Mexico City International Airport
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To: TRAVEL EDITORS
Contact: Corporate Communications of Continental Airlines, Houston, +1-713-324-5080, corpcomm@coair.com
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Airport Arrival/Departure: Despite airport expansion and a drop in the number of travelers, Mexico City's Benito Juarez International Airport still of...
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Explosives detection system and checkpoint X-ray scanners will boost security in Latin America's most important airport
NEW YORK -- L-3 Communicatio...
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Mexico's Largest Airline Now Offers the Convenience of Self-Check-in at Airport's Newest Terminal
DAYTON, Ohio -- AeroMexico announced it recently d...
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Beginning today, Delta Air Lines is offering weekly service to Mexico City from Memphis International Airport, making it the hub's sixth international destination.
The first departure leaves today at 9:25 a.m. A promotion for the new flight includes a special introductory fare of $149 for a one- way ticket from Memphis to Mexico City from Jan. 15 through May 21, 2011. Additional taxes, fees, restrictions and baggage charges may apply. The promotion runs through Jan. 20.
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Mexico City International Airport (AICM) is installing Bioscrypt's V-Smart identity verification solution in order to strengthen the access control element of the security solution in its new, modern terminal.
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Business Editors
SUNRISE, Fla.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 28, 2001
Ursus Telecom Corporation ("Ursus") (Nasdaq:UTCC), an international long-distance c...
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Mexicana de Aviacion on Friday began nonstop service from Portland International Airport to Mexico City.
The flight gives customers access to Mexico, Central America, South America and the Caribbean through Mexico City, the airline's largest travel hub.
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With the start of the holiday season, Aeromexico will resume international flights out of L.A./Ontario International Airport this month.
The Mexico City-based airline, one of the largest in Mexico, exited Ontario in February, leaving the airport with no direct international flights.
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MEXICO CITY -- This huge cosmopolitan city takes almost everything in stride, but nerves are beginning to fray. For the past week, the Paseo de la Reforma and the Zocalo -- Mexico City's grandest boulevard and its most historic plaza -- have been occupied by a tent-city encampment of protesters demanding a recount of last month's presidential election. Traffic was always bad, but now the concept of gridlock is being redefined.
On Thursday, demonstrators briefly blocked the entrance to the stock exchange. Rumors that they would try to shut down Mexico City's international airport prompted authorities to send in elite forces to beef up security. Newspapers speculate daily on other potential targets.