Topic: Stuart Clark
IF these five players were in a line-up, chances are most cricket fans would be flat out trying to identify them. . . The truth is, the Sydney ...
Australian seamer and former Test player Stuart Clark announced his retirement from international and state cricket on Wednesday.The 35-year-old will instead focus on his new role as general manager of the Sydney Sixers in a new eight-team, city-based Twenty20 domestic competition ...
Many employers have gotten a jumpstart on the wellness focal point that is part of the new health-care law (Patient Protection and Affordable Care...
Australia's selectors have been confused and contradictory in their choice of a side tagged the 'Recyclables' for next week's crucial third Ashes Test, newspapers said.England as holders can retain the Ashes if they win the third Test, starting in ...
Former Ashes winner Stuart Clark hopes that Australia's selectors stand by under-fire bowler Mitchell Johnson for the second Test in Adelaide.. Johnson has received the brunt of the criticism flying around in the wake of the first Test draw, having contributed ...
Clarke helped New South Wales draw their Sheffield Shield match against Victoria at the Sydney Cricket Ground.But the batsman, a pivotal figure in the Aussies attempt to regain the Ashes, was in pain as he occupied the crease, regularly crouching on ...
Like other religions, Wiccans and Pagans have legends about how their traditions came to be. No one in their right mind called him- or herself a witch anywhere in Europe until the latter. In addition to Christian mysticism, they draw on an ...
Solar scientists, not to be confused with climate scientists, study the most important heat engine driving our planet's temperatures-the sun. Matthew Penn and William Livingston, solar astronomers with the National Solar Observatory (NSO) in Tucson, Arizona, have been following a marked ...
If you want a crash course in cosmology, Stuart Clark's The Universe is an excellent place to start. " and "Is there evidence for God? ". Clark is an engaging writer who manages to convey of lot of information in each answer.
Stuart Clark suggests that, because the sun's output is reducing, the sun is shrinking (12 June, p 30). Conditions on the sun's surface may not be allowing as much energy to escape as before, but there is no evidence to ...