Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn first. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn first. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Ba, 14 tháng 5, 2013

Cricket-New Zealand pace bowler Southee cleared for first test

LONDON, May 13 (Reuters) - New Zealand pace bowler Tim Southee has been cleared to play in the first test against England at Lord's starting on Thursday after scans showed no damage to his front bowling foot.

Southee was pulled out of the team during the drawn four-day match against the England Lions at the weekend in Leicester and sent to London for scans.

"Tim's fine," coach Mike Hesson told reporters on Monday. "He's had some treatment to his toe and we're very comfortable he'll be right for the first test."

Matt Prior, whose century in the third test against New Zealand in Auckland this year ensured England drew the series 0-0, was named England's men's cricketer of the year on Monday. He is the first wicketkeeper to win the award.

(Writing by John Mehaffey)


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Chủ Nhật, 12 tháng 5, 2013

Kings claim first New Zealand scalp with Highlanders win

PORT ELIZABETH (Reuters) - South Africa's Southern Kings bounced back from a humiliating home defeat last weekend to secure a 34-27 victory over the Highlanders in Port Elizabeth on Saturday.

It was their first ever win over a New Zealand side a week after they were thrashed 72-10 at home by the Waratahs.

That dismal performance lacked passion and brutally exposed their inexperience in their maiden year of Super Rugby.

But Saturday's victory - set up by outstanding loose-forward play from Luke Watson, Wimpie van der Walt and Cornell du Preez - was a complete turnaround. They were more physical, better organised and showed greater precision with their set-pieces.

Two tries from Watson and further scores by Du Preez and Shaun Venter gave the hosts a try-scoring bonus point, while the Highlanders came away with two points after they also ran in four tries via Colin Slade (two), Brad Thorn and Hosea Gear.

"We got absolutely pumped last week but it was still almost a full house tonight so a lot of credit must go to the crowd," said Kings captain Watson.

"We showed a lot of character and courage. We haven't got much to lose. We had to take some risks and it paid off,"

After taking a 6-3 lead through the boot of flyhalf Demetri Catrakilis, the Kings got the opening try after Watson burrowed over.

GREAT TRY

The Highlanders hit back with a great individual try of their own, flyhalf Slade chipped the ball in behind the Kings defence and collected it himself before diving over under the posts.

The momentum was with the visitors at that point and when Thorn barged over to score the Highlanders had the lead.

But they could not hold it into the break, with Watson scoring his second try from a driving maul to give the Kings a 20-17 advantage at halftime.

The home side took control of the game in the first 15 minutes of the second period with two more tries.

Good footwork from Catrakilis allowed Du Preez to go over in the corner, with Tamati Ellison sin-binned for repeated infringements in the lead-up to the try.

The bonus-point was won after a great piece of individual skill from Kings hooker Bandise Maku, who broke free into the Highlanders 22 and flicked the ball back as he was tackled into the path of Venter.

That score put the home side 17 points ahead, but there were some late jitters when Slade scored his second try and Hosea Gear got a bonus-point for the visitors to close the gap to seven.

The Highlanders had all the possession for the final five minutes of the game, but could not complete the comeback.

"We played into their strengths by giving them penalties. It is pretty frustrating but we have seven days to regroup before we play the Bulls," Highlanders captain Andrew Hore said.


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Rugby-Kings claim first New Zealand scalp with Highlanders win

PORT ELIZABETH, May 11 (Reuters) - South Africa's Southern Kings bounced back from a humiliating home defeat last weekend to secure a 34-27 victory over the Highlanders in Port Elizabeth on Saturday.

It was their first ever win over a New Zealand side a week after they were thrashed 72-10 at home by the Waratahs.

That dismal performance lacked passion and brutally exposed their inexperience in their maiden year of Super Rugby.

But Saturday's victory - set up by outstanding loose-forward play from Luke Watson, Wimpie van der Walt and Cornell du Preez - was a complete turnaround. They were more physical, better organised and showed greater precision with their set-pieces.

Two tries from Watson and further scores by Du Preez and Shaun Venter gave the hosts a try-scoring bonus point, while the Highlanders came away with two points after they also ran in four tries via Colin Slade (two), Brad Thorn and Hosea Gear.

"We got absolutely pumped last week but it was still almost a full house tonight so a lot of credit must go to the crowd," said Kings captain Watson.

