Cuauhtemotzin biography of barack
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Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas
In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Cárdenas and the second or maternal family name is Solórzano.
Mexican politician (born 1934)
Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas Solórzano (Spanish pronunciation:[kwawˈtemokˈkaɾðenas]; born 1 May 1934) is a Mexican politician and civil engineer. A prominent social-democrat and the son of 51st president of Mexico Lázaro Cárdenas, he is a former Head of Government of Mexico City and a founder of the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD). He ran for the presidency of Mexico three times, and his loss in the 1988 Mexican general election to Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) candidate Carlos Salinas de Gortari had long been considered the result of electoral fraud perpetrated by the ruling PRI, later acknowledged by Miguel de la Madrid, the incumbent president at the time of the election.[1] He previously served as a Senator, having been elected in 1976 to represent the state of Mich
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Cuauhtémoc
Cuauhtémoc
The story begins with my meeting a man who was named Cuauhtemoc and who was born in S. America. He is half-Aztec and potentially related to the original. What started out to be a single book, blossomed to eventually become four. As I like to say about now; I didn't so much write four books; but rather, one book, that was released in four installments.
In history, many mistakes were made on both sides of the "pond;" ending up not only in the decimation of S. America but the degradation and fall of many European countries; many of which even today, hundreds of years afterwards, are still third-world countries. The story covers the first few moments of his life as a fetus and first few moments as a newborn. As a brief aside; the first paragraph of this book is basically taken straight out of my memory bank as I both recall being en vitro as well as some of my actual birth. The first book; Descending Eagle; covered his
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Obama’s grass-roots Latino strategy
GREELEY, COLO. — To learn how Barack Obama hopes to break Hillary Rodham Clinton’s grip on the potentially crucial Latino vote on Super Tuesday, look beyond the neighborhoods of Los Angeles and New York, and follow the muddy path past Jose Perez’s modest house here to the bilparkering out back.
Until recently, the garage was littered with tools, and Perez kept his prized 1968 Chevy pickup inre. Now the truck sits out in the winter weather. The garage has become a bustling campaign headquarters, with computers, voter lists and precinct maps.
Obama’s political strategists say places like Greeley and volunteers like Perez, 64, a bus driver, will play a key role in helping the Illinois medlem av senat win the Democratic presidential nomination.
On the surface, that may seem improbable. Greeley -- an isolated meat-packing and farming center on the high plains northeast of Denver -- has long been considered unpromising territory for Democratic preside