phone Pomoc-kontakt

AP HDD 2

EN_00956906_5761
AP HDD 2
** FILE ** Colorado Gov. Bill Owens throws shirts to supporters as he celebrates his reelection in Denver, Nov. 5, 2002. Gov. Owen's oldest daughter Monica, center, and mother June Keefe, right, joined in the celebration. He was a cover boy for the National Review, a Republican governor whose tough talk on taxes and accountability in education made him a darling of conservatives who wondered whether he might be White House material in 2008. Then something happened: Gov. Bill Owens dropped off the national radar and now faces perhaps his toughest task: Persuading Colorado voters to give up $3.1 billion in tax refunds over the next five years to help bring the state out of the red. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski, File)
NOV. 5, 2002 FILE PHOTO Minimum price 50PLN
AP HDD 2
2002-11-05
ASSOCIATED PRESS/East News
Associated Press
ED ANDRIESKI
02110501287
0,66MB
17cm x 13cm przy 300dpi
1, 2002, 2008, 3, 5, A, ACCOUNTABILITY, AND, ANDRIESKI, AS, BE, BILL, BILLION, BOY, BRING, CELEBRATES, CELEBRATION, CENTER, COLORADO, CONSERVATIVES, COVER, DARLING, DAUGHTER, DENVER, DROPPED, ED, EDUCATION, FACES, FILE, FIVE, FOR, GIVE, GOV, GOVERNOR, HAPPENED, HE, HELP, HIM, HIS, HOUSE, IN, JOINED, JUNE, KEEFE, MADE, MATERIAL, MIGHT, MONICA, MOTHER, NATIONAL, NEXT, NOV, NOW, OF, OFF, OLDEST, ON, OUT, OVER, OWEN, OWENS, PERHAPS, PERSUADING, RADAR, RED, REELECTION, REFUNDS, REPUBLICAN, REVIEW, RIGHT, SHIRTS, SOMETHING, STATE, SUPPORTERS, TALK, TASK, TAX, TAXES, THE, THEN, THROWS, TO, TOUGH, TOUGHEST, UP, VOTERS, WAS, WHETHER, WHITE, WHO, WHOSE, WONDERED, YEARS,