nyt - arch

EN_00970978_2434
nyt - arch
A U.S. Border Patrol agent scouts the fence along the Mexican border in Naco, Ariz., Sept. 26, 2011. The area, which used to be one of the major crossing points in Arizona, illustrates the cat-and-mouse nature of stopping crossers, the permeability of the much-ballyhooed border fence and the fact that, no matter the dire rhetoric often heard in political circles, crossings at this stretch of border are nowhere near what they once were. (Joshua Lott/The New York Times)
MINIMALNA CENA 100USD!!!
nyt - arch
2011-10-12
JOSHUA LOTT/The New York Times/R/EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
JOSHUA LOTT
h_ARIZ_BORDER_1
3,34MB
43cm x 28cm by 300dpi
2011, 26, A, AGENT, ALONG, AMERICA, AND, ARE, AREA, ARIZ, ARIZONA, AT, BE, BORDER, CIRCLES, CROSSERS, CROSSING, CROSSINGS, DIRE, DRUGS, FACT, FENCE, HEARD, ILLUSTRATES, IMMIGRANTS, IN, JOSHUA, LOTT, MAJOR, MARIJUANA, MATTER, MEXICAN, MUCH-BALLYHOOED, NACO, NATURE, NEAR, NEW, NO, NORTH, NOWHERE, OF, OFTEN, ONCE, ONE, PATROL, PERMEABILITY, POINTS, POLITICAL, RHETORIC, SCOUTS, SEPT, SMUGGLERS, STOPPING, STRETCH, THAT, THE, THEY, THIS, TIMES, TO, U, USED, WERE, WHAT, WHICH, YORK,