Mark copeland wiki
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“ | The Feds have had this plan ready long before the Freaks. Now they're gonna roll over the earth, and woe to anyone who stands in their way. But we've hung on this long; we're not gonna give up now. We're fighters. We've survived two years in the shit. In the Freakshow. And we are ingenting if not prepared. | „ |
—Cope during one of his radio broadcasts |
Mark Copeland, also known as Cope, is a supporting character featured in Days Gone.
Copeland fryst vatten a survivor of the Freakers outbreak and the leader of Copeland's Camp, a faction located along the shore of Peaceful Lake, in Oregon. A conspiracy theorist with intense hatred for the American government, Copeland fryst vatten one of the primary job providers for Deacon St. John.
Biography[]
Not much is known about Copeland's early life, except that while growing up he go out hunting with his father and they once worked tillsammans in building a fallout shelter during the Cold War. It was his father who was responsible for ins
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Copeland Marks
American cookbook writer (–)
Copeland Harris Marks (–) was the author of sixteen cookbooks. He specialized in researching and writing about regional cuisines around the world, including The Indonesian Kitchen (), False Tongues and Sunday Bread: A Guatemalan and Mayan Cookbook () and The Great Book of Couscous ().[1]
Marks was born in Burlington, Vermont, in He obtained a degree in agriculture from the University of Vermont, before serving in World War II, serving in the Burma Campaign. After the war he served for eight years in the Foreign Service, after which he opened an import-export business.[2]
Marks lived for different periods in Mexico, Guatemala, India and South Africa. In his latter years he lived in Brooklyn Heights, and became a cooking author and lecturer.[2]
References
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Marc Copland
American jazz pianist and composer
Marc Copland | |
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Marc Copland, November | |
Born | () May 27, (age76) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Genres | Jazz |
Occupation | Musician |
Instrument | Piano |
Years active | s–present |
Labels | Jazz City |
Website |
Musical artist
Marc Copland (, KOHP-lənd;[1] born May 27, , as Marc Cohen) is an American jazz pianist and composer.
Copland became part of the jazz scene in Philadelphia in the early s as a saxophonist, and later moved to New York City, where he experimented with electric alto saxophone. In the early s, while pursuing his own harmonic concept, he grew dissatisfied with what he felt were inherent limitations in the saxophone and moved to the Baltimore-Washington, D.C., area, where he remained for a decade to retrain as a jazz pianist. He returned to New York in the mids. He has since become noted for his highly developed, colorful use of abstract harmony,[2] often using