| Accepting the challenge to list the 100 Greatest Liverpool Players Shanklygates columnist Darren Phillips presents ...
Tomorrow numbers 60-69 will follow. The countdown will continue each day until top spot is unveiled. Today a number of very different players are featured in ten names below. 70. John Toshack Career: Cardiff City, Liverpool, Swansea City Total Appearances: 247 Total Goals: 96 Honours: 1st Division Championship 1972-73, 1975-76, 1976-77 FA Cup 1973-74 UEFA Cup 1972-73, 1975-76 Charity Shield 1976-77 European Super Cup 1977-78 40 Wales caps (26 with Liverpool) Debut vs. Coventry City (h) Division One 14 November 1970 drew 0-0 The Welsh forward fetched a club record �110,000 when he signed from Cardiff City in November 1970. He scored 77 goals in 159 appearances for the South Wales Club.
Arsene Wenger: Quota will 'kill' the Premier League
Arsene Wenger, the Arsenal manager, has warned plans by Sepp Blatter, the Fifa president, to impose limits of five foreign players per team would "kill" the English Premier League as the world's best competition. Currently, the European Union states quotas would breach laws on employment and free movement of labour. But Blatter believes that stance should be challenged "to protect the national identity of the football clubs". "It would kill the Premier League at the moment for being the best league in the world, certainly," Wenger said. "Why? Because you can see a massive reduction in the quality. If you have the choice between 200 million players or 50 million players, it is less good. It is as simple as that. "It will protect the bad players, or those who are not good enough.
At Risk: BC's Vital Foreign Student Industry (in Views)
They spend $500 million a year here. Will they still? By Crawford Kilian Published: November 15, 2007 TheTyee.ca Most of us don't realize it, but one of B.C.'s most important exports is knowledge. We don't load it onto freighters or trucks. We load it into the heads of about 28,000 foreign students every year, who then take it back home to China or Korea or the U.S. Doing so is making us a fortune. Our export industries are alarmed by the rise of the Canadian dollar. God knows what's going to happen to the Vancouver film business, now that its members have to be paid in loonies costing more than U.S. greenbacks. American tourists, already discouraged by the need for a passport if they want to get back into the U.S., are likely to stay south of the border.
Missing elderly couple found safe
An elderly couple who left a Thanksgiving dinner in Deptford and headed home to Pennsauken about 10 miles away spent more than 24 hours driving around lost before their car slid into a ditch and they were found by police in Ocean County about 50 miles away. Albert Hansel, 85, and his wife, Veronica, 84, were reported missing by their daughter, Joan Daniels of Deptford, after they failed to arrive at their home Thursday night, Plumsted Township police said. "He made a wrong turn, and from there it just got worse for them," Plumsted Police Officer Matt Petrecca said. The couple were not injured when their car landed in a ditch off Route 539 near Route 537 at 7:15 p.m. Friday, police said. The 1999 Chevrolet Lumina needed only a tow to get out of the gully, and the couple would have been on their way if officers had not sensed something was amiss and checked the license plate.
Column: WSU Tri-Cities' Liberal Arts program goes beyond textbooks
Albert Einstein said the value of a liberal arts education "is not the learning of many facts but the training of the mind to think something that cannot be learned from textbooks." All baccalaureate education is built upon a strong liberal arts foundation. It's the basis for every degree, regardless of the discipline, because it teaches students to understand humanity and its place in the world. It also educates students to think creatively. The liberal arts curriculum is designed to provide a solid groundwork in critical thinking and communication skills. Currently, liberal arts is the largest academic program at Washington State University Tri-Cities, with 29 percent of our students majoring in the degree programs digital technology and culture, English, fine arts, history, psychology, general social sciences and general humanities.
Don't ignore that warning inner voice during job interviews
Intuition. Instinct. Hunch. Heart. Gut.Whatever the term, that primal red flag screaming "No, don't do it," is simply the body's inner compass trying to guide you out of a potentially threatening situation -- perhaps your next job. The problem is, most of us ignore it. "You have to listen to what your body is telling you," said Gailann Bruen, a social worker in Morristown who specializes in intuition. "The body never lies. Those physical feelings -- whether it's a knot in your stomach, tightness in your chest -- are the body's way of wagging that finger and saying 'This isn't good for me.'" Bruen often encounters clients who have ignored their gut instinct and talked themselves into a job, only to run for the hills months later. "I had a client -- a single mom -- who was an airline stewardess and outgrew the passion," she said.
Adult Knee
Patellofemoral Evaluation After Total Knee Arthroplasty. Validation of a New Weight-Bearing Axial Radiographic View Andrea Baldini, John A. Anderson, Pierpaolo Cerulli-Mariani, James Kalyvas, Helene Pavlov, and Thomas P. Sculco J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2007;89:1810-1817. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] Patella Alta: Association with Patellofemoral Alignment and Changes in Contact Area During Weight-Bearing Samuel R. Ward, Michael R. Terk, and Christopher M. Powers J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2007;89:1749-1755. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] Rotating Hinged Total Knee Replacement: Use with Caution Aidin Eslam Pour, Javad Parvizi, Nicholas Slenker, James J. Purtill, and Peter F. Sharkey J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2007;89:1735-1741.
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