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Coe's and with
In Jonathan Coe's 1987 debut novel The Accidental Woman, the protagonist Maria shares a flat in Hornsey with two women for several years.
Coe's albums Nothing Sacred and Underground Album contained profane, sexually explicit material, including songs making reference to an orgy in Nashville's Centennial Park, sex with pornographic film star Linda Lovelace and insults directed at Jimmy Buffett and Anita Bryant.
However, Nicklaus ' one-under-par 287 tied for seventh in the 1961 Masters Tournament, and was second that year only to Charles Coe's low amateur placing, when he tied for second with Arnold Palmer at seven-under par 281, one shot behind champion Gary Player.
Neither won, nor did either win in their first major encounter in the European Championships Prague in 1978 in an 800 metre race, where Ovett ( breaking Coe's UK record with a run of 1: 44. 09 ) was second and Coe finished third behind the East German Olaf Beyer.
Coe's leg was along the Stanley Park Seawall, and he exchanged a " torch kiss " with the previous runner, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and the next runner, a 19 year old member of the Squamish community.
Jack Coe's son, Jack Coe, Jr. is now a preacher with a healing ministry.
He remained with Coe's band for four years.
Mr. Coe's interest in Americana and anti-Communist politics led him to establish programs in American Studies at forty colleges and universities, with continuing funding through the Coe Foundation.

Coe's and Steve
The term " Indipop " was first used by the British-Indian fusion band band Monsoon in their 1981 EP release on Steve Coe's Indipop Records.

Coe's and Ovett
Earlier that month, he had established a new mile world record of 3: 48. 8 and two weeks later equalled Sebastian Coe's world record of 3: 32. 1 in the 1500 m. The Moscow Olympics marked only the second time that Ovett and Coe had met each other in international competition ( the first being the 800 m in the 1978 European Championships ) and there was huge media speculation over which would emerge as the greater.
More specifically, Ovett ran behind Coe's shoulder for quite a long time, but on the final bend he fell two metres behind Coe and failed to close the gap in the home straight.
Though in 1980 Ovett had tied Coe's 1500 m world record of 3: 32. 1, new timing rules would come into effect in 1981, which would recognise records over 400 m to the hundredth of a second.

Coe's and for
A 2000 tour in which David Allan Coe performed as an opening act for Kid Rock was the subject of criticism from journalist Neil Strauss, who alleged that Coe's songs were racist.
Following Coe's retirement from athletics, he was a Member of Parliament for the Conservative Party from 1992 – 97, and became a Life Peer on 16 May 2000.
On 7 July he tied Sebastian Coe's world record ( 1: 41. 73 ) for the 800 metres at a meeting in Stockholm, Sweden.
Coe's record had stood for sixteen years.
The theory for ecocomposition dates back to Marilyn Cooper's 1986 essay " The Ecology of Writing " and Richard Coe's " Eco-Logic for the Composition Classroom " ( 1975 ).
* the adaptation of Jonathan Coe's novel The Rotters ' Club ( 2005 ) for BBC Two
Three years later, after Coe's disappearance made the front page of the Daily Mirror, McCartney would immortalize her in song, using the article as the basis for " She's Leaving Home ".
Coe's paintings and prints are auctioned as fund raisers for a variety of progressive causes and, since 1998, she has sold prints to benefit animal rights organizations.

Coe's and much
The story has been much reproduced, particularly following the 1992 publication of Michael D. Coe's Breaking the Maya Code.
Director Danny Boyle first pitched the idea to Sebastian Coe, who loved it so much he took it to Young, a friend of Coe's from their days advising William Hague.
Coe's ownership of a ranch near Cody, Wyoming led him to direct much of his giving to this Rocky Mountain state.

