Word: mexicoã
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...including Nobel Prize Winners William Lipscomb and Benoit Mandelbrot—onstage. At one point, two lucky audience members won dates with the octogenarian Nobel laureates. One of the award recipients, Brent Jordan—who previously worked as bouncer at a gentlemen’s club in New Mexico??said he was excited to be a part of this year’s event. “I think it’s great,” he said. “Any kind of attention you get always helps.” In conjunction with Geoffrey...
Tapped in 2000 to serve as health minister by Mexico??s newly-elected president, Vicente Fox, Frenk embarked on a campaign to provide care for the 50 million Mexicans who, at the time, were uninsured. His efforts led to the establishment of the “Seguro Popular” initiative, a public fund that paid for a number of health programs...
Former Mexican President Vicente Fox spoke about Mexico??s transition from authoritarianism to democracy to a packed crowd at the John F. Kennedy Forum last night, saying that Mexico??s best chance for the future is a free market economy tempered by a responsible government and redistributive social policies. Fox said that Mexico needs leaders who think big and who will govern the nation with consistency. “The shortest path between two points is a straight line. We in Latin America like to go to left for six years, right for six years, then...
...Notre Dame. Clark worked with the University of New Mexico for four years prior to his job on the Fighting Irish staff and helped bring the Lobos from soccer obscurity to both the NCAA tournament and the finals of the College Cup. During his stay, the University of New Mexico??s record rose from 32-40-4 in the four years before he arrived to 61-16-8 during his stay tenure. As a successful player, Clark was a two-time All American member of the 1998 Stanford soccer team, which went to the NCAA tournament...
...Latin American community, according to founders Joshua Kushner ’08, Daniel E. Kafie ’05, and Harvard Business School student Mario T. Schlosser. Even though membership is currently by invitation only, Vostu.com has accrued over 600 members—mostly from Argentina, Peru, and Mexico??since it went public. While it includes features, such as photo albums, event planners, and blogs, common to other social networking portals, Kafie, a Honduran native, thinks that Latin Americans will prefer the “closer relationships” and “tighter groups” fostered...