Thursday, 11 September 2014

HEALTHCARE NEWS: Third U.S. Ebola patient showing 'remarkable improvement'

CHICAGO (Reuters) - The third American to be treated for Ebola in the United States is showing "remarkable improvement" after receiving an infusion of plasma from U.S. Ebola survivor Dr. Kent Brantly, as well as an undisclosed experimental drug, his doctors said on Thursday.

Dr. Rick Sacra, 51, who is being treated in a special biocontainment unit at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, received two doses of plasma from Brantly, which doctors are calling a convalescent serum, and has been given nightly doses of an undisclosed experimental drug, Dr. Phil Smith, one of Sacra's doctors, said in a news briefing.

"I don't know how much of his recovery is due to the drug, how much is due to the convalescent serum and how much to the aggressive intravenous fluids," Smith said.

Brantly's blood likely contains protective antibodies that may help buy Sacra some time while his body tries to fight off the infection, Smith said. The hospital tried a number of potential donors, but Brantly's blood type turned out to be a match for his friend and fellow missionary Sacra.

"It really meant a lot to us that he was willing to give that donation so soon after his recovery," Debbie Sacra, the patient's wife, told the briefing. "I spoke to his (Brantly's) wife. We marveled that they had the same blood," she said.

The worst-ever Ebola outbreak, which has already killed at least 2,296 people in West Africa, has triggered a scramble to develop the first drug or vaccine for a deadly disease that was discovered nearly 40 years ago in the forests of central Africa.

Smith said he has been asked not to disclose the name of the experimental drug Sacra is receiving because it is still in the early stages of development and there is no data on whether it works.

Sacra arrived at the Nebraska hospital from Liberia on Friday, Sept. 5, and has since shown a "remarkable improvement," Dr. Angela Hewlett told the briefing.

Smith said Sacra's first day was "pretty rocky" but he began improving by the third day of care. His wife, Debbie, said she is "amazed" at how quickly Sacra has "turned around since he arrived."

She said Sacra contracted Ebola on Aug. 29 while working at a hospital in Liberia on behalf of the North Carolina-based Christian group SIM USA. Sacra had worked in the obstetrics ward at the ELWA Hospital of SIM in Monrovia.

(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Bernard Orr)



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TOP NEWS Top Republicans back Obama's plan to fight Islamic State

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Republican leader of the U.S. House of Representatives voiced support on Thursday for President Barack Obama's expanded campaign against Islamic State militants, but members of his party questioned whether the plan was forceful enough.

Obama sent a panel of top administration officials to make the case to Congress for broadening operations against the Sunni militants, including U.S. air strikes in Syria for the first time, more strikes in Iraq and more military advisers in Iraq.

In a televised address on Wednesday night, the Democratic president declared he would lead an alliance to root out Islamic State, plunging the United States into two conflicts in which nearly every country in the Middle East has a stake.

The White House argued that Obama does not need Congress' formal authorization, but wants legislators' support to show a united front against opponents and to coalition members.

House Speaker John Boehner said Obama had made a "compelling case for action" but said the president must provide Republicans with more details about his strategy. "It's important to give the president what he has asked for," he told a news conference.

Boehner and other Republican leaders who support Obama's plans must unite factions within their party, including members deeply skeptical of Obama's spending plans and those who want the United States to cut its foreign military involvement.

Boehner said Republican House members have doubts about whether Obama's plan can accomplish his mission of destroying a militant group whose fighters have killed thousands of people in recent months.

"An F-16 is not a strategy. And air strikes alone will not accomplish what we're trying to accomplish. The president's made clear that he doesn't want boots on the ground, well somebody's boots have to be on the ground," the Ohio representative said.

A House vote could take place as soon as Tuesday on Obama's request for $500 million to arm and train moderate Syrian rebels, one part of his program.

Islamic State is a Sunni group that embraces a radical vision of a Middle East ruled along 7th century precepts. Its fighters are battling a Shi'ite-led government in Iraq and a Syrian government led by President Bashar al-Assad, a follower of an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has won support from 10 Arab countries for a "coordinated military campaign" against the militants.

NO DECISIONS ON VOTE

Boehner said no decision had been made on how the House might vote on Obama's request for authorization and $500 million in funding to arm and train moderate rebels waging a three-year-long war against Assad.

A White House spokesman said the administration would like Congress to include the authorization in a bill to fund government operations, called a continuing resolution, that is expected to pass next week.

Some senators from both parties said Obama should ask Congress for a formal authorization to use military force, something that is not expected before lawmakers leave Washington next week to campaign for the Nov. 4 congressional elections.

"Our allies would feel much more secure and committed... if they knew that Congress was behind this," Tennessee Senator Bob Corker, the top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, told reporters.

The Syrian rebels are seen as a moderate counterpart to both Islamic State and Assad's government, but lawmakers harbor doubts about the rebels.

"There's a real question as to whether we have a Free Syrian Army and most of the reports I've read ... show so many different groups and not a high reliability," Republican Representative Rodney Frelinghuysen of New Jersey, who chairs the House Appropriations Defense Subcommittee, told reporters.

Connecticut Democratic Senator Chris Murphy said he would vote against any resolution arming the Syrian rebels, or any spending bill with such a measure attached.

Administration officials see the vote as crucial to its efforts to build an international coalition. But the timing is tricky, as such a move could be seen as a "war vote" by a war-weary public, just two months before congressional elections.

Any vote to authorize military action could prove especially tough for Democrats, whose liberal base tends to be wary of war, as the party tries to hold a slim U.S. Senate majority.

The beheadings of two U.S. journalists by Islamic State militants coalesced support for action from both parties.

(Additional reporting by David Lawder, Richard Cowan, Susan Heavey, Roberta Rampton and Doina Chiacu; Editing by John Whitesides and Grant McCool)



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LIVE NEWS: Oscar Pistorius trial verdict

Live text and Contribute.

On the first day of the verdict, the judge at Oscar Pistorius' trial ruled out murder

She could still find him guilty of culpable homicide, for which he could face a long jail term

The South African athlete denies intentionally killing his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp

The double-amputee says he thought there was an intruder on Valentine's Day 2013

He also faces charges of firing a gun in public and illegally possessing ammunition

All times BST
Live text

Reporting: Helier Cheung Amber Dawson 

Andrew Harding, Africa correspondent
tweets: Meanwhile, Reeva Steenkamp's parents are already back in court and journalist scrum awaits #OscarPistorius arrival outside.

Andrew Harding, Africa correspondent
tweets: Legal experts here convinced prosecution have grounds to appeal Judge's decision ruling out murder verdict for #OscarPistorius

07:39
Mr Pistorius admits firing through a toilet door at his home but says he mistook his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp for an intruder.

07:37
In addition to murder charges, he also faces two charges of firing a gun in public and illegally possessing ammunition. He has pleaded not guilty to all four charges.

07:34
The decision to clear Oscar Pistorius of murder charges has unsettled many in South Africa. The BBC's Pumza Fihlani looks at the reaction to Thursday's verdict - by both members of the public and legal experts.

Andrew Harding, Africa correspondent
tweeted earlier: Oscar's Great Escape - one newspaper headline in Pretoria this morning as South Africa mulls court judgement that he's not a murderer
.
TWEET Justine Lang, BBC News, Pretoria
tweeted earlier: Judge Masipa at court nice and early. One wonders if she has any idea of the rampaging legal storm over her decision to drop murder.

Kate Forbes, BBC News
tweeted earlier: You don't have to be able to understand Afrikaans to get it... #OscarTrial #OscarPistorius

Andrew Harding, Africa correspondent
tweeted earlier: The subtext to Judge Masipa's performance yesterday - this trial should have lasted 1 week. Too much speculative "evidence" presented.

