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" Nuestro Himno" (Spanish for "Our Anthem") is a Spanish-language version of the United States national anthem, "The Star-Spangled Banner". The debut of the translation came amid a growing controversy over immigration in the United States (see 2006 U.S. immigration reform protests ).
In 2005, Tañón released her hit album, "Una Nueva Mujer", which won Best Contemporary Tropical Album at the 2006 Latin Grammys. In support of Latin American immigrants in the U.S., in 2006 Tañón recorded, "Nuestro Himno" in collaboration with Pitbull, Carlos Ponce, and Wyclef Jean.
In 2006–2007, millions of people participated in protests over a proposed change to U.S. immigration policy. [1] These large scale mobilizations are widely seen as a historic turning point in Latino politics, especially Latino immigrant civic participation and political influence, as noted in a range of scholarly publications in this field. [1]
I'd vote for a 4-column setup, with Key's original, Snow's 1919 Bureau of Education translation, the Nuestro Himno version, and the English re-translation. Probably wouldn't fit, though. --Victor Lighthill 08:09, 1 May 2006 (UTC) I'm not sure what value the 1919 translation would bring except to show that Nuestro Himno isn't the same.
“The date represents when manufacturers can guarantee the full strength of the supplement. Rather than becoming unsafe, they lose potency slowly over time.”
In 2006, Kidron produced "Nuestro Himno" — the controversial Spanish-language version of "The Star-Spangled Banner". Kidron presented the song at a concert at the former immigration processing centre, Ellis Island , in May 2006.
Toppled Syrian leader Bashar Assad has released what appeared to be his first public statement since his regime was ousted by rebel forces and he fled with his family to Russia more than a week ...
The average U.S. hospice has not undergone a full certification inspection in more than 3.5 years, a HuffPost analysis of Medicare data found. HuffPost found 759 hospices that haven’t been inspected in more than 6 years. Nursing home inspections, by contrast, are required by federal law at least every 15 months.