"We showed a lot of character and courage. We haven't got much to lose. We had to take some risks and it paid off,"

After taking a 6-3 lead through the boot of flyhalf Demetri Catrakilis, the Kings got the opening try after Watson burrowed over.

GREAT TRY

The Highlanders hit back with a great individual try of their own, flyhalf Slade chipped the ball in behind the Kings defence and collected it himself before diving over under the posts.

The momentum was with the visitors at that point and when Thorn barged over to score the Highlanders had the lead.

But they could not hold it into the break, with Watson scoring his second try from a driving maul to give the Kings a 20-17 advantage at halftime.

The home side took control of the game in the first 15 minutes of the second period with two more tries.

Good footwork from Catrakilis allowed Du Preez to go over in the corner, with Tamati Ellison sin-binned for repeated infringements in the lead-up to the try.

The bonus-point was won after a great piece of individual skill from Kings hooker Bandise Maku, who broke free into the Highlanders 22 and flicked the ball back as he was tackled into the path of Venter.

That score put the home side 17 points ahead, but there were some late jitters when Slade scored his second try and Hosea Gear got a bonus-point for the visitors to close the gap to seven.

The Highlanders had all the possession for the final five minutes of the game, but could not complete the comeback.

"We played into their strengths by giving them penalties. It is pretty frustrating but we have seven days to regroup before we play the Bulls," Highlanders captain Andrew Hore said. (Reporting by Nick Said in Cape Town; Editing by Ken Ferris)


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Thứ Năm, 11 tháng 4, 2013

Sudan leader to make first visit to South Sudan

JUBA, South Sudan (AP) — A government official says Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir will travel to South Sudan on Friday.

The visit will be al-Bashir's first to South Sudan since the country peacefully broke away from Sudan in 2011.

South Sudan government spokesman Barnaba Marial Benjamin said Thursday that the two heads of state want to prove to the world that the two countries plan to live peacefully together. Al-Bashir and South Sudan President Salva Kiir will discuss how to implement security agreements the two countries signed in September and the status of the contested region of Abyei.

Bashir had planned to travel to South Sudan in April 2012 but cancelled the visit after South Sudan's military seized the disputed oil-producing town of Heglig. The two leaders are likely to discuss their co-dependent oil industries.


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Thứ Hai, 25 tháng 3, 2013

China's first lady sparks homegrown fashion frenzy

BEIJING (AP) — New Chinese first lady Peng Liyuan's choice of attire has sparked a flurry of excitement over an independent homegrown label, an unusual phenomenon in a country where political figures are more frumpy than fashionable and wives usually shy away from the spotlight.

Images of Peng, 50, stepping off a plane arm-in-arm with her husband President Xi Jinping in Moscow on Friday have circulated widely on the Chinese Internet, prompting praise of her style as understated and sophisticated.

Eagle-eyed fashion-savvy bloggers identified the leather handbag she carried and smart, double-breasted black trench coat she wore as items designed by Guangzhou-based label Exception. The brand has been described as one of China's leading independent labels whose simple but unique designs stand out in an industry dominated by Western copycats.

"First ladies are ambassadors of the culture and the design and of the soft power of a country. I'm glad that she chose to wear Chinese and take up that role of spokesperson for Chinese design here," said Hong Huang, publisher of the fashion magazine iLook and one of the most popular microbloggers in China.

Hong said it was too early to tell if Peng's high-profile public appearance signaled that she would be playing a more significant role in Chinese politics than her predecessors, who — unlike many of their Western counterparts — have been largely unseen. "It's good that finally China has a very pretty, very beautiful first lady and she can hopefully speak up for a lot more and complement whatever Xi wants to say, in a way, like all first ladies do."

Online retailers have sought to associate their products with what news portals are terming the "Peng Liyuan style," with searches for those key words resulting in lists of handbags and trench coats, many of which did not even resemble the items she wore. Heavy online traffic to Exception's website has caused it to crash since Friday, with it loading only sporadically on Monday.

The impact Peng, a celebrated performer on state television, is having on fashion bears some similarity to trends sparked by Britain's duchess of Cambridge, the former Kate Middleton, who helped bring Brazilian-born designer Issa to the world's attention before her marriage to Prince William. American first lady Michelle Obama has also lent cachet to designer Jason Wu by wearing a gown he custom-made to last month's inauguration.