07:31
However, she said his conduct on 14 February 2013 was negligent, before adjourning the trial until Friday morning. Many await to hear if he will be found guilty of culpable homicide (manslaughter).

07:30
On day one of the trial, Judge Thokozile Masipa cleared Pistorius of murder. She said the prosecution had failed to prove he intended to kill his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp.

07:30
Hello and welcome to the BEN Latest News live coverage of the second day of the verdict in the trial of South African athlete Oscar Pistorius.

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WORLD NEWS: Oscar Pistorius trial judge to deliver homicide verdict

(BBC) - South African Judge Thokozile Masipa stopped short of giving her expected verdict, as Karin Giannone reports
The judge in the trial of Oscar Pistorius is due to announce if the South African athlete is guilty of the culpable homicide of his girlfriend.

Judge Thokozile Masipa cleared him of murder on Thursday, saying the state had failed to prove he intended to kill the model Reeva Steenkamp last year.

But the judge said his conduct on the night in question had been negligent.

Mr Pistorius admits firing through a toilet door at his home but says he mistook Ms Steenkamp for an intruder.

Prompting tears from the Olympic and Paralympic sprinter, Judge Masipa said he could not have foreseen killing whoever was behind the door - but went on to say that he had acted hastily and with excessive force.

She described his actions as negligent.

BBC correspondents said the judge appeared to be leaning towards the lesser charge of manslaughter, known in South Africa as culpable homicide, when she adjourned unexpectedly for the day.


Media caption
Judge: "He did not subjectively foresee as a possibility that he would kill the person behind the door, let alone the deceased, as he thought she was in the bedroom"

Reeva Steenkamp's parents were composed as they heard the judge's verdict

The Paralympic athlete was mobbed by photographers and onlookers as he left the court

In 2012, Oscar Pistorius made history by becoming the first double amputee to run in the Olympic Games
The charge of culpable homicide implies negligence without intention to kill and could still mean a jail sentence of up to 15 years. Legal experts suggest seven to 10 years is more likely.

The double amputee had denied murdering Ms Steenkamp after a row on Valentine's Day last year, saying he shot her by mistake.

Mr Pistorius, 27, has pleaded not guilty to all the charges he faces, including two counts of shooting a firearm in public and the illegal possession of ammunition.


Analysis: Pumza Fihlani, BBC News, Pretoria High Court

While finding Oscar Pistorius not guilty of murder, Judge Masipa appears to be leaning towards the lesser charge of manslaughter, known in South Africa as culpable homicide.

Minutes after the lunch break, she seemed to be on the verge of announcing her verdict, only to stop abruptly and adjourn until Friday - leading to sighs and gasps in the overflow court.

Following a long trial that has gripped people around the world, Judge Masipa seems to want to give a detailed account before announcing her verdict. South Africa's legal system has also been on trial and many believe the athlete is getting off lightly, possibly because of his fame.

But legal experts argue that the judge has merely followed the law and the evidence before her. The onus was on the state to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt, which the judge said it had failed to do.

How judgement was tweeted


VerdictWhat it meansSentence
Premeditated murderIntended and planned to unlawfully kill Reeva Steenkamp, or an intruderMandatory life term - 25 years before parole
Common-law murderUnlawfully intended to kill in the heat of the moment but without "malice aforethought". Either: shot at door intending to kill, or knew someone might be killed and still fired gunMinimum of 15 years up to 20 years, at judge's discretion
Culpable homicide (manslaughter)No intention to kill. Takes into account disability, but actions negligent and not in keeping with a reasonable personMaximum of 15 years, possibly between seven and 10 years
Discharging a firearm in publicTwo counts for allegedly firing a gun through a car sunroof and discharging a gun at a restaurantA fine or up to five years - for each charge
Illegal possession of ammunitionIn possession of .38 bullets for which he has no licenceA fine or up to 15 years

Most of the trial, which began on 3 March 2014, has been televised and attracted worldwide attention.

Before the fatal shooting, Oscar Pistorius was feted in South Africa and known as the "blade runner".

He had won gold at the London 2012 Paralympic Games and also competed at the Olympics.

Ms Steenkamp, a 29-year-old model and law graduate, was hit three times by bullets shot through the toilet door by Mr Pistorius at his home in the capital, Pretoria, in the early hours of 14 February 2013.


Media caption
The BBC's Andrew Harding has gained access to the house where the shooting took place
He denied the prosecution's allegation that the couple - who had been dating for three months - had rowed. The judge also said she had not been convinced by the efforts to prove that the couple had rowed.

The athlete said he thought his girlfriend was still in the bedroom when he heard a noise in the bathroom, which he believed to be an intruder.

In July, a psychiatric report requested by the judge said Mr Pistorius had post-traumatic stress disorder but no mental illness that could prevent him being held criminally responsible for his actions.

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GARMIN’S DO-IT-ALL VÍVOSMART KEEPS TABS ON YOUR STEPS, SLEEP, BIKE, PHONE AND MORE

When we reviewed Garmin's original Vívofit fitness tracker, we were impressed with everything it did. We loved that way it automatically adjusted the daily step goals to encourage us to be more successful, and liked the way the "move bar" kept track of how long we'd been sitting, and let us know it us to get up and move. The only complaints we had were about what it didn't do: It didn't vibrate to cue us to move or wake us up in the morning, and the display didn't light up for viewing our stats at night.

Today, Garmin announced a newer, smarter version of its popular Vívofit fitness tracker that solves both of those problems and then some. The new fitness band, called the Vívosmart, does everything the first-generation Vívofit did and more. In addition to displaying the time and date, steps taken, distance traveled, and calories burned, the Vívosmart can receive and display smart notifications when paired with a compatible smartphone. Wearers can be alerted to incoming phone calls, text and email messages, and upcoming calendar events all on the wrist. More importantly, Garmin also added a vibration alarm and used an OLED touchscreen display that can be viewed anytime of the day or night. It also resists water to 5 atms, or about 50 meters.

Related: The best fitness trackers and tech to get you in shape


Like the original Vívofit, the Vívosmart will automatically sync with the Garmin Connect Mobile app and track heart rate when paired with a heart-rate monitor. It also tracks sleep and displays how long and how well a wearer rested. But from there the Vívosmart leaves the old sibling far behind. For cyclists, the Vívosmart can display bike speed when paired with the proper sensor. It also offers control over the music player on the connected smartphone. And for users who also own one of Garmin's Virb action cams, the Vívosmart can act as a remote control to start and stop video recording or to capture a still image. Which could come in pretty handy if the camera is mounted on the top of a helmet, or in some other hard-to-reach spot. The Vívosmart can even help with finding a misplaced smartphone. With a simply tap on the phone icon the Vívosmart will send a message to the phone and make it vibrate and ring to give up the phone's location.

We're hoping to review the Vívosmart soon, but from what we've seen it looks like Garmin has listened to user feedback and taken steps to make a good fitness-tracking band great.

The Garmin Vívosmart, which ships later this month come in two sizes and three colors (berry, blue, and black) will retail for $170, or $200 bundled with a heart rate monitor.


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TOP NEWS U.S. wins Arab support for Syria/Iraq military campaign

JEDDAH (Reuters) - The United States signed up Arab allies on Thursday to a "coordinated military campaign" against Islamic State fighters, a major step in building regional support for President Barack Obama's plan to strike both sides of the Syrian-Iraqi frontier.

After talks in Saudi Arabia's summer capital Jeddah, Secretary of State John Kerry won backing from 10 Arab countries - Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon and six Gulf states including rich rivals Saudi Arabia and Qatar - for a coalition to fight the Sunni militants that have seized swathes of Iraq and Syria.

"Arab nations play a critical role in that coalition, the leading role really across all lines of effort: military support, humanitarian aid, our work to stop the flow of illegal funds," Kerry told a news conference.

