Mexico Cruise
17-Oct-2007
Travel Mexico  |  Cities Classifieds Hotels |  Maps Of Mexico |  Restaurants
  • Tropical Storm Kiko reforms off Mexico's Pacific coast (USA Today)

    Tropical Storm Kiko reformed before dawn Wednesday off Mexico's Pacific coast, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.


  • New Mexico golf finances audited (GolfWeek)

    New Mexico women?s coach Jackie Booth?s contract was not renewed last spring after 10 years as head coach of the Lobos. Turns out she left the school amid allegations that she had mishandled fundraising money and been reimbursed for expenses never incurred.


  • Homewood Suites opens first Mexico property (bizjournals.com via Yahoo! Finance)

    Homewood Suites by Hilton has opened its first property in Mexico in the city of Torreon.


  • Scotiabank May Almost Double Mexico Branches in Three Years (Bloomberg.com)

    Oct. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Bank of Nova Scotia, Canada's second-largest bank, plans to almost double its Mexican branch network over the next three years to tap growing demand for loans and deposits, the head of the bank's Mexico unit said.


  • Review: Painter Diebenkorn found inspiration in New Mexico desert (San Francisco Chronicle)

    Can we discern the point or the period at which an outstanding artist found his own voice? Every retrospective whispers this question. But it has special piquancy in "Diebenkorn in New Mexico" at the San Jose Museum of Art, a survey of the least-studied...


  • Scotiabank to nearly double branches in Mexico, broaden credit offerings in region (Canadian Business)

    TORONTO - Scotiabank (TSX:BNS) is planning to nearly double its branches in Mexico over the next three years as part of a move that includes edging into the traditionally risky market with broader credit offerings.


  • Mexico's Drug Violence Could Infiltrate U.S. (KXAN 36 Austin)

    Houston -- Drug violence in Mexico could spill into the United States. According to a report released Wednesday by a consultant on Gov. Rick Perry's Texas Border Security Council, the U.S. side of the border is vulnerable, because law enforcement is poorly coordinated, undersupplied and sometimes corrupt.


  • Back to Travel Mexico

    Back to Mexico Travel News Archive

     




    Back to BACK TO TRAVEL MEXICO