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AL DÍA was founded by Hernán Guaracao in 1994. It started as a modest monthly publication, an 8-page newsletter, published once a month. One year later, it became AL DÍA, a black and white Latino newspaper that joined the already crowded field of Spanish-language publications in the city.
The word arroba is also used for a weight measure in Portuguese. One arroba is equivalent to 32 old Portuguese pounds, approximately 14.7 kg (32 lb), and both the weight and the symbol are called arroba. In Brazil, cattle are still priced by the arroba – now rounded to 15 kg (33 lb). This naming is because the at sign was used to represent ...
Al Día is a general information Spanish language news medium that serves the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex. Al Día publishes daily on aldiadallas.com, and once-a-week (Wednesday) print edition. It is published by DallasNews Corporation (formerly A. H. Belo) and is a sister publication of The Dallas Morning News.
Al Dia may refer to: Al Día (Costa Rica), a Costa Rican newspaper; Al Día, a Guatemalan newspaper; Al Día, a Spanish-language U.S. newspaper in the Dallas-Fort ...
Andrea Arrobo, a hydrogen specialist, will be the first woman to hold the post, Noboa's office said in a statement late on Tuesday. Arrobo, 33, previously worked at the electricity and renewable ...
El Nuevo Día was founded in 1909 in the city of Ponce as "El Diario de Puerto Rico," [a] later changing its name to "El Día" in 1911, a name it kept for nearly seven decades. Its founder was Guillermo V. Cintrón, [ 2 ] with assistance from Eugenio Astol and Nemesio Canales . [ 3 ]
Arrobo was born in about 1991. She attended the Universidad de los Hemisferios []. [1] It is a small university in Quito established in 2004. [2] She studied International Relations before she sent to Spain to obtain her master's degree from the University of Barcelona.
The modern metric arroba used in these countries in everyday life is defined as 15 kilograms (33 lb). In Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru the arroba is equivalent to 12.5 kilograms (28 lb). [2] In Bolivia nationally it is equivalent to 30.46 litres (6.70 imp gal; 8.05 US gal).