Non-Arab Sunni power Turkey also attended the Jeddah talks but two other major regional players - Shi'ite Iran and Syria itself - were excluded, a sign of the difficulty of building a coalition across the Middle East's sectarian battle lines.

The Arab states agreed in a communique to do more to stop the flow of funds and fighters to Islamic State and help rebuild communities "brutalized" by the group.

"The participating states agreed to do their share in the comprehensive fight against ISIL, including ... as appropriate, joining in the many aspects of a coordinated military campaign against ISIL," they said, using the acronym for Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant, a former name for the group.

Kerry met the Arab leaders to drum up support a day after Obama announced his plans to strike fighters in Iraq and Syria.

U.S. officials said Kerry also sought permission to make more use of bases in the region and fly more warplanes overhead, issues that were not mentioned in the communique. Kerry said none of the countries in the coalition would send ground troops.

In a hopeful sign of outreach across the sectarian divide that has spread war across the Middle East and fed Islamic State's militancy, Sunni Saudi Arabia said it might open an embassy in Shi'ite-ruled Iraq after decades of suspicion.

The Saudis, who support other Sunni armed movements in Syria but consider Islamic State a terrorist group, have also promised to help Obama's campaign by providing training camps for moderate Syrian Sunni fighters.

But Iran, the main Shi'ite power in the Middle East and supporter of Syria's President Bashar al-Assad, said it had severe reservations over the new U.S.-led coalition, and doubted it would fight "the root causes of terrorism", which it blames squarely on Sunni Arab states like Saudi Arabia.

Obama announced his plans in a prime time address on Wednesday to build an alliance to root out Islamic State in both Syria and Iraq, plunging the United States into two conflicts in which nearly every country in the Middle East has a stake.

The region has been galvanized since June when Islamic State fighters, already in control of much of Syria, swept through northern Iraq, seizing cities, slaughtering prisoners, and proclaiming a "caliphate" that would rule over all Muslims.

The White House says the group is a threat to the West as well, attracting fighters from around the world who could return to carry out attacks at home.

Islamic State is a Sunni group that embraces a radical vision of a Middle East ruled along 7th century precepts. Its fighters are battling a Shi'ite-led government in Iraq and a Syrian government led by Assad, a follower of an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam. They are also fighting against more moderate Sunnis in Syria and against Kurds on both side of the frontier.

An alliance against Islamic State is bound to require cooperation from countries that consider each other enemies. Washington itself supports the Shi'ite-led government in Iraq but opposes Assad in Syria; it is allied to most Sunni Arab states while hostile to Iran.

A State Department official traveling with Kerry said the top U.S. diplomat would the ask allies to make room for U.S. military activity: "We may need enhanced basing and overflights ... there's going to be a meeting soon of defense ministers to work on these details."

Kerry would also urge regional television news outlets, particularly Qatari-owned Al Jazeera and Saudi-owned Al Arabiya, to air anti-extremist messages. Governments in the region would be urged to press mosques to preach against Islamic State.

"They need to get at the clerics because the clerics can get at the mosques in the neighborhood and they have to expose ISIL for what it is," the official told reporters.

Washington also wants more efforts to stop the flow of money to the group by tackling oil smuggling and cracking down on contributions from private donors, the official said.

Lebanese Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil told Reuters there was extensive discussion in Jeddah about whether the campaign should be broadened to include other Islamist groups, not just Islamic State. This is something that strongly anti-Islamist Gulf Arab states such as the United Arab Emirates had sought. Despite attending the talks, Turkey was not mentioned in the communique, an omission attributed by a senior Turkish official to sensitivities about 46 Turkish hostages held by the fighters. Turkey will discuss the needs of the alliance with Kerry on a visit to Ankara he starts on Friday, the official said. IRAN'S SEVERE MISGIVINGS

Iran, for its part, blames Gulf Arabs for stoking the Sunni militancy that led to Islamic State's rise. Foreign ministry spokeswoman Marzieh Afkham, said on state television of the U.S.-led alliance that there were "severe misgivings about its determination to sincerely fight the root causes of terrorism".

The prospect of U.S. armed action in Syria also drew concern from Russia, which has backed Assad. In Moscow, the Foreign Ministry said air strikes in Syria would require a U.N. Security Council mandate or be considered an act of aggression.

Kerry said he was surprised by such a statement in view of events in Ukraine - a separate international crisis where Washington says Moscow has sent troops, which Russia denies.

On Wednesday, before Obama's speech announcing the campaign, Kerry visited Baghdad and endorsed a new power-sharing government for Iraq, led by a Shi'ite, Haider al-Abadi, but also including Sunnis and Kurds.

Abadi was named last month to replace Nuri al-Maliki, blamed at home and abroad for partly provoking Islamic State's surge by alienating Sunnis from his government. Washington had long said that forming an inclusive government in Iraq was necessary before Obama would commit to major military action.

Kerry called Abadi's new Shi'ite-led government "the heart and backbone" of the fight against Islamic State.

Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal said the kingdom might reopen its embassy in Baghdad, closed since Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in 1990. He added that the building needed to be renovated. His Iraqi counterpart Ibrahim Jaafari said the reopening of the embassy "would reflect well on relations".

(Additional reporting by Angus McDowall, Parisa Hafezi and Orhan Coskun,; Editing by William Maclean and Peter Graff)



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TOP NEWS British banks warn they'll head south if Scotland quits UK

EDINBURGH (Reuters) - The battle for the hearts and heads of the Scottish people intensified on Thursday as two banks said they would shift their registered head offices to London if Scotland voted to break away from the United Kingdom in a referendum next week.

The warning from Edinburgh-based Lloyds (LLOY.L) and RBS (RBS.L) put the independence campaign on the defensive and followed a new poll which showed a slender lead for those wishing to keep the 307-year long union with England.

And the Scotsman newspaper, in a front-page editorial on Thursday, announced its verdict on the choice: "We are better together."

The latest developments heightened the drama and the passions surrounding the historic referendum.

In the past week, polls had shown a surge in support for the independence campaign led by Alex Salmond's Scottish National Party, and it appeared they were on a march to victory in next Thursday's vote.

That prompted Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron and Ed Miliband of the opposition Labour Party to head to Scotland on Wednesday to make emotional appeals for Scots to stay within "Britain's family of nations".

The pro-independence camp says it is time for Scots to rule their own country and build a fairer society without being told what to do by a political elite in London. The campaign for staying together says Scotland is more prosperous and secure within the United Kingdom, and says an independent nation would struggle to be economically viable.

The unanswered questions of what currency Scotland would use and what central bank it would have led to alarm in the corporate world as well as weighing on voters' minds.

Dutch insurer Aegon NV (AEGN.AS) also said on Thursday it would set up a new registered life company in England if Scotland exited the union.

The company said policies for its non-Scottish customers in the UK would continue to be in sterling and that it would support any different currency for Scottish based customers.

Thursday's announcements by Edinburgh-based Lloyds (LLOY.L) and Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS.L) - both part-owned by the British government - were greeted by the "No" campaign as bolstering their position.

Lloyds bank, which is 25 percent-owned by the British government and controls Bank of Scotland, said its contingency plans included setting up "legal entities in England", a move that would not affect its business.

RBS said it would be necessary to re-domicile its holding company. TSB Banking Group (TSB.L), which is part-owned by Lloyds, said it was likely to relocate some operations to England.

Lloyds' headquarters are in London but its registered office is in Edinburgh. RBS senior management is based in London but its registered offices are in Edinburgh. The location of a company's registered office, its legal home, is what dictates its regulatory and tax regime.

NO RBS JOB CUTS

RBS Chief Executive Ross McEwan told staff that moving the registered offices did not mean it would cut jobs in Scotland or move operations away, and it would not affect its day-to-day services.

