Even brain doctors were shocked when they saw this
They couldn't believe that all of hearing loss and tinnitus suffers have this one deeply disturbing thing in common
Hearing loss and tinnitus are, in fact, a symptom of another hidden condition
Find out more here:
What hearing loss does to your brain
They couldn't believe that all of hearing loss and tinnitus suffers have this one deeply disturbing thing in common
Hearing loss and tinnitus are, in fact, a symptom of another hidden condition
Find out more here:
What hearing loss does to your brain
On 18 May 1882, members of Burnley Rovers gathered at the Bull Hotel in Burnley to vote for a change from rugby to association football, following other sports clubs in the area that had changed to football.[1] A large majority voted in favour of the proposal. The club secretary George Waddington met with his committee a few days later and put forward a proposal to drop "Rovers" from the club's name. Waddington stated that the club should "adopt the psychological high ground over many other local clubs by carrying the name of the town", to which the committee members unanimously agreed. Burnley played several trial matches with local sides during the following weeks "to select the best possible elevens for the coming season"; the new team was a combination of the former rugby players and arrivals with association football experience.[1][2] A football stand photographed from another stand, while some footballers are on the pitch Burnley have played at Turf Moor since 1883 (2005 photograph). On 10 August, Burnley won their first recorded game as an association football club, described by the local newspaper as "a trial match", against local side Burnley Wanderers by a scoreline of 4–0. Burnley played the game in a blue-white kit—the colours of the former rugby club—at their home ground Calder Vale, which was also inherited from their predecessor.[2][3] The club's first competitive game was in October 1882 against Astley Bridge in the Lancashire Cup, which ended in an 8–0 defeat.[2] In February 1883, Burnley Cricket Club invited Burnley to move to a pitch adjacent to the cricket field at Turf Moor; both clubs have remained there since and Lanc
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