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Buy 3 Single Topic Units, get 1 free!
Right now, at Interpreter Education Online, when you purchase 3 STUs, you'll get a 4th one free!*
Choose from legal and/or medical skill-building and subject matter courses.
Hurry, offer ends 01/05/13!
* For the 4th course, only STUs without instructor evaluation may be chosen
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What's new at IEO?
IEO Courses were recently approved by CCHI for continuing education credit!
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We hope you all had a wonderful holiday and are happy with the gifts you have received. Christmas might be over, but IEO still has a present to give away!
You will receive 1 free single topic course with your purchase of any 3 single topic courses. This is a great way to satisfy your continuing education requirements and acquire CEUs.
Available for both legal and medical interpreters, single topic courses can be used to brush up on interpreting skills and to learn more about specific subject matter.
Hurry! Promotion expires January 05, 2013
Interpreter Education Online 3141 Caniff St., Hamtramck, MI 48212 Phone (313) 481-4985 Fax (855) 225-3100 www.InterpreterEducationOnline.com services@InterpreterEducationOnline.com  
Skype - InterpreterEducationOnline |
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In prison, working to help the blind read
Connie Stone acknowledges a certain irony in her life. College educated for a career in criminal justice, the middle-aged Dallas woman now is 11 years into a 40-year sentence for solicitation to commit murder. Click here for more information.
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A Polyglot's Daily Linguistic Workout
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What's in a name? A lot
After the Queen's visit to the Foreign Office this week, British Foreign Secretary William Hague announced that the southern part of the British Antarctic Territory will now be known, at least on British maps, as "Queen Elizabeth Land". Within hours of this announcement, made in acknowledgement of Her Majesty's Diamond Jubilee and her service to the country, the story was top of the tweeting trends in the UK. To continue reading the article, click here.
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Awakening language
The Southern Oregon University campus was quiet on Tuesday, since students have retreated for the holidays and most faculty and staff stayed home when a snow day was called.
But if you listened closely in Taylor Hall, you may have heard about a Native American language that scholars believe was awakened from sleep, resurrected from implied extinction, with the help of Dr. Wesley Leonard.
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