"This is a technical procedure regarding the location of our registered head office. It is not an intention to move operations or jobs," McEwan said in a memo seen by Reuters.

Salmond seized on McEwan's comments to dismiss the significance of the moves. He accused the British government of orchestrating a campaign among corporate leaders to talk negatively about independence.

"I think the people of Scotland have moved beyond these warnings and these scaremongerings," he told a news conference.

John Swinney, finance minister in the SNP-led Scottish government, told the BBC that the banks' announcements were a result of the British government's refusal to agree to a formal currency union with an independent Scotland.

Bank of England Governor Mark Carney has raised questions about currency arrangements in an independent Scotland, saying it would need stockpiles of sterling if it adopted the pound without an agreement with the rest of the United Kingdom.

The thought of the banks' departure caused little heartache in some quarters.

"I would rather be poor and standing on my own two feet, making my decisions about my country, rather than being ripped off by robber barons in Westminster," Daniel Hargreaves, a "Yes" voter from Edinburgh, told Reuters as he rushed to work.

Salmond also repeated his stance that, despite what political leaders in London are now saying, rump United Kingdom would agree to a currency union in the event of a "Yes" victory as it was common sense and would be in their mutual interest.

His confidence does not extend to financial markets, with the pound taking a hit as the possibility of a "Yes" victory strengthened. Investors also fear the effect on Britain of Scotland claiming much of the North Sea oil and gas reserves.

Two of Britain's biggest retailers, John Lewis JLP.UL] and Next (NXT.L) also said an independent Scotland could face higher prices in the shops.

Charlie Mayfield, chairman of department store chain John Lewis Partnership, which also owns the Waitrose grocery chain, said it cost more to deliver goods in Scotland due to the longer distances and higher regulatory costs.

Next Chief Executive Simon Wolfson said it would not be difficult for Next to adapt but he would worry that prices and taxes would go up and jobs be lost.

Salmond also said on Thursday he was sure the European Union would welcome independent Scotland as a member, pointing to the substantial proportion of EU fishing and energy resources that lie in Scottish waters.

EU membership has been another battleground, with some European leaders saying Scotland would have to leave and apply to rejoin. Spain, facing its own separatist movements in Catalonia and the Basque Country, has been particularly vocal.

However, the new EU commissioner for enlargement, Johannes Hahn, suggested on Thursday there was room for maneuver.

"Let's wait what will be the outcome in Scotland. Let's allow the Scots to decide," he told Austria's ORF radio. "This is also part of our European fabric of values - that those who are affected decide and then the others have to respect that."

A poll released on Wednesday evening showed 53 percent of Scots would vote against a split, against 47 percent intending to opt for independence. The figures from the poll, carried out by Survation for the Daily Record newspaper, excluded 10 percent of voters who said they were still undecided.

The Scotsman editorial, covering the newspaper's first three pages, said that independence would bring too many unknowns, from currency to defense.

"With the choices before us, the conclusion is that we are better together, that Scotland's interests lie not in creating division but in continuing in the union and using its strengths to contribute in our success," it said.

Salmond however, said he was sure Scots would vote for independence next Thursday, despite "the blatant bullying and intimidation" of the British government.

(Additional reporting by William Schomberg, Costas Pitas, Kate Holton, Matt Scuffham, Shadia Nasrallah and Karen Rebelo; Editing by Sophie Walker)



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TOP NEWS Russia faces new U.S., EU sanctions over Ukraine crisis

BRUSSELS/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - European Union governments agreed on Thursday to begin their new sanctions against Russia over the Ukraine crisis on Friday but could lift them next month if Moscow abides by a fragile truce, while the United States prepared its own fresh sanctions.

The steps are the latest by the United States and the EU following Russia's annexation of Crimea in March and what the West sees as an effort since then to further destabilize Ukraine by backing pro-Russian separatists with troops and arms.

President Barack Obama said he will provide details on the new U.S. sanctions on Friday. The United States plans to sanction Sberbank, Russia's largest bank, and to further limit other Russian banks' access to U.S. capital, sources familiar with the matter said on Thursday.

The 28 governments of EU member states last week agreed on the new sanctions against Russia but spent several days wrangling over their announcement and implementation.

Russia's foreign ministry said the approval of the new EU penalties showed the European Union had "made its choice against" the current peace road map aimed at ending the worst confrontation between Moscow and the West since the Cold War.

After EU ambassadors gave the go-ahead to the new sanctions to go into effect on Friday, European Council President Herman Van Rompuy said EU officials would conduct a review before the end of September of how the truce reached last week between Ukraine government forces and rebels was working. If Russia was complying, some or all sanctions could be lifted, he said.

"If the situation on the ground so warrants," he said, officials may submit to EU leaders "proposals to amend, suspend or repeal the set of sanctions in force, in all or in part".

That enticement to Moscow to cooperate, while immediately imposing new measures, reflects impatience on the part of some leaders not to pull punches after less than a week of the truce but also concern among others, especially those most heavily dependent on Russian trade, not to provoke Moscow's retaliation.

The EU agreement on the timing of the sanctions followed a phone call on Thursday involving Van Rompuy, British Prime Minister David Cameron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Francois Hollande and Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, Cameron's spokesman said in London.

"If Russia genuinely reverses course, then of course the European Union and others will return to the subject, but there unfortunately has been very little evidence so far and that is why you have the European Union going ahead," the spokesman said.

Western powers have accused Russia of sending tanks and troops into eastern Ukraine to prop up a rebellion by pro-Moscow separatists. The Kremlin denies that and has responded with its own sanctions and threats of more retaliation.

'A CHANGE OF DIRECTION'

Britain's Europe Minister David Lidington said he told Russia's ambassador to London that EU sanctions were being imposed as a direct response to Russian actions and "would remain in place until we see evidence of a change of direction".

Moscow would take comparable measures in response to new EU sanctions, Russian news agencies quoted a Foreign Ministry spokesman as saying.

"Today, Brussels and the leaders of the EU nations need to give a clear answer to EU citizens as to why they are putting them under the risks of confrontation, economic stagnation and unemployment," the Russian ministry said in a statement.

The Russian response could include caps on used car imports and other consumer goods, Kremlin economic aide Andrei Belousov was quoted by state-run RIA news agency as saying.

But a Kremlin spokesman was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying Russia is committed to helping enforce a peace initiative in Ukraine despite the new EU sanctions.

Some European officials believe Moscow could use disruptions to the natural gas deliveries on which the EU depends as its trump card in the confrontation over Ukraine.

Poland's state-controlled gas importer PGNiG said on Thursday it had received 45 percent less natural gas than it requested from Russia's Gazprom on Wednesday.

Although Gazprom said Russian gas flows to Poland were unchanged from the previous week, Poland said later that Gazprom had promised to deliver contracted gas supplies to PGNiG on Friday.

Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico said he had asked officials to determine the reason for a drop of around 10 percent in supplies of Russian gas to Slovakia in recent days.

Ukraine imports around half of its gas needs from Russia, and the EU meets a third of its demand through imports from Russia, with 40 percent of that gas flowing through Ukraine.

The new EU sanctions are expected to put Russia's top oil producers and pipeline operators, Rosneft, Transneft and Gazprom Neft, on a list of Russian state-owned firms that will not be allowed to raise capital or borrow on European markets, an EU diplomat said.

EU sanctions do not include the gas sector and in particular state-owned Gazprom, the world's biggest gas producer and the biggest gas supplier to Europe.

But under the EU penalties, firms in the bloc will be barred from providing drilling or well testing services for deepwater oil exploration, Arctic oil exploration or production and shale oil projects in Russia.

Battle-tank maker Uralvagonzavod [URALG.UL], aerospace company Oboronprom and state-controlled United Aircraft Corp (UAC) are also expected to face sanctions, according to a draft obtained by Reuters.

