The New York Times Agency May 2010

EN_00914465_9962
The New York Times Agency May 2010
(NYT13) SKULL VALLEY, Utah -- Feb. 27, 2005 -- UTAH-NUKE-TRIBE-3 -- Tribal chairman Leon D. Bear hitches a trailer to a gravel truck at the Skull Valley Goshute tribe's new gravel pit on their reservation in western Utah in February. The Goshute Indians are not mighty in number, financial capital, or political clout. Their reservation is mostly empty -- a windswept land of sage and scrub 50 miles west of Salt Lake City. But over the last eight years the Goshutes have outlasted, outwitted and outplayed an armada of hugely powerful forces arrayed against them, as they have sought to build what would be the nation's biggest bunker for the storage of high-level radioactive waste. (Kevin Moloney/The New York Times)
CENA MINIMALNA - 100 USD
2005-02-27
EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
Kevin Moloney/The New York Times/Redux
16465493
0,54MB
25cm x 17cm by 300dpi
2005, 27, 50, A, AGAINST, AN, AND, ARE, ARMADA, ARRAYED, AS, AT, BE, BEAR, BIGGEST, BUILD, BUNKER, BUT, CAPITAL, CHAIRMAN, CITY, CLOUT, EIGHT, EMPTY, FEBRUARY, FINANCIAL, FOR, FORCES, GOSHUTE, GOSHUTES, GRAVEL, HAVE, HIGH-LEVEL, HITCHES, HUGELY, IN, INDIANS, IS, KEVIN, LAKE, LAND, LAST, LEON, MIGHTY, MILES, MOLONEY, MOSTLY, NATION, NEW, NOT, NUMBER, NYT13, OF, ON, OR, OUTLASTED, OUTPLAYED, OUTWITTED, OVER, PIT, POLITICAL, POWERFUL, RADIOACTIVE, REDUX, RESERVATION, SAGE, SALT, SCRUB, SKULL, SOUGHT, STORAGE, THE, THEM, THEY, TIMES, TO, TRAILER, TRIBAL, TRIBE, TRUCK, UTAH, VALLEY, WASTE, WEST, WESTERN, WHAT, WINDSWEPT, WOULD, YEARS, YORK,