phone Pomoc-kontakt

The New York Times Agency May 2010

EN_00913897_2549
The New York Times Agency May 2010
(NYT43) GREEN BAY, Wis. -- July 18, 2002 -- WIS-IMMIG-2 -- The resolution, making English the official language of county government in Green Bay, Wis., has no practical impact -- the county translates documents and provides interpreters only when required by federal law. But the symbolic effects have already torn through this fast-changing city in weeks of angry debate. On Wednesday in her grocery, May Xiong, who as a nurse in the Vietnam War treated American soldiers, none of whom spoke Lao, said: "What would happen to their legs, their arms, their eyes? They need a translator.'' (Mike Roemer/The New York Times)
CENA MINIMALNA - 100 USD
2002-07-18
EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
Mike Roemer/The New York Times/Redux
17336906
0,29MB
14cm x 11cm przy 300dpi
18, 2002, A, ALREADY, AMERICAN, AND, ANGRY, ARMS, AS, BAY, BUT, BY, CITY, COUNTY, DEBATE, DOCUMENTS, EFFECTS, ENGLISH, EYES, FAST-CHANGING, FEDERAL, GOVERNMENT, GREEN, GROCERY, HAPPEN, HAS, HAVE, HER, IMPACT, IN, INTERPRETERS, JULY, LANGUAGE, LAO, LAW, LEGS, MAKING, MAY, MIKE, NEED, NEW, NO, NONE, NURSE, NYT43, OF, OFFICIAL, ON, ONLY, PRACTICAL, PROVIDES, REDUX, REQUIRED, RESOLUTION, ROEMER, SAID, SOLDIERS, SPOKE, SYMBOLIC, THE, THEY, THIS, THROUGH, TIMES, TO, TORN, TRANSLATES, TRANSLATOR, TREATED, VIETNAM, WAR, WEDNESDAY, WEEKS, WHAT, WHEN, WHO, WHOM, WIS, WOULD, XIONG, YORK,