The EU sanctions would prohibit the companies from raising capital in Europe via "financial instruments with a maturity exceeding 30 days," the draft document said.

An earlier round of EU sanctions barred EU nationals and companies from buying or selling new bonds or equity with a maturity of more than 90 days issued by major state-owned Russian banks: Sberbank, VTB Bank, Gazprombank, Vnesheconombank (VEB) and Russian Agriculture Bank (Rosselkhozbank).

Under the new sanctions, EU nationals and companies may no longer provide loans to the five banks. Trade in new bonds or equity with a maturity exceeding 30 days, issued by the same banks, will now be prohibited.

The EU will offer Russia more time to adjust to a European trade pact with Ukraine at talks with Ukraine and Russia in Brussels on Friday, diplomats say.

(Additional reporting by Kylie MacLellan in London, Andreas Rinke in Berlin, Jan Strupczewski, Robin Emmott, Julia Fioretti, Alastair Macdonald, Francesco Guarascio in Brussels; Writing by Will Dunham; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)



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GAMING NEWS: SLEEP PODS, MASSAGE BEDS AND TECH CODDLE PRO ATHLETES ON THIS NIKE CONCEPT JET

As soon as the athletes board they begin receiving information on their physiological state post-game. (Nike "Home Team Advantage at 40,000 Feet" concept image and caption © Teague )

When sports teams hit the road to play in away games, they'd usually charter a commercial airliner to haul the players and team personnel. These planes aren't too different that the ones most of us fly on (just slightly roomier), but it still means long-legged basketball players or beefy linebackers may have to shove themselves into a compact seat or two, not to mention the noise and re-circulated air they have to endure. And, an uncomfortable flight could mean a player might end up being in his or her worse form for the game. Which is why Seattle-based design firm Teague in collaborating with designers from Nike to create a private plane that meets the needs of today's pro sports teams.

The concept (there is no actual plane right now) is called "Home Team Advantage at 40,000 Feet," and it reimagines the interior of plane. Gone are the rows of painful seats made for packing in passengers; in are customized, high-tech spaces that help players stay in their best shape, even travelling 2,500 miles from West Coast to East Coast. These include "four areas of performance innovation," designed for recovery, circulation, sleep, and thinking.

From the images you'll see sleeping pods that monitor a player's vitals as well as provide ice and compression sleeves and adjustable rests for each leg; a lounge for players to relax; a specialized kitchen that plans nutritional meals; and massage beds with biometrics testing – all designed to address those four "performance innovation" areas. (We're going to guess there will be an in-flight gym as well.) On board, the computer system uploads stats from the sensors embedded in players' apparel and footwear, providing them post-game data of their performance. Most importantly for athletes, the interior is über-stylish.


This high-tech jet might seem superfluous, but the idea is actually not unsound. In its research, Teague found that players who play in away games are at a disadvantage due to the effects of travel, which is why home teams tend to have that "home team advantage" over visitors. Teague quotes a study that shows teams who travel cross-country, lose 60 percent of games, while another study shows motor function can deteriorate due to air travel. It also surveyed experts and team personnel in both pro and college sports, as well as the trainers and designers from Nike.

And while such a plane would likely cost tens of millions, consider that major sports teams, as well as collegiate ones, spend just as much (and more) in building ground facilities that are designed to do the same things that Teague's sports jet would.

"These investments in wages and facilities are the team owners' response to an increasingly competitive race to attract the best players and get the best performance out of those players," Teague writes. "But something obvious is missing in the protection of a their most valuable asset: how teams travel." Teague says teams should also invest in "away" facilities, not just at home.

If a tiny private jet comes to mind, think bigger. Teague's designs are obviously for the types of large Boeing and Airbus planes we fly on. (A Boeing 787-8 would fit nicely with Teague's concept.) In fact, Teague has a long relationship with Boeing in designing plane interiors, as well as working with airlines on cabin designs. Add the fitness know-how from Nike, and suddenly, an "athlete's plane" becomes totally plausible.


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TOP NEWS U.S. jobless claims rise, but firming labor market trend intact

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits unexpectedly rose last week, but that probably does not signal a material shift in labor market conditions as claims remain near their pre-recession levels.

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits increased 11,000 to a seasonally adjusted 315,000 for the week ended Sept. 6, the highest level since late June, the Labor Department said on Thursday.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast claims slipping to 300,000 last week.

The period included the Labor Day holiday and claims tend to be volatile around holidays. A Labor Department analyst said there were no special factors influencing the state level data.

The four-week average of claims, considered a better measure of labor market trends as it irons out week-to-week volatility, edged up 750 to 304,000, not far from pre-recession levels and consistent with strengthening labor market conditions.

Atlantic City casino closings could bump up claims in the coming weeks.

U.S. Treasury debt prices held their modest gains, while the dollar and U.S. stock index futures were little moved by the data.

Job growth braked sharply in August, with employers adding only 142,000 jobs to their payrolls - snapping six consecutive months of job increases above 200,000.

Economists, however, cautioned against reading too much into the weakness, noting that payroll gains tend to be smaller in August because of difficulties adjusting the data for seasonal fluctuations in hiring.

In addition, other labor market indicators, including manufacturing and services sectors surveys have pointed to relatively strong job gains.

The jobless claims report showed the number of people still receiving benefits after an initial week of aid rose 9,000 to 2.49 million in the week ended Aug. 30, also not straying too far from pre-recession levels.

The unemployment rate for people receiving unemployment benefits held at 1.9 percent for the ninth straight week.

(Reporting By Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Andrea Ricci)



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TOP NEWS Amid Alibaba fever, reasons for caution in IPO market

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The highly anticipated debut of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, the Chinese e-commerce group, will come amid the busiest year for initial public offerings since the technology bubble burst in 2000.

Alibaba's IPO, which could come as soon as Sept. 19, could raise more than $21 billion and claim Facebook Inc's title of biggest tech IPO. It will usher in a fall season when plenty of new names sell shares for the first time in the U.S. market.

Returns from IPOs so far this year have been mixed. Some analysts say large swaths of the market, especially biotechnology stocks, are frothy.

The percentage of IPOs coming from money-losing companies has jumped to a 14-year high, according to Jay Ritter, a professor of finance and leading scholar of IPOs at the University of Florida.

The mixed financial results could dim enthusiasm for some of the hot names coming later this year, including web hosting company GoDaddy, airline Virgin America, and possibly burger chain Shake Shack, which has been exploring an IPO.

Roughly one-third of the 188 stocks that debuted this year are selling below their IPO price. New stocks have risen an average of 19 percent over the first three months of trading, compared with 36 percent in 2013, and 23 percent in 2012, according to research firm Dealogic in New York.

"With the exception of mature companies like Alibaba, a lot of the companies that have all the hype around them tend to underperform beyond the first day. They just get squeezed to valuations that are beyond what they can absorb," said Kathleen Smith, who manages Greenwich, Connecticut-based Renaissance Capital's IPO ETF.

MediWound Ltd, a biopharmaceutical company, serves as a cautionary tale. Its shares down 60 percent from the first closing price.

In perhaps the year's biggest flop, shares of King Digital Entertainment Plc, the maker of mobile game "Candy Crush Saga," have tumbled more than 29 percent since going public in March.

"Remember how a few years ago, everyone had Angry Birds? That seems so 1998 now. These things run on a life cycle, and you need new things in the content pipeline all the time," said Jim O'Donnell, chief investment officer at San Francisco-based Forward, which has $5 billion in assets under management.

Some of the IPOs from late last year, including casual dining chain Potbelly Corp, have also sunk. Potbelly is down 60 percent from its first-day close.

Given the underwhelming performance of several high-profile IPOs in recent months, some analysts worry investor appetite for risk is reaching unsustainable levels.