For its part, Exception appears to be gauging its next move. Chinese politics is a traditionally secretive world and the company risks sparking a backlash by associating itself too publicly with the wife of the head of state.

Some of the more conservative among the Communist Party might frown upon the commercialization of the first lady's image or criticize such attention as being reflective of an excessively materialistic society.

Exception was founded in the mid-nineties by a couple who shared a love of design and the rock band The Ramones, according to Hong. Chief executive Mao Jihong, one of the co-founders, could not be reached on his cellphone. The label has expanded to become a high-end brand with nearly 100 stores and retail counters in China.

Company spokeswoman Tan Yijia, reached in the company's Guangzhou headquarters, said she could not immediately confirm that the pieces Peng wore on the trip were made by the label. The city's quality supervision bureau, however, said on its official microblog site that it has confirmed that Peng's outfit was made by Exception.

Despite Exception's public silence, commentators in China's fashion world are celebrating the attention on the label and, more significantly, the rise of the profile of a popular first lady.

"It's the first time that China's first lady appears like a modern woman. I think she dressed very well, with taste and confidence," said Zhang Yu, editor of China's Vogue magazine. "After so many years, we finally have a first lady who can represent us so appropriately. I think it is a landmark event."

___

Associated Press researcher Flora Ji contributed to this report.


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Chủ Nhật, 24 tháng 3, 2013

A diplomatic star is born in Chinese first lady

BEIJING (AP) — Glamorous new first lady Peng Liyuan has emerged as Chinese diplomacy's latest star, cutting a very different profile from her staid predecessors on her debut official visit abroad to Russia.

A well-known performer on state television, Peng featured prominently in Sunday's state media coverage of husband and President Xi Jinping's activities in Moscow, Xi's first state visit since assuming the presidency earlier this month.

Peng watched song and dance routines at a performing arts school on Saturday, but did not join in as some media reports had suggested she might. Xi's trip continues this week with stops in Tanzania, South Africa and Congo, during which Peng is expected to hold other public events.

Chinese newspapers on Saturday ran images of Xi and Peng descending arm-in-arm from their aircraft after arriving in Moscow on Friday, and state broadcaster CCTV ran a report on its main Sunday news broadcast about her visit to the school.

The popular Beijing News tabloid ran a full page of items on Peng's appearances on Sunday, alongside a photo of her arriving at a speech Xi gave Saturday dressed in an elegant Chinese-style silk tunic and skirt.

"In her role as first lady on this visit abroad, Peng Liyuan is exhibiting China's soft power," the paper quoted Wang Fan, head the Institute of International Relations at China Foreign Affairs University, as saying.

"As a singer and artist and a long-term advocate for poverty relief and other causes, Peng has an excellent public image," Wang said.

Much of the coverage focused on her personal style, with a report on the mass-market sina.com website noting with satisfaction that the black leather clutch she paired with the outfit was made to order by a Chinese firm in the southwestern city of Chengdu, a flattering contrast with prominent Chinese female politicians scorned publicly for appearing decked head to toe in foreign designer brands.

"In practical terms, this is an important show of support for China's domestic industries, but in the larger sense, it should raise national self-respect and confidence," read a posting on China's popular Weibo microblogging service left by Lin Zhibo, Gansu provincial bureau chief of the Communist Party's flagship newspaper, People's Daily.

The wives of China's top officials have traditionally been mostly invisible at home and attracted little attention while accompanying their husbands on state visits abroad. And the contrast is even sharper in the case of Mao Zedong's wife, Jiang Qing, who was widely hated and later imprisoned for her role as leader of the radical Gang of Four that mercilessly persecuted political opponents during the chaotic 1966-76 Cultural Revolution.

More recently, former Premier Wen Jiabao's wife, Zhang Peili, became known for her role in the country's gem trade and was never seen in public with her husband.

Peng, 50, is famed for her CCTV performances and serves as an ambassador for the World Health Organization, but largely retired from public life after Xi was made China's leader-in-waiting in 2007. While sometimes described as a folk singer, she holds the rank of major general in the People's Liberation Army and is best known for her stirring renditions of patriotic odes, often while wearing full dress uniform.

Peng and Xi have one daughter, a student at Harvard who remains out of the limelight.

Peng works on tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS outreach for the WHO. She made headlines last year by appearing alongside Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates as part of a campaign to discourage smoking, a high-profile cause in a country where about two-thirds of men smoke.


