Word: tienda
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...developing a taste for jamón ibérico, made from acorn-fed black-footed pigs, wasn't easy. The USDA's ban on the Spanish delicacy was lifted only last year. And even though the first shipments of whole hams aren't due to arrive until 2008, importer La Tienda already has a list of 200 customers who have placed $199 deposits for hams that will cost upwards of $1,000 when they are finally delivered. For those without that much cash or patience, the first chorizo and sausages made from the meat of these precious pigs will be available...
...Fidel's favorite stalking grounds. Gaviota takes tourists to the outskirts of the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo and lets them spy on troop movements -- cocktails and binoculars included. TRD Caribe, the newest arm of Gaviota, is the fastest-growing chain of department stores. TRD, appropriately enough, stands for tienda recaudacion en divisas -- literally, "store to rake in the dollars...
...department is still waiting for a response to a tenure offer extended to Marta Tienda, a University of Chicago expert on Hispanic studies. If Tienda accepts Harvard's position, she will be the first Hispanic woman to receive a lifetime post...
...bone-dry Brownsville, Texas, the rain came fast and furious, sending pedestrians scurrying for protection. Dozens took shelter at La Tienda Amigo, a retail mart near the bridge to Matamoros, Mexico, across the Rio Grande. Downpour turned to deluge, dumping two inches of rain in 30 minutes -- apparently enough to collapse the structure housing the store into a murderous heap of concrete and metal. Dozens of people were crushed or trapped in the rubble. One wall tumbled outward, killing a woman sitting in a car parked in front of the store. Anthony Padilla, a photographer for the Brownsville Herald, witnessed...
...time studying their price cuts and pragmatic merchandising. "This is a revolution that is here to stay.'' Jeronimo Arango Jr. wrote his two younger brothers in Mexico City. "We'll go into it when I get back." They did, opening Latin America's first tienda de descuento in Mexico City. Today, having been paid the flattery of imitation by dozens of other Latin American stores, the pioneering Arango brothers-Jeronimo, 37, Placido, 32, and Manuel, 26-are Latin America's biggest discounters, with 1962 sales of $16.6 million. This week their Almacenes Aurrera, or Forward...
| 1 |