Coe's and .
Reportedly 6, 000 people visited Coe's corpse during a public exhibition at which pieces of the lynching rope were sold as souvenirs.
Waters took his information about the date of the end of the Mayan Long Count calendar from the 1966 edition of Michael Coe's The Maya.
* Jonathan Coe's novel The Rotters ' Club ( 2001 ) evokes 1970s Britain.
Sen. Stanfield got half of the lots created by the subdivision and Dr. Coe's development company got the other half.,
In 1977 Johnny Paycheck released a cover of Coe's " Take This Job And Shove It ," which was a number one hit and Coe's most successful song.
Coe's 1979 Columbia album Spectrum VII contained a note stating " Jimmy Buffett doesn't live in Key West anymore ," a lyric from a song from Nothing Sacred.
" Coe's drummer at the time, Kerry Brown, is African American and married to a white woman, as was Brown's late father, Clarence " Gatemouth " Brown.
" During the writing of the article, Coe contacted Strauss, but Strauss did not acknowledge any interaction between the two in his article, which only stated that Coe's manager refused to speak on the record.
Coe's musical style derives from blues, rock and country music traditions.
Coe's lyrics frequently include references to alcohol and drug use, and are often boisterous and cocky.
Coe's debut album, Penitentiary Blues was described as " voodoo blues " and " redneck music " by Allmusic's Thom Jurek.
Coe's first country album, The Mysterious Rhinestone Cowboy, has been described as alt-country, " pre-punk " and " a hillbilly version of Marc Bolan's glitz and glitter.
This was significant not only because of Coe's proven ability as a player, but also because Nicklaus became the then-youngest champion in the modern era, second only to Robert A. Gardner, who won in 1909.
* 13, 955 words-Jonathan Coe's 2001 novel The Rotters ' Club contains a 13, 955-word sentence.
It was at Loughborough University that he met athletics coach George Gandy, who had developed " revolutionary " conditioning exercises to improve Coe's running.

rivalries and with
Australian rules football, officially known as Australian football, also called football, footy or Aussie rules However, late in the century the code began to decline in New South Wales and Queensland largely due to competition with other more popular football codes, as well as interstate rivalries and the lack of strong local governing bodies.
Additionally, Brazil has no contested territorial disputes with any of its neighbours and neither does it have rivalries, like Chile and Bolivia have with each other.
President Habré hoped to pursue closer relations with Arab states as a potential opportunity to break out of his Chad's post-imperial dependence on France, and to assert Chad's unwillingness to serve as an arena for superpower rivalries.
It was " set in Argentina, with the reunion of two brothers, the story follows the rivalries born out of creative differences passed down through generations of an artistic Italian immigrant family.
In the Middle Ages, rivalries with England and the Holy Roman Empire prompted major conflicts such as the Norman Conquest and the Hundred Years ' War.
However, such overt breaks with the movement have still been rather uncommon, despite numerous rivalries inside and between competing local Fatah groups.
Other rivalries involve attitudes towards Ancient technology, with some Alliances ( such as " The Restorationists ") seeking to rebuild Ancient society, while others ( such as " The Seekers ") want to destroy remaining artifacts.
They have geographic rivalries with the Miami Dolphins and Tampa Bay Buccanneers.
The Jaguars also have rivalries with other teams that arose from the AFC Central days, most notably with the Pittsburgh Steelers.
In the 1870s, Ottoman officials were reasserting their presence in the Persian Gulf, with a military intervention in 1871 — which was not effectively pursued — where family rivalries in Kuwait and Qatar were breeding chaos.
Historically, one of the Royals ' major rivalries was with the New York Yankees.
Also of note are division rivalries with the Cleveland Indians, Chicago White Sox, Detroit Tigers, and Minnesota Twins.
Liverpool has long-standing rivalries with neighbours Everton and with Manchester United.
Charles Macklin, not otherwise recalled as a great Macbeth, is remembered for performances at Covent Garden in 1773 at which riots broke out, related to Macklin's rivalries with Garrick and William Smith.
Guha noted in 2012 that, " Ideologues have carried these old rivalries into the present, with the demonization of Gandhi now common among politicians who presume to speak in Ambedkar ’ s name.
Manchester United has rivalries with Arsenal, Leeds United, Liverpool, and Manchester City, against whom they contest the Manchester derby.
The team's heated rivalry with the Philadelphia Eagles is the oldest of the NFC East rivalries, dating all the way back to 1933 and has been called the best rivalry in the NFL in the 21st century.
While this rivalry is typically given less significance than rivalries with the Eagles and Cowboys rivalries, there have been periods of great competition between the two.
Their heated rivalry with the Giants is the oldest of the NFC East rivalries, dating all the way back to 1933 and has been considered the best rivalry in the NFL in the 21st century.
By 1786, Americans found their continental borders besieged and weak, their respective economies in crises as neighboring states agitated trade rivalries with one another, witnessed their hard currency pouring into foreign markets to pay for imports, their Mediterranean commerce preyed upon by North African pirates, and their foreign-financed Revolutionary War debts unpaid and accruing interest.
What is clear however, is that the recent creation of the Papal States had seen the traditional rivalries of the ruling families of Rome transformed into a murderous desire to control this new temporal power in Italy, dragging the papacy with it.

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