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Thứ Tư, 13 tháng 3, 2013

Cricket-New Zealand win toss, bowl first v England

WELLINGTON, March 14 (Reuters) - New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum won the toss and chose to bowl in the second test against England at the Basin Reserve on Thursday.

McCullum had told reporters he would bowl if he won the toss to extract whatever assistance they could get from the pitch that is expected to offer more pace and bounce than University Oval in Dunedin.

New Zealand retained the same starting side that put them into a strong position after the first innings of the first test in Dunedin.

England were also unchanged, though batsman Kevin Pietersen had been under an injury cloud with a sore right knee.

"Great to see KP come through. I think he is a lot better this week," said England captain Alastair Cook, who added he would have also probably bowled first.

New Zealand: Brendon McCullum (captain), Peter Fulton, Hamish Rutherford, Kane Williamson, Ross Taylor, Dean Brownlie, BJ Watling, Tim Southee, Bruce Martin, Neil Wagner, Trent Boult.

England: Alastair Cook (captain), Nick Compton, Jonathan Trott, Kevin Pietersen, Ian Bell, Joe Root, Matt Prior, Stuart Broad, Steven Finn, James Anderson, Monty Panesar

(Reporting by Greg Stutchbury, editing by Ed Osmond)


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POPE LIVE: Pope Francis makes first appearance

"Pope Live" follows the choice of the new pope as seen by journalists from The Associated Press around the world. It will be updated throughout the day with breaking news and other items of interest.

___

FIRST JESUIT POPE

Pope Francis — the first Jesuit pope — has spent nearly his entire career at home in Argentina.

The former Jorge Mario Bergoglio, 76, reportedly got the second-most votes after Joseph Ratzinger, the last pope, in the 2005 papal election. He has long specialized in the kind of pastoral work — overseeing churches and priests — that some say is an essential skill for a pope.

In a lifetime of teaching and leading priests in Latin America, which has the largest share of the world's Catholics, the former Bergoglio has shown a keen political sensibility as well as a self-effacing humility, according to his official biographer, Sergio Rubin. His personal style is the antithesis of Vatican splendor.

Bergoglio is also known for modernizing an Argentine church that had been among the most conservative in Latin America.

— Michael Warren

___

FIRST APPEARANCE

Pope Francis is appearing on the balcony over St. Peter's Square to wild cheers from the crowd below.

___

RECENT POPES:

A list of popes from the 20th and 21st centuries:

Pope Francis — March 13, 2013-

Benedict XVI — April 19, 2005-Feb. 28, 2013.

John Paul II — Oct. 16, 1978-April 2, 2005.

John Paul I — Aug. 26-Sept. 28, 1978.

Paul VI — June 21, 1963-Aug. 6, 1978.

John XXIII — Oct. 28, 1958-June 3, 1963.

Pius XII — March 2, 1939-Oct. 9, 1958.

Pius XI — Feb. 6, 1922-Feb. 10, 1939.

Benedict XV — Sept. 3, 1914-Jan. 22, 1922.

Pius X — Aug. 4, 1903-Aug. 20, 1914.

Leo XIII — Feb. 20, 1878-July 20, 1903.

___

ARGENTINE POPE

Argentine Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio is elected pope — and he is the first pontiff from the Americas.

He has chosen the name Pope Francis.

___

DEADLINES

The conclave might have been quick - but not quick enough for some newspaper editors in Europe, who bemoaned the late hour as they tried to ready their next day's editions.

As the wait for the next pontiff to appear on the balcony dragged on, Archie Bland, deputy editor of The Independent in London, tweeted: "God clearly punishing newspapers with the timing here. Was the internet not enough?"

Peter Spiegel, Brussels bureau chief for the Financial Times, echoed Bland's sentiments. "Can someone please tell the new pope the (at)FT is about to miss it's 1st European deadline? (hash)HurryUp" he tweeted.

— Cassandra Vinograd — Twitter http://twitter.com/CassVinograd

___

WHITE SMOKE OR NOT?

In St. Peter's Square, there was a fleeting moment of indecision when the first plumes of smoke appeared from the Vatican chimney.

Some cried out that it was black, signifying that no decision was made by the conclave. Then, seconds later under a steady rain, it became clear that white smoke was pouring out.

Wild cheering erupted in the square.

"Oh no, it's black!" said an Italian nun, Sister Eugenia. "It's white! It's white!'

