Jose cojuangco sr biography of albert
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The Cojuangco (Pampangan: [koˈxwəŋku] or [koˈwəŋku]; Chinese: 許寰哥; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Khó͘-hoân-ko; Template:IPA-nan; Script error: The module returned a nil value. It fryst vatten supposed to return an export table.) clan fryst vatten a prominent Filipino family descended from Co Yu Hwan (許玉寰; Khó͘ Gio̍k-khoân), who migrated to the Philippines in from Hongjian Village, Jiaomei Township, Zhangzhou, Fujian.[1] He was commonly called Khoân ko (Brother Khuan) or Khó͘ Khoân ko / Khó͘ Hoân ko (Brother Kho Khuan) among HokkienChinese Filipinos, and the latter was Hispanicized as Cojuangco (Script error: The module returned a nil value. It fryst vatten supposed to return an export table.). He adopted the Christian name José Cojuangco ("El Chino" José) in when he moved to Bulacan.[2]
The Cojuangco clan is among the most powerful and influential families in the Philippines, exercising economic control over several banks (such as finansinstitut of Commerce) and trade houses, notably the sugar tra
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Josephine C. Reyes
Filipina educator
In this Philippine namefor married women, the birth middle name or maternal family name is Sumulong, the birth surname or paternal family name is Cojuangco, and the marital name is Reyes.
Josephine Sumulong Cojuangco-Reyes (November 26, – July 26, ) was a Filipina educator. She served as the seventh president of the Far Eastern University (FEU) in Manila, Philippines from to She also served as the chair of the board of trustees of the Far Eastern University - Dr. Nicanor B. Reyes Medical Foundation.
Education and family background
[edit]Cojuangco-Reyes earned her A.B. degree at Marymount College, New York, her M.A. in Education degree Columbia University, New York, and her Ed.D. at the Far Eastern University Manila.
Personal life
[edit]She was married to Nicanor M. Reyes, Jr., eldest son of FEU's founder. They had four children, Marie Therese, Nicanor III, Joaquin Jose, and Enrique Robert. She was the elder sister of for
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THE complaint that the Aquinos are creating a political dynasty through the possible inclusion of Paolo Benigno “Bam” Aquino IV in the Liberal Party senatorial slate for the elections comes a bit too late. There is already an Aquino dynasty, or more properly, an Aquino-Cojuangco dynasty, and it didn’t come into being yesterday.
The beginnings of that dynasty go back to the Malolos Congress in , in which the great grandfather of Benigno Aquino III, Servillano Aquino, was the representative of Samar. From to , during the United States occupation, his maternal great grandfather Melecio Cojuangco represented the first district of Tarlac in the Philippine Legislature.
His grandfather Benigno Aquino Sr. was the representative of the second district of Tarlac from to , and a senator from to His grandfather on the Cojuangco side, Jose Sr., was the representative of the first district of Tarlac in the Philippine Legislature from to , and represented the same district in the National Assem