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| | Millet -- A Healthy Whole Grain |
 | | Millet is one of the oldest foods known to humans and possibly the first cereal grain to be used for domestic purposes. |  | | Millet is a major crop in many of these countries, particularly Africa and the Indian subcontinent where the crop covers almost 100 million acres, and thrives in the hot dry climates that are not conducive to growing other grains such as wheat and rice. |  | | Millet has been used in Africa and India as a staple food for thousands of years and it was grown as early as 2700 BC in China where it was the prevalent grain before rice became the dominant staple. |
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http://chetday.com/millet.html
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| | MILLET |
 | | About 90% of the grain of this crop produced, is used on the farm as food and seed. |  | | The millet stovers, after the harvest of grains, is used as a dry fodder, particularly during the winter months when fodder is usually scarce. |  | | Millet crop is attacked by several diseases including, downy mildew, grain molds and covered kernel smut. |
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http://www.parc.gov.pk/milletcdty.html
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| | Millet |
 | | Millet is one of the most nutritious and easily digested of all grains; and it is high in starch, making it a good high energy food. |  | | Millet is the perfect grain for drought-stricken areas. |  | | Japanese barnyard millet, shanwa (Japan), kheri (India): (Echinochioa frumentacea or Panicum crus-galli) It is cultivated in warm regions for use as food or forage. |
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http://www.innvista.com/health/foods/seeds/millet.htm
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| | Pearl Millet |
 | | New varieties of pearl millet, however, are being developed for use as a grain crop. |  | | Pearl millet can potentially be planted as a double crop after winter wheat or winter canola in the southern part of the state, but is a little too long season for double cropping elsewhere in the state. |  | | Although pearl millet was developed as a food crop, and is still primarily used this way in Africa and India, it's grain is most likely to be used for animal feed in the U.S. Several studies have been conducted on it's potential for various types of animals, including poultry, ducks, cows, hogs, and catfish. |
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http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/articles/ji-millet.html
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| | Millet Production |
 | | Foxtail millet is also used as a grain crop and for birdseed. |  | | Proso millet is grown as a grain crop for human food and is adapted to regions where spring-sown small grains are successful. |  | | The term "millet" is applied to various grass crops whose seeds are harvested for human food or animal feed. |
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http://lubbock.tamu.edu/othercrops/docs/nmsumilletprod.htm
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| | Proso Millet in North Dakota |
 | | Proso millet is remarkably free from disease and insect pests. |  | | Proso millet, also called proso, grain millet or hog millet, is grown primarily for feed grain or birdseed purposes. |  | | Swathing is the suggested method for millet harvest, and should begin after seeds in the upper one-half of the panicle have matured. |
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http://www.ext.nodak.edu/extpubs/plantsci/crops/a805w.htm
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| | Vegetarians in Paradise/Millet History, Millet Nutrition, Millet Recipe |
 | | Millet, a fast-growing grain, could be harvested in about 45 to 65 days. |  | | Millet was the basic grain cultivated in this region along with a few experiments in growing wheat and hemp. |  | | Rather than separating their different grain and legume seeds, the natives combined their abundant millet seeds with other grains and legumes and planted them in a rather helter skelter fashion. |
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http://www.vegparadise.com/highestperch29.html
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| | millet -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | Millets, probably first cultivated in Asia or Africa more than 4,000 years ago, range in height from 1 to 4 feet (0.3 to 1.3 m), with the exception of pearl millet, which has stalks 5 to 10 feet (1.5 to 3 m) tall and about 1 inch (2.54 cm) thick. |  | | A wide variety of millets are grown as forage crops and as food cereals. |  | | Millets, probably first cultivated in Asia or Africa more than 4,000 years ago, range in height from 1 to 4 feet (0.3 to 1.3 m), with the exception of pearl millet, which has stalks 5 to 10 feet (1.5 to 3 m) tall and about 1 inch (2.54... |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9052726?tocId=9052726
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| | Harambee: Finger Millet Comes Back |
 | | Demand for millet seed is growing as uses for the nutritious grain continue to increase. |  | | Demand for finger millet seed was high for the 1997 planting season. |  | | A major advantage of finger millet is that grains are so small that pests seldom attack the finger millet heads. |
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http://www.ssu.missouri.edu/IAP/Harambee/05_Millet.html
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| | MILLET in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE (Bible History Online) |
