Österbottens Tidning (abbreviated ÖT) is a Swedish language regional daily newspaper, which is mainly distributed in the largely Swedish speaking Ostrobothnia in Finland.
It was formed on 23 May 2008 through a merger of Jakobstads Tidning in Jakobstad (Pietarsaari in Finnish) and Österbottningen in Karleby (Kokkola in Finnish). The newspaper focuses on the Jakobstad and Kokkola region and it is published daily.
The newspaper had two editors in 2008, Tom Johansson in Karleby and Henrik Othman in Jakobstad. Margareta Björklund is the chief editor.
In May 2013, the online news content was locked behind a hard paywall. The circulation of the paper was 13,817 copies in 2013.
Téa is a female given name of French origin.
Téa can refer to:
TA may refer to:
Tiendas Industriales Asociadas S.A. Tía S.A. branded as Tía is a South American retailing brand founded in 1940, with separate divisions and brands in Ecuador, Uruguay and Colombia. It is the largest discount retailer in Ecuador and Uruguay operating there nearly 300 locations under the brands Tía, MAGDA, Ta-Ta and MULTI AHORRO. In Colombia Tia S.A (Colombia) operates 19 locations under the Tía brand.
Tía S.A finds its roots in the Eastern European supermarket chain Te-Ta founded by Kerel Steuer and Federico Deutsch in the 1920s in Prague, Czechoslovakia, with presence in Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and Romania. The Second World War and its effects forced the founders to emigrate to the Americas leaving everything behind, and beginning operations in Bogotá, Colombia in 1940 under the brand Tía, later expanding to Argentina, Peru, Uruguay and Ecuador under the Tía brand and other brands. The wave of European migrants in the 1930s brought to Colombia a dozen members of the European families Steuer and Deutsch who created a store where customers could find everything they wanted without having to go to other stores. The idea of creating a store similar to those that existed in Eastern Europe was protocolized on October 14, 1940, opening the first Tía store in South America, on Carrera Séptima, between calles 17 and 18, in the heart of Colombia, Bogotá.