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International House World Organisation is a worldwide network of 160 language schools and teacher training institutes in more than 50 countries. [ 1 ] International House was founded in 1953 by John Haycraft and his wife Brita Haycraft in Cordoba (Spain), to provide an innovative approach to language teaching.
International House Berkeley, at the University of California, Berkeley, in California; International House Hotel in New Orleans, Louisiana; International House of Chicago, at the University of Chicago, in Illinois; International House of New York, an independent residential facility and programs center near Columbia University, in New York
International House New York, also known as I-House, is a private, independent, non-profit residence and program center for postgraduate students, research scholars, trainees, and interns, located at 500 Riverside Drive in Morningside Heights, Manhattan, New York City.
International House is a 1933 American pre-Code comedy film starring Peggy Hopkins Joyce and W. C. Fields, directed by A. Edward Sutherland and released by Paramount Pictures. The tagline of the film was "The Grand Hotel of comedy".
The International House Berkeley was part of a larger "International House movement", founded by Harry Edmonds. [2] Edmonds decided to investigate the situation of foreign students in New York City. With the funding and support of John D. Rockefeller Jr., the first International House opened in New York in 1924. [5]
International House was founded in 1953 when John Haycraft and Brita Haycraft opened their first language school in Cordoba, Spain. [3] In 1974 they set up a non-profit International Trust to help raise the standards of English language teaching and training worldwide.
An IHOP in Portland, Oregon in 1983, with the older look and "International House of Pancakes" signage. Jerry Lapin, Al Lapin, and Albert Kallis founded International House of Pancakes in the Los Angeles, California area in 1958 with the help of Sherwood Rosenberg and William Kaye.
The International House of Prayer of Kansas City (IHOPKC) was founded by Mike Bickle on May 7, 1999. The organization began in a small building off Grandview Road in Kansas City, Missouri, as a prayer room dedicated to worshiping Jesus night and day.