Ben Canete, a 32-year-old Filipino, jumped up and down shouting: "Viva il Papa!"

"I can't explain how happy I am right now," he said.

___

'LONG LIVE THE POPE'

Throngs in St. Peter's Square are chanting "Long live the pope!," many of them with tears in their eyes.

There are least 50,000 people in the square. Crowds went wild as the Vatican and Italian military bands marched through and up the steps of the basilica, followed by Swiss Guards in silver helmets and full regalia.

They played the introduction to the Vatican and Italian anthems and the crowd joined in, waving flags from around the country.

___

CHOOSING A NAME

Every time a new pontiff is chosen in a conclave, a senior cardinal goes up to him and asks: "And by what name do want to be called?"

The question is popped immediately, while all electors are still locked in the Sistine chapel. So the winner had better have done his homework and already picked a name.

Shortly after, the senior cardinal reads out the pontifical name in Latin from the main balcony of St. Peter's Basilica as part of the "Habemus Papam" — "We have a pope" — formula that proclaims the election of a new pope.

— Daniela Petroff

___

PAPAL DIGS

The new pope can't move into the papal apartment just yet.

He will remain with the cardinals at the Vatican's Santa Marta hotel, an impersonal modern hotel on the edge of the Vatican gardens where they have been sequestered since the beginning of the conclave.

He will spend his first night as pontiff in a room that features a bed with a dark wood headboard and a carved image of Christ's face, as well as a sitting area and a study.

The new pope is expected to stay there for a few weeks until the papal apartment in the Apostolic Palace can be renovated. The apartment was sealed Feb. 28, just after Benedict resigned, and cannot be reopened until the new pope formally takes possession.

— Nicole Winfield — Twitter http://twitter.com/nwinfield

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TWITTER HANDLE

The pope's Twitter account, whose profile was changed to read "Sede Vacante" when Benedict stepped down, now has been switched back to "Pontifex."

No tweets yet.

___

https://twitter.com/pontifex

___

DRESSED UP

The pope's new clothes were ready before he was.

The family-owned Gammarelli tailor shop, which has dressed popes for two centuries, had three sets of vestments — in small, medium and large — prepared for the naming of the new pontiff.

The papal outfits were on display in the window of the small wood-paneled store nestled in the shadow of the Pantheon, where the family moved in 1850 from the original founded just around the corner in 1798. They were delivered to the Vatican and left in a room next to the Sistine Chapel, ready for the new pope to change into his new clothes.

The pre-made looks haven't always fit. In 1958, the rotund John XXIII appeared on the balcony with safety pins holding together the back of his cassock.

— Daniela Petroff

___

QUICK DECISION

It was a fairly quick decision.

In centuries past, conclaves dragged on for weeks and months, sometimes years. During a 13th-century conclave that stretched for weeks, a leading candidate died.

These days the discussions are much quicker. The pope was chosen in five rounds over two days.

The previous conclave that chose Benedict XVI went four rounds over two days before the Latin announcement rang out across St. Peter's Square from the basilica's balcony: "Habemus papam" — We have a pope!

The longest conclave of the last century went on for 14 rounds over five days, and yielded Pius XI — in 1922.

— Frances D'Emilio — Twitter http://twitter.com/fdemilio

___

WHO VOTED FOR ME?

One thing is sure — the new pope will never truly know who voted for him.

Cardinals used to sign their names to ballots, but stopped doing so "due to an old history of intrigues and tensions, when people used to fear the most serious reprisals for their choices," says Michael Bruter, who teaches political science at the London School of Economics.

Even so, factions of cardinals will have made their views known during informal talks between votes.

Romain Lachat, a political scientist at Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona, says the formation of coalitions — where voting cardinals slowly rally around a man who may only be their second or third choice — is inevitable.

There is no formal process of elimination and cardinals can even vote for themselves — which may explain why conclaves often need more than one round of balloting to produce a pope.

— Frank Jordans — Twitter http://twitter.com/wirereporter

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THE BIG SMOKE

The ballots are tied together with needle and thread and are then placed in an iron stove. If the smoke coming out of the chimney is white — not black — it means there's a pope.

The signal hasn't always been so clear. In 1958, damp straw didn't catch fire, and the smoke was white instead of black. After John Paul's death in 2005, the Vatican used special chemicals in an effort to make the color clear — with only limited success.