Much of the influx of money-losing companies comes from one sector, biotechnology, where investors tolerate spotty track records in hopes of cashing in on lucrative payouts.

While some investors find their bets rewarded, as in the case of UltraGenyx Pharmaceutical Inc, which is up 176 percent from its IPO price, others are disappointed. Three of the five worst performing IPOs of 2014 are in biotechnology.

"They're essentially looking at companies that don't have much in the way of revenue or profit and hoping to see that one big blockbuster drug approval or pharma company buyout," said Jeff Reeves, editor of InvestorPlace.com in Rockville, Maryland.

Yet even excluding biotech, IPOs look rich. Offer prices have been about 50 percent higher this year than the average from 2001 to 2013, even as median sales declined to $136.2 million from $187.3 million in the year before the companies go public, according to Ritter.

Experts say the stock market's gains, with the S&P 500 topping 2,000 for the first time last month, are somewhat responsible for the appetite for risk. And with the U.S. Federal Reserve keeping rates low, investors seeking growth are attracted to more untested companies.

"Individual investors' appetite for risk will be predicated on the economic backdrop. If they think the Fed will continue to be accommodating, they'll be more apt to want to take risks on IPOs," said Joel Guth, chief executive officer of Gryphon Financial Partners, a member of the HighTower Network.

Still, there are some indications investors are becoming cautious. In the second quarter, stocks rose an average of 9.2 percent on their first day of trading. In each of the three quarters before that, stocks popped about 20 percent.

That could mean the torrent of companies slated for IPOS in the next few months, like restaurant-arcade chain Dave & Buster's Entertainment and peer-to-peer banker LendingClub, will be met with more skepticism.

"When valuations are at their highest level in years, at some point, there's going to be a correction," Ritter said.

(Additional reporting by Ryan Vlastelica; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)

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FOOTBALL NEWS: Liverpool coach Rodgers anger over Sturridge injury

Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers has criticised England's handling of Daniel Sturridge after the striker was ruled out for up to three weeks.



Sturridge, 25, suffered a thigh strain while training with England last week and missed Monday's Euro 2016 qualifying win over Switzerland.



"We're disappointed because we feel it was an injury which could have been prevented," said Rodgers.



"I think clubs work differently at times to international teams."



Sturridge played most of England's friendly against Norway

Sturridge, who has played the full 90 minutes in each of Liverpool's three league games this season, was on for 89 minutes of England's friendly against Norway on 3 September.



He suffered his injury in a training session 36 hours after the match at Wembley, which England won 1-0.



"When we look at our players here we look at them individually in terms of what their needs are," said Rodgers.

"Fast players would have a second day recovery while other players can work on that day.



"When you are that type of quick player like Daniel Sturridge, Raheem Sterling and boys like Danny Welbeck, you need to recover them."

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Entertainment & Arts NEWS: Richard Kiel, James Bond villain Jaws actor, dies at 74

Richard Kiel was most famous for his role as Jaws in the Bond films The Spy Who Loved Me and Moonraker
Actor Richard Kiel - who played steel-toothed villain Jaws in two James Bond films - has died in California aged 74.

The towering American star, who appeared in The Spy Who Loved Me in 1977 and Moonraker in 1979, died in hospital in Fresno on Wednesday.

A spokeswoman for Saint Agnes Medical Center confirmed Kiel's death, but did not reveal the cause.

The 7ft 2in (2.18m) actor also appeared in the sports comedy Happy Gilmore, starring Adam Sandler, in 1996.


Kiel got his first acting break in the 1950s
Kiel made his name as cable-chomping henchman Jaws opposite Roger Moore as 007.

Sir Roger said he was "totally distraught" at the death of his co-star.

"We were on a radio programme together just a week ago," said the former Bond star, adding "[I] can't take it in".

Kiel and Sir Roger were guests on BBC's Radio 4 programme The Reunion, which aired on Sunday, along with Bond actress Britt Ekland, recalling their roles in the spy series.

During the programme, Kiel said he initially thought playing Jaws - a man who killed people with his teeth - could appear "over the top".

"I was very put off by the description of the character and I thought, well, they don't really need an actor, he's more a monster part," he said.

"So I tried to change that view of it... I said if I were to play the part, I want to give the character some human characteristics, like perseverance, frustration."


Sir Roger said he was "distraught" at co-star Kiel's death, a week after they reunited for a radio show
Sandro Monetti, director at Bafta in Los Angeles and a former showbiz reporter, described Kiel as having "teeth of steel, but a heart of gold".

He recalled seeing the actor at James Bond conventions: "It was like seeing kids meeting Santa Claus. Everyone has got such joyous memories of Jaws, and he had time for everybody."

Monetti added: "Whenever you mentioned Jaws, his eyes lit up and there was that famous grin."

Micky Dolenz, who starred with Kiel in the seminal episode of The Monkees - I was a Teenage Monster, tweeted his memories of the star: "The great character actor and gentle giant."

The character of Jaws in The Spy Who Loved Me was originally intended to die at the end of the movie, but he was so popular with fans that Kiel was brought back to reprise the role in Moonraker.

"The original script had me being killed by the shark," Kiel said.

"They filmed that and they also filmed an ending where I survive and pop out of the ocean.

"That was one of the big moments for me, watching the blue-collar screening of the movie, The Spy Who Loved Me, and having the reaction of the crowd at the theatre when Jaws popped out of the ocean, survived and swam away. There were hoots and howling, applause. I couldn't believe it."


Kiel, pictured with fellow Bond villains Christopher Lee, Rick Yune and Toby Stephens, was 7ft 2in tall
Born in Detroit, Michigan, Kiel had the hormonal condition acromegaly, which was said to have contributed to his height.

His first break came in 1959 when he played the alien Kanamit in Twilight Zone.

He published an autobiography in 2002, called Making It Big In The Movies.

His many other acting roles included deadly assistant Voltaire in the 1960s TV series The Wild, Wild West; playing opposite William Shatner in the 1970s TV sitcom Barbary Coast; taking on the lead character of Eli Weaver in the movie The Giant of Thunder Mountain; and spoofing his most famous role as "Famous big guy with silver teeth" in the movie version of Inspector Gadget.

In recent years, he also spent much of his time touring the world and appearing at conventions to meet Bond fans.

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LOVE NEWS: Tindafella Jarrod Allen dates woman he mocked on Tinder

If someone made fun of you online would you still go on a date with them?

What about if you were on Instagram and saw they'd recreated the photos you had put on your Tinder profile?

Tindafella - who achieved notoriety with parodies of the women he spots on the dating app - has now gone on a date with with one of the people he mocked.

Sophie Nelson, who was the girl drinking red wine using her foot, and Tindafella - real name Jarrod Allen - have now met up in person.


Speaking to Newsbeat about Jarrod, Sophie said: "He's great! He's really funny and easy going, a lot bigger than I expected!"

Their date was filmed for The Project, an Australian current affairs programme.

The pair, who both live in Sydney, also did the #redwinefootchallenge as part of their evening.

"He was terrible at it and got wine all through his beard," said Sophie.


Jarrod, a 25-year-old electrician, has said he has had numerous marriage proposals since his pictures went viral.

He has previously been accused of trolling the subjects of his parodies, but has said he has been glad most people seem to see "the funny side".

"There is no malice behind any of it. I'm just trying to make people laugh," he said.

"Of course there are going to be people who take things way to seriously and kick up a stink... but hey, haters gonna hate."


Sophie said she has received huge amounts of attention from around the world since the pictures went viral.

The 26-year-old, who is a student and works part-time in a funeral parlour, added: "I thought it was hilarious, the morning it went viral I woke up to 20 notifications.

"The first one said: 'I found a picture of you on the Internet!' I freaked. After seeing what it was I calmed down and saw the funny side," she told Newsbeat.

