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         Pretty Francis:     more books (127)
  1. I'm coming home, my pretty Mimosa. < Song. > Written by R. P. Weston & Fred. J. Barnes. [Staff and tonic sol-fa notation. Voice part.] by Maurice Scott, 1905
  2. " Pretty Maid of the Pyrenees. " < Song. > Written and composed by J. F. Lambe and T. W. Thurban, etc. [Staff and tonic sol-fa notation. Voice part.] by John F Lambe, 1907
  3. " You do look pretty in your Tea-gown, Kitty! " < Song. > Written and composed by C. Collins and H. Staunton by Charles Collins, 1911
  4. The Pretty little House that Jack built. < Song. > Written and composed by L. Cooke, Harry Gifford and Tom Mellor. [Staff and tonic sol-fa notation. Voice part.] by Leonard Cooke, 1911
  5. You shan't come in my pretty Cage. < Song. > Written by Fred W. Leigh, etc. [Staff and tonic sol-fa notation. Voice part.] by Charles Collins, 1903
  6. " Pretty Poll! Scratch a Poll! " [Song.] Written by R. P. Weston by Hermann E Darewski, 1915
  7. Come along, pretty 'Liza, etc. < Song. > [With separate voice part.] by Fred Murray, 1905
  8. That pretty little Wife of mine, etc. < Song. > [With separate voice part.] by Charles Collins, 1900
  9. Oh, Polly! pretty little Polly! < Song. > Written by Harry Castling, etc by Fred W Venton, 1891
  10. My pretty little Fisher-maid. Song, words by L. Cooke by Edward Saint Quentin, 1913
  11. " My pretty little eastern Star " ... Song. Written and composed by T. Mellor, Alf. J. Lawrance and Harry Gifford. [With separate voice part.] by Tom Mellor, 1908
  12. Pretty little sweet, sweet Dickey Bird, etc. < Popular song. > [With separate voice part.] by Albert Perry, 1901
  13. My pretty Zulu Lu, etc. [Song.] by Max Hoffmann, 1902
  14. Pretty Nell. Love Ballad, written composed & sung by H. Chester by Horace Chester, 1887

101. Francis Bacon
Selection of paintings, biography, and information about the life of the artist.
http://www.queer-arts.org/bacon/bacon.html
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102. Trenches On The Web - Special: ANZAC Memories
MACK, Cpl. Francis James, 4330. 29th Bn.Australian Inf. Died of wounds 29th July, Son of Henry Francis and Eva Mildred Mack, of 33, Parramatta Rd.,
http://www.worldwar1.com/sfanzac1.htm

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ANZAC Memories
The Letters of Francis James Mack
Photo: Francis Mack (left) with friend, Jim Stark.
This is a contributed item. Please direct your feedback concerning the contents of this item to the author using the e-mail link below. By all means let them know if you find it interesting. They enjoy hearing from you!
Letters, photos and background information contributed by
Frank Mack (frankm17@tpg.com.au)

(nephew of Francis James Mack) Left: Francis (seated) photographed again with pal Jim Stark. Right: The men of the 29th at Hurdcott Camp. June 1917: From left to right 1st row (standing): Douglas, Drummond Hay, Lowe, Strickland. 2nd row: King, Martin, Perrins, Ross. 3rd row: Mack , Challis, Kitchen
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The Letters of
Francis James Mack Australian Military Forces Badge MACK, Cpl. Francis James, 4330. 29th Bn.Australian Inf. Died of wounds 29th July, 1918. Age 20. Son of Henry Francis and Eva Mildred Mack, of 33, Parramatta Rd., Summer Hill, Sydney. Native of Cassilis, New South Wales. Vignacourt British Cemetery Plot IV. Row D. No. 11.

103. PatriotsInsider.com: Russ Francis Brings Experiences To Local Radio
Former Patriot great Russ Francis has been working on his on air It s beenpretty cold, Francis said. It s just nice to sit on the board again.
http://patriots.scout.com/2/413421.html
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Russ Francis brings experiences to local radio
By Ian M. Clark Union Leader Sports
Date: Jul 27, 2005
A blast from the past has appeared on the air in the Northeast. Former Patriot great Russ Francis has been working on his "on air" skills turning his football experience into a viable career on the airwaves. Ian M. Clark of the Union Leader talks about Fancis' new move back to New England and his new radio show.
Former Patriot Russ Francis bringing his unique experiences to local radio
By IAN M. CLARK , courtesy Union Leader Sports
CONCORD - Surfer, athlete, pilot, politicial. Russ Francis is all those things and more. The former New England Patriots tight end will be showcasing his varied interests every Saturday morning on Concord's WTPL 107.7 FM from 9 a.m. to noon on the "Russ Francis Show." The program debuts on Aug. 6 and Francis was in front of the mike yesterday morning, offering a sneak preview as he sat in with Ken Cail and Chris Ryan on the New Hampshire Wake Up Show on WTPL. "We've heard people talk about radio or TV shows that need to be informative and entertaining as the number one goal. The Russ Francis show is going to move that to number two," Francis said. "Number one on this show is going to be your voice, the fan. I want to hear your voice, your stories and the incredible insight New England fans have. And I can say that having played on the West Coast. They are much more tuned in to sports fans than anywhere I've been."

104. The Question Of God . Other Voices . Francis Collins | PBS
No one knows better than Dr. Francis Collins how easy it might be for It waspretty clear I hadn t done any data collecting here about what these faiths
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/questionofgod/voices/collins.html
Francis Collins
Peter Sellars

O.W. Holmes, Jr.

Steve Martin

William James
...
Corrie ten Boom

Francis Collins C.S. Lewis . Some 30 years later, he stands by his convictions, positioning science not as substitute for theology, but as a subset of it. Here, Collins traces out his personal path to God, and explains how his faith affects his work. What follows is an edited transcript of an interview conducted for the making of The Question of God
An Interview with Francis Collins
You describe yourself as a rather obnoxious atheist in your youth. Tell me more about what you mean by that. FRANCIS COLLINS: "God gave us an opportunity through science to understand the natural world, but there will never be a scientific proof of God's existence." Then I went off to be a graduate student in quantum mechanics at Yale, where I was very compelled with the notion that everything in the universe can be described in a second-order differential equation. I read a little bit about what Einstein had said about God, and I concluded that, well, if there was a God, it was probably somebody who was off somewhere else in the universe; certainly not a God that would care about me. And I frankly couldn't see why I needed to have any God at all. I was in a very reductionist frame of mind. That's often what science imposes upon your thought process, and it's a good thing when you apply it to the natural world. But I sought to apply it to everything else. Obviously the spiritual world is another entity. So I concluded that all of this stuff about religion and faith was a carryover from an earlier, irrational time, and now that science had begun to figure out how things really work, we didn't need it any more. I think you wouldn't have enjoyed having lunch with me when I was in that phase. My mission then was to ferret out this squishy thinking on the part of people around me and try to point out to them that they really ought to get over all of that emotional stuff and face up to the fact that there really wasn't anything except what you could measure.

105. Page Not Available
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106. Draco.centerline.com
Old age is the harbor of all ills. Old age is the most unexpected of things thatcan happen to a man. Old age is too high a price to pay for maturity.
http://draco.centerline.com:8080/~franl/pgp/pgp.html
A commune is where people join together to share their lack of wealth. A company is known by the men it keeps. A consultant is a person who borrows your watch, tells you what time it is, pockets the watch, and sends you a bill for it. A continuing flow of paper is sufficient to continue the flow of paper.

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