 | | The Italian millet, setaria Italica, known as Bengal grass, is also called in Arabic dukhn, and has a similar seed. |  | | Both the common millet and the dourra were cultivated in Egypt in very ancient times; the Hebrew dochan was certainly the first, but may include all three varieties. |  | | Its seeds arc as small as mustard seeds and are used largely for feeding small birds, but are sometimes ground to flour and mixed with other cereals for making bread. |
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http://www.bible-history.com/isbe/M/MILLET
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| | Foxtail Millet for Forage |
 | | Grazing windrowed foxtail millet enables the producer to eliminate the cost of baling, handling bales, and feeding hay to cattle. |  | | Producers are planting winter wheat into proso millet or foxtail millet stubble to eliminate the fallow period before winter wheat. |  | | Foxtail millet, grown for hay, offers producers flexibility in crop choice because of its low water use: 10 to 12 inches (precipitation plus soil water use) to produce a crop. |
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http://www.akron.ars.usda.gov/fs_foxtail.html
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| | Millet |
 | | An easily cultivated, fast-growing grain, millet was an important food in Europe in the Middle Ages, but it was supplanted by other grains, such as barley. |  | | Millet is usually tolerated by people who are allergic to wheat. |  | | The smallest of our familiar grains, millet surpasses whole wheat and brown rice as a source of some B vitamins, copper, and iron. |
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http://www.wholehealthmd.com/refshelf/foods_view/0,1523,72,00.html
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| | millet on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | Millet seeds or grain have served man and domestic animals as food (e.g., groats) since ancient times. |  | | Proso millet (Panicum miliaceum) is the chief cereal in parts of Asia and Africa; in the United States it is used for feeding poultry and cage birds. |  | | Spraying pesticides on a millet field against locusts. |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/m1/millet.asp
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| | Pearl Millet: New Feed Grain Crop |
 | | When millet and sorghum grain were compared in high-silage growing rations for steers adjusted to equal protein intake, the results suggested millet protein had a high biological value as the addition of Rumensin to the rations gave millet grain a 10% advantage over sorghum grain (Brethour 1982) (Table 4). |  | | Use of pearl millet, sorghum, and triticale grain in broiler diets. |  | | Cultivating, harvesting, and handling a pearl millet crop for grain with existing equipment and in ways similar to current farming practices, will be important for its successful adoption. |
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http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/proceedings1993/V2-198.html
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| | Millet, Food Resource [http://food.oregonstate.edu/], Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR |
 | | Cereal, Thiamin, Barley, Wheat, Oat, Corn, Rye, Buckwheat, Millet |  | | ABSTRACT Millet and sorghum are staple food crops in many African and Asian countries where the dry, hot climate does not permit growing wheat and rice. |  | | Lipase appeared to be more active in defatted millet than in defatted wheat. |
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http://food.oregonstate.edu/g/millet.html
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| | The Millet Family |
 | | Marie Odile Millet (26 Oct 1884-13 Aug 1909) m. |  | | Leonie Millet (21 Jun 1892-30 Sep 1972) m. |  | | Theophile Millet (17 Aug 1844, SJTB-10 Apr 1880, SJTB) m. |
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http://www.angelfire.com/la/ancestors/Millet.html
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| | Pearl Millet Diseases: Introduction |
 | | As pearl millet cultivation expands into nontraditional areas in temperate and developed countries, production constraints from diseases are assuming greater importance. |  | | Dissemination of accurate information on diseases of the crop has not kept pace with the increased interest in pearl millet as a viable crop in nontraditional areas. |  | | Pearl millet [Pennisetum glaucum (L.) R.Br.] has traditionally been an important grain, forage, and stover crop primarily in the arid and subtropical regions of many developing countries. |
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http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/np/pearlmillet/intro.htm?pf=1
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| | [No title] |
 | | The grain has long aroused the interest of food experts, such as in the case of the Hunza tribe where millet is an essential item in the diet. |  | | Every basic Hunza food such as yoghurt and millet is now coming under scrutiny by modern nutritionists. |  | | Among the grains, millet is well balanced in essential amino acids. |
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http://www.efn.org/~sundance/TeffMillet.html
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| | Pearl Millet Diseases: Title and Contents |
 | | Geographic distribution of plant parasitic nematodes associated with pearl millet |  | | Host ranges and geographic distributions of Bipolaris species pathogenic to Pennisetum species |  | | Host ranges and geographic distributions of Curvularia species pathogenic to Pennisetum species |
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http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/np/pearlmillet/title.htm
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| | Millet Husks? - Shroomery Message Board |