If in doubt, the bells of St. Peter's Basilica also ring when a new pope has been chosen.

— Frances D'Emilio — Twitter http://twitter.com/fdemilio

___

VATICAN SECURITY

Throngs of the faithful are in St. Peter's Square, ready to cheer the new pope when he steps out onto the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica. The vast square in Rome is a sea of umbrellas, flags and chanting crowds.

The Vatican's security force, known as the gendarmerie, is in charge of those inside the square, while Italian police handle crowd control just outside the Vatican's boundaries. Security officers from both forces include plainclothes agents dressed up as tourists, watching for any unusual movement.

A tented field hospital went up near the Vatican before the conclave began.

There have been a few "trial runs" of crowd control. Pope Benedict XVI's public audience drew so many people — some 150,000 — that there wasn't enough space for all in the cobblestone square.

— Frances D'Emilio — Twitter http://twitter.com/fdemilio

___

NEXT STEPS

The 266th pope has been chosen.

Whoever he may be, he now changes into his papal white cassock, and one-by-one the cardinals approach him to swear their obedience.

He will stop and pray in the Pauline Chapel for a few minutes before emerging on the loggia of the balcony overlooking St. Peter's Square.

Preceding him to the balcony is French Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, the protodeacon, who announces "Habemus Papam!" Latin for "We have a pope" and then introduces him to the world in Latin.

He then emerges and delivers his first public words as the leader of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics.

— Nicole Winfield — Twitter http://twitter.com/nwinfield

___

NEW POPE

White smoke is pouring out from the Sistine Chapel chimney in St. Peter's Square, signaling that a new pope will appear on the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica within the hour.

_____

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POPE LIVE: First mass set, installation on Tuesday

"Pope Live" follows the choice of the new pope as seen by journalists from The Associated Press around the world. It will be updated throughout the day with breaking news and other items of interest.

___

FIRST MASS

Pope Francis is getting right to work. He will celebrate his first Mass as pope in the Sistine Chapel on Thursday, and will be installed officially as pope on Tuesday, according to the Vatican spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi.

___

BENEDICT IN THE BACKGROUND

The pope leads alone.

Benedict XVI's decision to be the first pontiff to step down in 600 years raised a host of questions about his role in the Church. But he made clear as he ended his leadership that there was no doubt who would be in charge, pledging obedience to the future pontiff.

The former pope's coat of arms was removed from a floral display in front of the Vatican's governor's palace and his fisherman's ring, an official part of the pope's regalia that features an image of St. Peter fishing from a boat, as well as the personal seals and stamps he used for official papers were destroyed.

Benedict has literally been kept out of sight. The emeritus pope has only been spotted once since retiring — in a photo snapped by a paparazzo hiding in a tree.

— Victor L. Simpson

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ONE LUNG

Doctors are buzzing about the new pope having just one lung. He had one removed due to an infection as a teenager.

"It could be simply an infection that couldn't be cleared with antibiotics," or even tuberculosis, says Dr. Joe B. Putnam, chairman of thoracic surgery at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn.

"The key thing is he had it as a child and has probably taken very good care of himself. My hunch is that he's a lifelong nonsmoker," Putnam says. "He looked great" in the public appearance today, he added. "I don't think he's going to slow down at all."

The late actor John Wayne had a lung removed for cancer, Putnam notes: "He made seven more movies after that, including 'True Grit,' for which he won an Oscar."

— Marilynn Marchione, AP Chief Medical Writer — Twitter http://twitter.com/MmarchioneAP

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A SHEPHERD

The Rev. Enrique Ramirez, a Dominican priest in Lima, Peru, was pleased that the new pope seems less of an intellectual and more of a shepherd than his predecessor.

"The writings of Benedict XVI are marvelous because he is an intellectual. Here our new Pope Francis seems to be a bit closer to pastoral duties side, as that's what he's done all his life," he says.

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QUICKQUOTE: BALTIMORE

Ann Hochman, who was picking up her daughter Jane from daycare at the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen In Baltimore, said she was very excited to have a Latin American pope.

"He seems fantastic, he seems very warm," she said. "To have someone from our side of the world is pretty exciting."

— Alex Dominguez

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LATIN PRIDE

Paolo Olivares, a 29-year-old seminarian from Chile, says it's very important to have a Latin American pope.

