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Cole House (born February 5, 1988) is an American cyclist. [3] He originally raced in BMX and mountain biking during his youth before switching to road racing at the age of 18. [2] He is a member of the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin, Wolf Clan: his mother is Oneida and his father is of mixed Oneida, Ojibwe and Belgian descent. He is from Wisconsin ...
The National Park Service purchased Council House in 1994 and renamed it the Mary McLeod Bethune Council House National Historic Site. [8] The National Council of Negro Women purchased as its new headquarters Sears House—an $8 million, six-story, 42,000-square-foot (3,900 m 2 ) historic building at 633 Pennsylvania Avenue NW. [ 15 ]
In real life, Cole Hauser is just as devoted as the character he plays, but his relationship is even better. Hauser has been married to Cynthia Daniel since 2006, and they’re the proud parents ...
The Jones-Hill House is an indoor collegiate sports training complex located on 14.5 acres (5.9 ha) of land on the campus of the University of Maryland in College Park, a suburb north of Washington, D.C. [3] Jones-Hill House is situated in the center of the campus, adjacent to Capital One Field at Maryland Stadium, near Stamp Student Union and McKeldin Library.
Cole and Cynthia's eldest son Ryland was born in 2004. The couple then went on to welcome their second child, son Colt Daniel, in 2008, and daughter Steely Rose entered the chat in 2013.
McCormick Apartments, also known as Andrew Mellon Building, Mellon Apartment, or 1785 Massachusetts Avenue Northwest, is a landmark apartment building on Embassy Row in Washington, D.C., whose inhabitants once included Andrew W. Mellon. It is the home of the American Enterprise Institute.
The theater, located on "Washington's Black Broadway", served the city's African American community when segregation kept them out of other venues. The Lincoln Theatre included a movie house and ballroom, and hosted jazz and big band performers such as Duke Ellington. The theater closed after the 1968 race-related riots. It was restored and ...
Sears was born in Washington, D.C., and raised in Chevy Chase, Maryland.He attended high school at the Landon School in Bethesda, Maryland. [1] Sears played football for the University of Maryland, but transferred and graduated from the University of Virginia with a degree in business management in 1999.