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Estadio Nemesio Díez (Nemesio Díez Stadium) unofficially known as La Bombonera is an association football stadium located in the city of Toluca de Lerdo, State of Mexico, Mexico Opened on August 8, 1954, with a capacity of 30,000, it is It is the home of Deportivo Toluca F.C. and Deportivo Toluca F.C. (women). It is one of the oldest football ...
The main shareholders of the new company that controlled Cervecería Modelo, a company whose sales in 1970 were estimated somewhere between 850 and 900 million pesos, were Juan Sánchez Navarro, Manuel Álvarez Loyo, Nemesio Díez, Secundino García, Antonino Fernández, Pablo Aramburuzabala and other employees of the brewery which would later ...
The Estadio Nemesio Camacho El Campín, commonly known as El Campín, is the main stadium of Bogotá, Colombia. It was inaugurated on 10 August 1938 and has a capacity of 39,512 spectators. [ 2 ] It is the home ground of the Categoría Primera A teams Millonarios and Santa Fe .
Sept 14: Diez y Seis Celebration at Pioneer Farms in northeast Austin. The award-winning Travis High Mariachi Band will score the celebration with traditional music played by their ensemble, an ...
Friendly game vs. Gimnasia y Esgrima de La Plata Estadio Corona and facilities in Torreón, Coahuila, Mexico. The Estadio Corona is the most important part of the complex of the Territorio Santos Modelo (TSM), which has the following facilities: Capacity for 30,000 spectators, divided into 5 levels; It consists of 112 suites and 2 superpalcos;
Radio Mil Diez (or Radio 1010) was a radio station broadcasting from Havana, Cuba, owned by the Popular Socialist Party (PSP). [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Radio Mil Diez broadcast for five years, between 1943 and 1948, and played an important role in shaping contemporary Cuban music.
He later served as Mayor (Spanish: alcalde) of La Paz. There he also worked as a judge. He lived in the Palacio Diez de Medina, which is today the National Museum of Art, La Paz. When the uprising of Túpac Katari against the Spanish colonial rulers was suppressed in 1781, Díez de Medina was the responsible judge who ordered death by quartering.
Nemesio, from the Spanish name for Nemesis, is a Spanish given name. Notable people with the name include: Nemesio Camacho (1869–1929), Colombian businessman and politician; Nemesio Canales (1878–1923), Puerto Rican writer and politician; Nemesio E. Caravana (1901–?), Filipino film director and actor; Nemesio Antúnez (1918–1993 ...