The New York Times Agency May 2010
EN_00914465_2696
![The New York Times Agency May 2010](img/medium/arch3/dvd0248/35/EN_00914465_2696.jpg)
(NYT61) NEW YORK -- July 2, 2004 -- NY-RUSSIANS-2 -- Yulia Florinskaya, at Anyway Cafe in Manhattan, June 27, 2004, who immigrated as a teenager in the early 1990's, says she values America's stability. The American occupation of Iraq may seem far away for most New Yorkers. But for one small group of new Americans, talk of building democracy in a broken country sounds all too familiar. They are newcomers from Russia. (Frances Roberts/The New York Times)
CENA MINIMALNA - 100 USD
2004-07-02
EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
Frances Roberts/The New York Times/Redux
16946589
1,07MB
23cm x 16cm by 300dpi
1990, 2, 2004, 27, A, ALL, AMERICA, AMERICAN, AMERICANS, ANYWAY, ARE, AS, AT, AWAY, BROKEN, BUILDING, BUT, CAFE, COUNTRY, DEMOCRACY, EARLY, FAMILIAR, FAR, FLORINSKAYA, FOR, FRANCES, FROM, GROUP, IMMIGRATED, IN, IRAQ, JULY, JUNE, MANHATTAN, MAY, MOST, NEW, NEWCOMERS, NYT61, OCCUPATION, OF, ONE, REDUX, ROBERTS, RUSSIA, SAYS, SEEM, SHE, SMALL, SOUNDS, STABILITY, TALK, TEENAGER, THE, THEY, TIMES, TOO, VALUES, WHO, YORK, YORKERS, YULIA,