 | | It was reasonably expensive, and I trial-ran some through PC, it all stuck together like a solid brick at the bottom, but I actually filled up the jar with water to about half way up the seed, and I am now reading that you should soak millet and then drain it before PC-ing. |  | | ps I have had success mixing popcorn and millet (the popcorn grains being bigger makes its even easier to shake up) |  | | Hulled has a habit of clumping morebecause its lost it's seed casing) |
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http://www.shroomery.org/forums/showflat.php?Number=1270426&page=
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| | Rebecca Wood, Nutritious Recipes, Steamed Millet Recipe |
 | | I say “in a row” because grain is best and most vital when used within 24 hours of cooking. |  | | Heat leftover millet with milk, sweeten with honey and flavor with cinnamon for a comforting hot breakfast cereal. |  | | Shape millet into a croquette with chopped herbs and, if necessary, an egg to bind it and pan fry or bake. |
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http://www.rwood.com/Recipes/Steamed_Millet.htm
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Jean-Francois Millet |
 | | His colouring, formerly heavy and sad, often rusty and unpleasing, or sticky and muddy, is here more delicate than ever before. |  | | Millet's early works those of his Paris period (1837-50) are extremely different from those which made him famous. |  | | Millet is quite the opposite of a Utopian or an insurgent. |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/10310b.htm
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| | Millet Soup |
 | | Put the stock and millet in a large pot. |  | | Bring to a simmer over medium heat, cover, and cook for 12 minutes. |  | | Stir in the milk and tamari, and bring to just to a simmer. |
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http://www.smallkitchengourmet.com/soup/06.html
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| | Fire Dep't |
 | | All equipment is housed in a new 8 bay fire hall constructed in 2000. |  | | All equipment is housed and operated by the Millet Fire Department. |  | | The Millet Fire Department works closely with the East West Millet Rural Fire Co-op Limited, the latter of which was formed in 1977 to provide fire protection to the rural area. |
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http://www.millet.ca/firedept.htm
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| | Guardian Unlimited Books By genre Interview: Catherine Millet |
 | | Perhaps the bottom has fallen out of the bottom market. |  | | She was not a bra-burner, partly because she did not wear a bra, or any underwear, for that matter. |  | | She is quite a small Frenchwoman, 54, chic in black cardie and Mary-Jane shoes, living in an apartment crowded with modern art near the Bastille in Paris. |
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http://books.guardian.co.uk/departments/biography/story/0,6000,718044,00.html
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| | December |
 | | I believe this because he most likely could have returned to Paris to 'play the part' as other artists were doing. |  | | And as a result of his perseverance, we can enjoy real beauty through the eyes of a peasant farmer, born and raised in a small town over 100 years ago in France. |  | | Jean-Francois Millet died at the age of 61on January 20, 1875, in Barbizon. |
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http://www.hisglory.us/Fine_Arts/fine_art_Millet_2004_12.htm
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| | Jean Millet |
 | | Jean Francois Millet was born into a family of peasant farmers near Cherbourg. |  | | In The Angelus, his best known work, Millet chose to celebrate a dignified, hard working couple at work in the fields - their heads bowed in an expression of devotion in the face of nature. |  | | Depicting his human figures with a classically sculptural simplicity, Millet's concern was to show the pair in harmony with their peaceful and unchanging rural existence. |
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http://www.artchive.com/artchive/M/millet.html
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| | MILLET - LoveToKnow Article on MILLET |
 | | He had renounced the beaten track, but he continued to study hard whilst he sought to procure bread by painting portraits at 10 or 15 francs apiece and producing small pastiches of Watteau and Boucher. |  | | The dresses worn by his figures are not clothes, but drapery through which the forms and movements of the body are strongly felt, and their contour shows a grand breadth of line which strikes the eye at once. |  | | Something of the imposing unity of his work~ was also, no doubt, due to an extraordinary power of memory, which enabled Millet to paint (like Horace Vernet) without a model; he could recall with precision the smallest details of attitudes or gestures which he proposed to represent. |
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http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/M/MI/MILLET.htm
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| | Millet - Mountain by Experience |
 | | For the first time in Europe, Millet launched all-nylon backpacks (to replace cotton hitherto universally used for this type of item). |  | | Several copies and imitations all over the world confirmed the leading position of Millet on the backpack market. |  | | As a world first, Millet launched a revolutionary seamless strap for backpacks, made entirely from nylon and padded with foam (international patent). |
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http://www.millet.fr/millet/us/corporate/histoire2.asp
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| | 2003 Research outputs |
