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El Cielo is a restaurant in Washington, D.C., United States. Sometimes referred to as "El Cielo DC", the restaurant is a branch of Colombian chef Juan Manuel "Juanma" Barrientos' Medellín-based restaurant, with sibling establishments in Bogotá and Miami. [1] [2] [3] The Washington, D.C. restaurant has received a Michelin star. [4]
Don Clemente Jacques began publishing the game in 1887. [1] His version of the game was distributed to Mexican soldiers along with their rations and supplies. [2] The images Don Clemente used in his card designs have become iconic in Mexican culture, as well as gaining popularity in the U.S. and some European countries. Don Clemente's cards ...
José Gómez Ortega was born on 8 May 1895 in Huerta de El Algarrobo, Gelves (Andalusia, Spain) to Fernando Gómez García, a bullfighter, and Gabriela Ortega Feria, a flamenco singer. Joselito was a third-generation bullfighter.
El Gallo Formation, in Mexico; People. Luis Aguilar (actor) (1918–97), Mexican actor and singer "El Gallo Giro" Martín Castillo (born 1977), Mexican boxer "El Gallo" Juan de la Rosa (born 1986), Mexican boxer "El Gallo Negro" Valentín Elizalde (1979–2006), Mexican singer "El Gallo de Oro" José Gómez Ortega (1895–1920), Spanish matador ...
Construction of the New Post Office Building was completed in 1934. The Post Office headquarters was a central feature of the redevelopment. The neoclassical building was designed by architects William Adams Delano and Chester Holmes Aldrich, who took as their inspiration the Place Vendôme in Paris. The central section of the tri-unit building ...
"Northwest" (also written as NW or N.W.) is located north of the National Mall and west of North Capitol Street. It is the largest of the four quadrants of the city, containing more than 42% of the entire city's area [1] and over half of its population. [2]
Gallo's plays have been staged in numerous venues, including, in Washington D.C.: The Kennedy Center, [2] The National Press Club, [3] [4] Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company, Cosmos Theatre, [5] and the Capital Fringe Festival; and in New York City: New York University, The Dramatists Guild of America, [6] Casa Italiana, and Abingdon.
The building was designed by architects and engineers in the Office of the Supervising Architect under Louis A. Simon, and built from 1928 to 1936. [2] The cornerstone was laid in 1929 by Treasury Secretary Andrew W. Mellon. [3]