Mexico Cruise
18-Jul-2007
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  • Once quiet towns engulfed by Mexico drugs war (Reuters via Yahoo! News)

    A slow-paced port city where old men in tropical guayabera shirts linger in cafes and couples sway to romantic "danzon" music, Veracruz was always a world away from the crime-scarred cities of northern Mexico.


  • Record Gulf of Mexico ?Dead Zone? Is Predicted (New York Times)

    The discharge of chemicals into the Gulf of Mexico has increased so much that government scientists are predicting that this year?s area of oxygen depletion may cover the largest area ever.


  • Glendale hit-and-run suspect arrested in Mexico City (Los Angeles Times)

    U.S. marshals arrested a Glendale man in Mexico City today in connection with a hit-and-run accident that killed a 24-year-old woman. Ara Grigoryan, 20, was arrested after he tried to board a flight to Spain, authorities said. He is wanted in connection with the July 10 death of Elizabeth Sandoval of Glendale.


  • A crash course in Mexico's varied cuisine (CNN.com)

    MEXICO CITY, Mexico (AP) -- A soft flour tortilla stuffed with melted Chihuahua cheese and fresh squash blossoms. Chili- and chocolate-laden mole draped over succulent chicken breasts. Spit-roasted-pork tacos topped with pineapple, onion and cilantro.


  • New Mexico State coach holds prized recruiting class in place (San Diego Union-Tribune)

    LAS CRUCES, N.M. ? Less than a week into his new job as New Mexico State's basketball coach, Marvin Menzies scored a major victory.


  • Gulf of Mexico "dead zone" could expand this year (Reuters via Yahoo! News)

    The Gulf of Mexico's "dead zone" -- a swath of water with such low levels of oxygen that marine life can be threatened or killed -- could be the largest since measurements began in 1985, scientists said on Tuesday.


  • Three Miles to Go in New Mexico (New York Times)

    In Columbus, N.M., and Palomas, Mexico, Matt sets out to see what it?s like to live on both sides of the border.


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