"I'm glad my picture was funny and not serious, or naked. Some of the other girls photos were a bit more serious, I'm not too sure if they saw the funny side."

She added: "As soon as I made that my profile picture on Tinder I got lots of matches, people really responded to my party trick."

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SPORTS NEWS: South Korea launch Asiad team on gold quest

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korean athletes vowed not to let the chance of winning an Asian Games gold medal on home soil slip through their fingers on Thursday, as the delegation to the 17th Asiad gathered in Seoul for a launch ceremony.

South Korea will have 831 athletes competing at the Sept. 19 to Oct. 4 Games in Incheon, west of Seoul, and have targeted at least 90 gold medals at the quadrennial multi-sports event.

A gold-medal laden performance at the Games would also help South Korea end 2014 on a bright note after a year of sporting failure and national tragedy.

The country is still struggling to recover from the Sewol ferry disaster in April in which 300 passengers, mostly schoolchildern, drowned after the ferry sank on a routine journey from Incheon to the southern holiday island of Jeju.

"We will strive to win more than 90 gold medals and defend our overall position of second place for the fifth time in a row," said Park Soon-ho, who will lead the South Korean delegation at the Games.

"We've had so many accidents and incidents this year which were heartbreaking for so many of us. I hope that our athletes' can help console those in pain through their efforts and good results."

The sporting year has also been a difficult one for South Koreans, who saw their national soccer team suffer a first-round exit at the World Cup in Brazil while the medal haul from the Sochi Winter Olympics was below expectations.

Among the gold medal favorites for Incheon is diminutive gymnast Yang Hak-seon, who won gold in the vault at the 2012 London Olympics and the Asian Games in Guangzhou two years earlier.

"I will do my best to be a defending champion. South Korea haven't won a gold medal in the gymnastic team event yet, so we will try to get one this time," he said.

K-POP SURPRISE

Decked out in official white blazers and red trousers, hulking weight lifters, towering basketball players and pint-sized gymnasts were crammed together at Seoul's Olympic Hall for the event.

Athletes were urged to give their all by Prime Minister Chung Hong-won and Korea Olympic Committee (KOC) President Kim Jung-haeng, but it was a surprise performance from K-Pop group T-ara that seemed to fire them up the most.

"Since the Games will be held on home soil, please be mindful of your attitude and how you act," said KOC President Kim. "Be careful not to get injured, and please be great civilian ambassadors in greeting foreign athletes."

South Korea have recorded their best gold-medal hauls when hosting the Asiad, winning 93 at the 1986 Seoul Games, and 96 at the Busan Games in 2002.

Lee Dae-hoon, who won gold in the taekwondo bantamweight division at the Guangzhou Games four years ago, said he would not let the chance to defend his title slip away.

"The Asian Games don't come around every year, and although I've won a gold medal before I won't just expect to win another one this time and will do my best."

Fencer Nam Hyun-hee is the favorite to defend her 2010 gold medal in the foil and the 32-year-old said she would push herself to the limit in Incheon.

"After having a baby my body isn't yet back to 100 percent fitness," said Nam, who had a daughter last year. "But this is my last Asian Games so I'm going to do everything I can to win another gold medal."

(Additional reporting by Kahyun Yang; Editing by Amlan Chakraborty)



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SPORTS NEWS: Play suspended at KLM Open after ball hits golfer

(Reuters) - Play was suspended during the first round of the KLM Open on Thursday when Paraguay's Fabrizio Zanotti was hit on the head by a golf ball.



The 31-year-old was on the 16th fairway at the Kennemer Golf Club in Zandvoort when he was injured by a ball hit from the 14th tee.



Zanotti, who won the BMW International Open earlier this season, received treatment on the course and was then taken to hospital.



Zanotti had started his round from the 10th tee and was level par after six holes when he was struck by the ball.



(Reporting By Michael Hann; editing by Amlan Chakraborty)





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SPORTS Del Potro delays comeback from wrist surgery

MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Former U.S. Open champion Juan Martin del Potro has delayed his comeback from a long layoff following wrist surgery in March and will miss tournaments in China, Japan and Malaysia over the next two months.



The 25-year-old Argentine started the year by winning his 18th ATP title at the Sydney International but since being upset in the second round of the Australian Open by Roberto Bautista has managed to play just four matches at two tournaments.



"I would like to take this opportunity to tell you, my fans, that although the recovery of the wrist is progressing very well, I need a little more time to reach the competitive level necessary to compete week after week," Del Potro said in a message posted on his Facebook page.



"I worked hard to be ready to make my comeback in Asia, where I had great results last year, but unfortunately it was not possible.



"I'm going to miss my fans in Malaysia, Tokyo and Shanghai who always gave me tremendous support. I will keep working hard on my recovery to play the European season at the end of the year."



Del Potro, the 2009 champion at Flushing Meadows, will miss the Sept. 22-28 Malaysian Open, his title defense at the Japan Open a week later and the Oct. 5-12 Shanghai Masters, where he made the final last year.



The season-ending European swing starts Oct. 13 with tournaments in Russia, Sweden and Austria.



(Reporting by Ian Ransom; Editing by Nick Mulvenney)





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SPORTS NEWS: World class shuttlers set to light up Incheon

(Reuters) - A quick look at the world rankings offers proof that the region's players remain the dominant force in badminton today with the Asian Games tournament set to be one of the most keenly contested and highest class events at the Incheon gathering.

Played over 10 days from Sept. 20, China is expected to mop up the majority of the seven gold medals on offer but several sub-plots and shots at retribution will add to the action as the drama unfolds at the Gyeyang Gymnasium.

Two players hoping to make up for disappointing campaigns at the recent world championships are men's world number one Lee Chong Wei of Malaysia and his counterpart in the women's rankings, Li Xuerui of China.

Lee's misfortune in major tournaments is agonizing and as the 31-year-old winds down a career that has brought him more than 50 titles, the lack of an Olympic, world championship or Asian Games gold sits uncomfortably on an otherwise stellar CV.

When his nemesis, Lin Dan of China, failed to earn selection for last month's world championships in Copenhagen, many believed Lee would finally shake off his 'nearly man' tag and win a first world title.

Lee looked unstoppable as he breezed through to the final but once again fell short of glory, losing out in two tight sets to Lin's compatriot Chen Long, a player the Malaysian had beaten in the previous two finals they contested in 2014.

Lee also lost in the final of the 2013 and 2011 world championships. He finished runner-up at the Olympic Games in 2012 and 2008, and won silver at the Asian Games in Guangzhou four years ago. Every one of those failures came against the remarkable Lin.

Lee will have both Lin and Chen blocking his path to gold in Incheon but the Malaysian is focused on reaching peak form rather than dwelling on another near miss.

"I've came back from defeats many times. I just need to be mentally stronger this time," Lee told reporters on his return to Kuala Lumpur following the world championships.

"I also think that the Asian Games will be a tougher challenge for me as China's top two will be competing. So, it will be up to me to be strong enough to rise to that challenge."

LI HOPEFUL

For five-time world champion Lin, a second successive Asian Games title would represent the perfect opening to what he hopes is a two-year cycle that concludes with an unprecedented third consecutive Olympic gold medal at the 2016 Rio Games.

"My goal is to play at a fourth Olympics if I can be there in Rio," Lin said in an interview at the recent Youth Olympics in Nanjing. "I would be proud and honored to represent China at the Games four years after winning in London."

In the women's singles, 23-year-old Li will also be hoping to bounce back after her shock three-set defeat to Spain's Carolina Marin in the Copenhagen final and add an Asian Games title to her Olympic gold medal from London.

Defending Asian Games champion and world number two Wang Shixian represents the biggest threat to her Chinese compatriot Li's hopes of victory in Incheon, while hosts South Korea and India will also be looking to make an impact.