 | | Production of improved infant porridges from pearl millet using a lactic acid fermentation step and addition of sorghum malt to reduce viscosity of porridges with high protein, energy and solids (30%) content. |
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http://www.up.ac.za/academic/foodsci/publ2003.htm
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| | Technical equipments for mountaineering, climbing, freeride - Mountain clothing - Millet |
 | | Technical equipments for mountaineering, climbing, freeride - Mountain clothing - Millet |  | | Millet, with 50 years of Alpine experience, makes technical equipments for mountaineering : mountain clothing, technical boots, technical bags, rock climbing shoes, backpacks, technical shoes, ropes... |
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http://www.millet.fr/millet/en
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| | NodeWorks - Encyclopedia: Jean-François Millet |
 | | His Angelus was widely reproduced in prints in the 19th century. |  | | Jean-François Millet (October 4, 1814 – January 20, 1875) was a painter and one of the founders of the Barbizon school in rural France. |  | | Born in the village of Gruchy, in La Hague in Normandy, Millet moved to Paris in 1838. |
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http://pedia.nodeworks.com/J/JE/JEA/Jean-Fran%e7ois_Millet
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| | WebMuseum: Millet, Jean-François |
 | | (1814-75) The son of a small peasant farmer of Gréville in Normandy, Millet showed a precocious interest in drawing, and arrived in Paris in 1838 to become a pupil of Paul Delaroche. |  | | Devoted to this area as a subject for his work, he was one of those who most clearly helped to create the Barbizon School. |  | | He had to fight against great odds, living for long a life of extreme penury. |
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http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/millet
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| | Millet 1 Cross-View |
 | | Jean-François Millet, was born in 1814 in Gruchy, a hamlet ten miles west of Cherbourg in northwest France. |  | | His paintings on rural themes attracted growing acclaim and between 1858 and 1859 he painted the famous Angélus (Musée d'Orsay), which 40 years later was to be sold for the sensational price of 553,000 francs. |  | | Jean-Louis, the painter's father, possessed real artistic talent, though all his life was spent tilling the fields. |
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http://www.mcs.csuhayward.edu/~malek/Illusions/2cross-view/Impression/Millet/Millet1cv.html
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| | Mosher Products - Recipes - Millet Flour |
 | | Can be baked in greased casserole dish in 350 degree oven for 35 to 40 minutes. |  | | 2 cups Millet flour or the Millet ground up finely in coffee grinder. |
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http://www.wheatandgrain.com/recipes2.html
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| | Francis Davis Millet |
 | | This portrait, undertaken when Maynard and Millet were both in Paris, represents Millet as a foreign correspondent, wearing the Russian and Romanian medals that had recently been awarded him for bravery under fire. |  | | After spending a year in Italy as the director of the American Academy in Rome during 1911, Millet booked passage back to America on the Titanic and was one of the 1,513 passengers who perished when it sank. |  | | Possessed of an inherent wanderlust, Millet covered the Russo-Turkish War for the New York Herald in 1877 and 1878. |
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http://www.npg.si.edu/exh/brush/mill.htm
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| | AllRefer.com - Francis Davis Millet (American Art, Biography) - Encyclopedia |
 | | Millet lived in England much of his later life; he died in the sinking of the Titanic. |  | | He became a member of the National Academy in 1885 and was first secretary of the American Academy at Rome. |  | | He had been a drummer boy in the Civil War before going to college. |
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http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/M/Millet-F.html
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| | Jean-Francois Millet Online |
 | | If you're past the thumbtack stage of your life, mount posters on wood for a simple yet professional look that protects your posters, as well as your walls. |  | | Jean-Francois Millet in the Louvre Museum Database, Paris (only available in French) |  | | Jean-Francois Millet at the National Gallery, London, UK Landscape with Buildings |
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http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/millet_jean-francois.html
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| | Francis David Millet Brown - Education - Information - Educational Resources - Encyclopedia - Music |
 | | He was 20 years old, and a Lieutenant in the 1st European Bengal Fusiliers (later The Royal Munster Fusiliers) during the Indian Mutiny when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the VC. |  | | Francis David Millet Brown was an Irish recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. |  | | Francis David Millet Brown - Education - Information - Educational Resources - Encyclopedia - Music |
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http://www.music.us/education/F/Francis-David-Millet-Brown.htm
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| | Millet - Encyclopedia.WorldSearch |
 | | Millet to Matisse: Nineteenth and Twentieth-Century French Paintings from Kelvingrove Art Gallery, Glasgow |  | | Home - Link to Us - Add to favorites |
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http://encyclopedia.worldsearch.com/millet,.htm
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