
Like polka dots on an all-white background, Hispanic businesses like La Mexican Grocery and Crystal Barbeque compete along the same pockmarked thoroughfares as town staples like Vesuvio Pizzeria and Jimmy’s Quick Lunch, where a dish of kraut and mash sells for $4.60.
“This is the land of opportunity. We all come for the same thing,” says Vesuvio co-owner Sofia Renaud, who immigrated to the former coal town from Italy with her parents 33 years ago. Today, the North Wyoming Street pizzeria sits in a largely Hispanic neighborhood once dominated by Italian, Polish and German-owned businesses.
“My mother used to say, ‘You never forget where you come from, but you have to pick up the traditions and values of your adopted country,’ ” says Renaud. ...
