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Profile of President Fox On Dec. 1 2000, Vicente Fox Quesada became the Constitutional President of the United Mexican States.
From:
Korea Times (Seoul, Korea)
| Date:
June 4, 2001
| COPYRIGHT 2001 Hankook Ilbo. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan. All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group.Copyright information
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Vicente Fox Quesada was born in Mexico City on July 2, 1942. He was the second of nine children born to Jose Luis Fox, a farmer, and Mercedes Quesada. When he was just four days old, his parents took him to live at the San Cristobal Ranch, a small community in the municipality of San Francisco del Rincon, in the state of Guanajuato.
Vicente Fox has four children, Ana Cristina, Vicente, Paulina and Rodrigo, with whom he has shared the joys of his home and work. The Fox fa...
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Profile of President Fox On Dec. 1 2000, Vicente Fox Quesada became the Constitutional President of the United Mexican States.
Korea Times (Seoul, Korea)
; Vicente Fox Quesada was born in Mexico City on July 2, 1942. He was the second of nine children born to Jose Luis Fox, a farmer, and Mercedes Quesada. When he was just four days old, his parents took him to live at the San Cristobal Ranch, a small community in the municipality of San Francisco del
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Fox, Inc. Takes Over Mexico.(Vicente Fox)
Multinational Monitor
; MARIA ALONSO FERNANDEZ ARISES before dawn to catch the crowded truck to the gates of the San Cristobal ranch so that she will be first in the fields by 7:00 a.m. With 10 brothers and sisters whose upkeep she contributes to, Maria will spend the next eight hours stooping to pick brussel sprouts and
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AMERICAN CHAMBER MOST CONVINCED BY VICENTE FOX
Infolatina
; Infolatina 12-01-1999 American Chamber Most Convinced by Vicente Fox MEXICO CITY, Dec. 01 (Reforma/Infolatina Of the three main candidates for the presidency who appeared before members of the American Chamber in Mexico Vicente Fox, of the National Action Party (PAN, as a Spanish acronym), was the
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Analysis: President-elect of Mexico Vicente Fox and his chances of bringing reform to that country
Talk of the Nation (NPR)
; ... hour, it's TALK OF THE NATION from NPR News. Welcome back to TALK OF THE NATION. I ... can't hear the interview. And the nightly news leads with things like: Tonight's top story ... listening to TALK OF THE NATION, from NPR News. Let's go to Tamara(ph) in Cincinnati ...
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Vicente Fox' Luxurious Ranch Sparks Corruption Probe
NPR Morning Edition
; ... Play Audio STEVE INSKEEP, host: It's MORNING EDITION from NPR News. I'm Steve Inskeep. RENEE MONTAGNE, host: And I'm Renee Montagne ... O'BOYLE: Surely, that's not the legacy Fox wants to leave. For NPR News, I'm Michael O'Boyle in Mexico City. Copyright 2005 National ...
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PAN CONVENTION CLOSES WITH WORDS OF CAUTION FROM VICENTE FOX
Infolatina
; Infolatina 03-17-1999 PAN Convention Closes with Words of Caution from Vicente Fox MEXICO CITY, Mar. 8 (The News/Infolatina)-- The opposition PAN party closed its annual convention with a warning of caution from Vicente Fox, Guanajuato state ...
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Vicente Fox, in his own words, on his first year as the president of Mexico.(Knight Ridder Newspapers)
Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service
; MEXICO CITY _ Mexican President Vicente Fox recently sat down with Knight Ridder's Kevin G. Hall to answer questions about his first year in office. These are excerpts from that interview. Fox, a former executive of Coca-Cola, spoke in English. On being the first Mexican president in 71 years who
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Fox's Vision: Right for the Century.(Mexican president Vicente Fox)(Brief Article)
Nation's Cities Weekly
; Three cheers for Vicente Fox. While the mighty U.S.A. gets ready to pick between two cautious, poll-gazing presidential nominees, the president-elect of Mexico toured this country last week with a refreshing vision of what it will take to build an economically vigorous and less divisive
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There's No Time for Fear.(Vicente Fox interview)(Brief Article)(Interview)
Newsweek International
; For the first time in its 70 years in power, Mexico's Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) held a primary election last week to decide its candidate to stand for president next July. Francisco Labastida, who had the backing of the party machinery, won in a landslide, taking more than 90 percent
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Fox, hunting: Mexico:(Guanajuato, Mexico, Pres Vicente Fox)
The Economist (US)
; GUANAJUATO SO THE left is heading for power in Mexico, is it? You might think so, from the welcome given to Cuauhtemoc Cardenas, son of a popular 1930s president, as he won the mayoralty of Mexico city. Even President Ernesto Zedillo, from the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), was
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