South Korea are well represented by Sung Ji-hyun and Bae Yeon-ju, both ranked in the world's top six, while India have two top-10 players in the draw with P.V. Sidhu expected to go deep into the tournament along with Olympic bronze medalist Saina Nehwal.

The hosts can also expect to enjoy medal success in the men's doubles after South Korea's teams picked up gold, silver and bronze in Copenhagen.

Lee Yong-dae and Yoo Yeong-seong lost the final but the world's number one-ranked pair are expected to go one better on home soil with their stiffest opposition likely to come from Indonesia's Mohammad Ahsan and Hendra Setiawan, who pulled out of the world championships due to injury.

China, however, will be confident of sweeping the other four events with Zhang Nan and Zhao Yunlei looking to continue their mixed doubles dominance, along with strong women's doubles pairs and both of their teams.

(Editing by Peter Rutherford)



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SPORTS NEWS: Gasol's Spain future in doubt after shock World Cup loss

BARCELONA (Reuters) - Spain centre Pau Gasol has doubts about his future with the national team following the hosts' shock quarter-final defeat by France at the basketball World Cup on Wednesday.

The Spaniards, packed with NBA talents and joint favourites with the United States, were expected to reach the final but the contest against France which began with fans in festive spirits ended with calls for coach Juan Antonio Orenga to resign.

The defeat could well mean the end of an era for a successful Spanish side who lifted the 2006 World Cup, bagged silver medals at the last two Olympics and won two of the last three European Championships.

"You never know when it is your last game or your last tournament," Gasol told reporters after the 65-52 loss.

The Chicago Bulls player has been the talisman for the side but he, like several others in the squad, are approaching the end of their illustrious careers.

"I would like to play until I am 50 but I doubt I will. It is an honour to play for my country but you never know...We have great young players coming through and I am sure that we will have a strong side for the future," said the 34-year-old.

"It is a painful defeat. We had big hopes and up until now had been playing very well. The 50 rebounds that they took compared to (Spain's) 28 is a massive difference. They dominated this area and we didn't move the ball around.

"I am proud of the team and my team-mates. It reminds me of Athens 2004 (Olympics) when we won all the games and we lost in the quarter-finals. It is very painful but it is part of sport."

Gasol, who faced France carrying an injury, was one of the few players to come out of the game with some credit but was unable to lift the team.

His brother Marc Gasol had travelled back to Barcelona the previous day for the birth of his daughter and looked disorientated and lost in both defence and attack.

Serge Ibaka also had a poor match as he continually failed to find the basket with throws from distance and was unable to hold France back with his usual intensity in defence.

Spain guard Juan Carlos Navarro felt his team mates were complacent.

"Everyone thought we were in the final before we played the games. It is clear that we did not prepare well for the game as we should have done and now the final has passed us by," the 34-year-old told reporters.

(Editing by Amlan Chakraborty)



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SPORTS Women front and center of Japan's Asian Games team

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan heads to the Asian Games with the team's top two symbolic leadership roles filled by women for the first time in what may mark a growing focus on women's sports in its traditionally male-dominated society.

Giving the roles of captain and flag bearer to women at the could be seen as a nod to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's efforts to raise the profile of women in the country.

The issue of women's sport in Japan came sharply into focus in 2012 when the women's soccer team rode economy class to the London Olympics despite having won the World Cup a year earlier, while the less successful men's team flew business class.

"I'm very nervous, but I want to do my best," said captain Hiromi Miyake, a 28-year-old weightlifter who won silver at the 2012 London Olympics.

"The Asian Games is the biggest competition after the Olympics, so since it is one point on the road to the Olympics I want to do my best - and hope it leads to me being selected for the Olympics."

The flagbearer for the Asian Games in Incheon, west of Seoul, is Kaori Kawanaka, an Olympian archer.

Once an Asian Games powerhouse, Japan dominated the medals table from the inaugural Games in New Delhi in 1951 through the 1978 Bangkok Asiad.

China took control of the medals table at New Delhi in 1982 and Japan has battled neighbours South Korea for second place ever since.

Japan's 716-strong delegation will include Olympians such as judoka Kaori Matsumoto along with less well-known figures.

   

GENDER NO ISSUE

Miyake, who studied piano from childhood before switching to weightlifting and who won a silver medal in the 48-kilogram category at the 2012 Olympics as well as a bronze at the 2006 world championships, will be competing in the same weight class at the upcoming Games.

Practicing for about seven hours a day, five times a week, the petite Miyake - all of 1.4 metres (4 ft 9 inch) tall - eats, trains, and sleeps at a training facility in suburban Tokyo.

Her strongest competitors will be from China and Korea, but both Miyake and Japanese sports officials played down any hint of regional rivalry, preferring to focus on more long-term goals such as paving the way for success at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro or Tokyo's Games in 2020.

"I hope Japan, China, and South Korea will perform well at the Games, pushing other Asian nations to do well, and ultimately contributing to a strong outcome for Asian countries at the upcoming Olympics," said Naoya Yanagiya, the director of sports department at the Japanese Olympics Committee (JOC).

He said that gender had not been an issue when choosing the captain and flag bearer.

"Gender is not considered when choosing the captain and flag bearer. We check on their availabilities and past performances," he added.

Even so, the focus on female athletes is a bit of a change in Japan, where male athletes have often had better treatment - and better financing.

"I think this is a once in a life time opportunity, so although I'm not used to these kinds of things, I want to challenge myself and learn from this," Miyake said.

The Asian Games is a multi-sports event held every four years hosted by the Olympic Council of Asia. A total of 45 countries will compete in 36 sports including swimming, judo, and wrestling.

The opening ceremony will be held on Sept. 19 and the Games will close on Oct. 4.

(Editing by Elaine Lies/Peter Rutherford)



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SPORTS Former New York Mets female ticketing executive sues team over discrimination

(Reuters) - A former New York Mets ticket sales executive sued the baseball club for discrimination on Wednesday, alleging in a federal lawsuit she was "frequently humiliated" and later fired by the team owner's son because she was pregnant while unmarried.

Leigh Castergine is seeking unspecified damages in the lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court, in Brooklyn, saying she was discriminated against by Jeffrey Wilpon, also the team's chief operating officer.

"He frequently humiliated Castergine in front of others by, among other things, pretending to see if she had an engagement ring on her finger and openly stating in a meeting of the team's all male senior executives that he is 'morally opposed' to Castergine 'having this baby without being married,'" the complaint said.

She was fired in late August, 2014, after she complained to the team's human resources department, according to the lawsuit, which also names Sterling Mets Front Office LLC.

"Wilpon fired Castergine based on his discriminatory views," it says.

The Mets did not respond to requests for comment.

ESPN quoted the team as saying in a statement: "We have received and reviewed the complaint. The claims are without merit. Our organization maintains strong policies against any and all forms of discrimination."

Castergine graduated from the University of Pennsylvania and worked for other sports teams including the Philadelphia Flyers and Orlando Magic. By 2010, she had an expertise in data analytics and pricing strategy.

The club, which hired her in December 2010, has rewarded her with two $50,000 raises, six-figure bonuses, and a promotion to senior vice president, the lawsuit said.

Shortly before he fired her, and after the birth of her child, Wilpon said "something changed" with Castergine and that she was no longer "as aggressive as she once had been," according to the lawsuit.

Wilpon also is alleged in the lawsuit to have told Castergine that she should tell her boyfriend she would make more money and get a bigger bonus if she had a wedding ring.

"I am as morally opposed to putting an e-cigarette sign in my ballpark as I am to Leigh having this baby without being married," Wilpon is alleged to have said in a February meeting with male senior executives that Castergine attended, according to the lawsuit.

(Editing by Robert Birsel)



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