Cancer survivor Rebecca Francis puts fatigue behind her to take on Rotorua Marathon 10km
28 Apr, 2021 09:19 PM
3 minutes to read
Rebecca Francis will put chronic fatigue behind her at the Rotorua Marathon. Photo / Supplied
Rotorua Daily Post
Cancer survivor Rebecca Francis hopes to put the frustration of 16 years of living with chronic fatigue syndrome behind her when she takes on the 10km event at the Rotorua Marathon next weekend.
The Rotorua-based radiographer was diagnosed with melanoma, which had spread to her lymph glands and lung and she was given a five-year survival rate of 10 per cent.
However, Francis survived the odds, and to celebrate her recovery and then aged in her mid-20s she trained to compete for the Christchurch Marathon.
Cancer survivor puts fatigue behind her to take on Rotorua Marathon 10km
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4 hrs ago
âIâm so happy! Iâm so happy!â Nora Mack said over and over as her birthday parade passed by Friday.Â
âIâm so happy! Iâm so happy!â Nora Mack said over and over as the parade passed by Friday.Â
Due to bad eyesight, she couldnât see the parade but said she was happy just hearing them pass by and honk and yell and âknowing they are there.â
It was a milestone for Mack, a resident of Peach Tree Place in Weatherford, who turned 103 years old that day.
Nora Catherine Kincannon Mack was born on April 2, 1918 in Ballinger, Texas to Jessie William and Rebecca Francis Kincannon. She had five sisters and one brother.
game hunters like rebecca francis and kendall jones. a critic writing, wondering how people live with themselves. this is not really a story about good guys and bad guys. this is a story about how humanity wants to interact in the long run with nature. and i think this is a historic moment. reporter: a 2009 report by a conservation group estimates tourists kill 105,000 animals in africa every year a business that generates about $200 million. advocates sabaning big game hunting would be a knee jerk reaction and a mistake. fastest way to threaten a sme species is quit hunting it. people want to pursue them and pay big money to do that and then goes to conservation of that animal. reporter: zimbabwe suspended big game hunting and not banned it outright.