"Yes, yes, yes! I think it's a change that the church needs," he says. "I think Cardinal Bergoglio has done a great job in Argentina and he will do even better in Rome."

Maggy Pena, a 45-year-old Rome resident from the Dominican Republic, was ecstatic, jumping up and down and screaming out her pride in being Latina.

"I'm so happy because the new pope is from Latin America. That means we are a big people," she said. "For the first time we have a pope. And next we will have an American president. You'll see!"

— Karl Ritter — Twitter —http://twitter.com/karl_ritter

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QUICKQUOTE: 'BE BOLD'

"We hope that this man will be bold, will be courageous and will try to clean up the sexual abuse scandal. We feel the very first step should be to discipline the cardinals and the bishops who are complicit in the cover-up, because until that happens this behavior will continue." — Barbara Dorris, victim outreach director of SNAP, or Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests.

— Gillian Flaccus

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WINNING OVER ROMANS

Before they even saw his face, Pope Francis had already won over the Roman masses.

The announcement that he would be known by the same name as St. Francis of Assisi, patron saint of Italy, sent the crowd into ecstasy.

He did even better with his first words, when Francis said the cardinals had reached to the "end of the earth" to find the bishop of Rome — recalling the beloved Pope John Paul II, a Polish cardinal who told his first crowd in 1978 that cardinals had called him "from a far country."

The former Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio is the son of an Italian immigrant and his Italian is only lightly accented.

— Victor L. Simpson

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ONE CATHOLIC'S THOUGHTS

After Francis was chosen as pope, AP's Stacey Plaisance caught up with Robert Stanley, a Catholic native of Chicago and a freshman at the University of Notre Dame. Stanley is enjoying his first trip to New Orleans and was eating lunch at a cafe near St. Patrick's Church downtown when the news broke.

Here's some of his reaction:

— "It's good for the Church. I was worried we'd have another Italian pope. Italy controls so much of the Church. They don't need to control the papacy too."

— "In South America, they are extremely dedicated in a way you don't see in the U.S., Italy or in France. They have pilgrimages where they literally crawl for miles. They are very dedicated, devout and pious. "

—"It's a new face, and I feel like he will have a greater appreciation for the problems of the developing world, in places like Africa, India and South America. It's bigger-picture issues, and that's the purpose of the Church, to help the naked, the hungry, those most in need."

— Stacey Plaisance — https://twitter.com/splaisance

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QUICKQUOTE: 'COMMON GOALS'

"We share many common goals — from the promotion of peace, social justice and human rights, to the eradication of poverty and hunger — all core elements of sustainable development." — U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

___

A NAME WITH CACHET

"Francis" is a name that carries a lot of cachet in Italy.

St. Francis of Assisi is one of Italy's patron saints. The Umbrian hill town of Assisi, where the saint lived a humble life of poverty, is one of Italy's major draws for pilgrims and other tourists. It is also associated with world peace movements.

St. Francis Xavier is another noted evangelist and a prominent Jesuit missionary. The new Pope Francis is one of the Jesuit order's most prominent members.

— Frances D'Emilio — Twitter — http://twitter.com/fdemilio

___

ONE OF THE FAMILY

In Cuba, parish priest Gregorio Alvarez says he believes Pope Francis' background could lead the Roman Catholic Church to focus more on the ills afflicting humanity, and less on internal issues.

"One hopes that the church will be closer to the problems of humankind and not only the problems of the church," Alvarez says.

"Being Latin American gives him an advantage — he understands the problems of poverty, of violence, of manipulation of the masses," he says. "All that gives him experience for the job. ... He's one of the family."

— Anne-Marie Garcia — Twitter http://twitter.com/AnneMarie279

___

RIGHT FOR THE JOB?

Tess Ernest, a volunteer at the Saint Francis Xavier church in El Paso, Texas, says Pope Francis's background will help him undertake the task before him.

"Jesuits are missionaries and educators but also very good administrators and that is what the Church needs now," she says.

A Jesuit might be the right man for the job "after all that has happened in the Church."

___

MESSI AND POPE

In Miami's Little Buenos Aires, Argentines broke out into cheers and applause as the new pope was announced.

"Long live Argentina!" some shouted. "God is Argentina!" cried others.

"We have Messi and we have the pope now," says Gabriela Pisquariello, an owner of the Buenos Aires Bakery & Cafe, referring to star Argentine soccer player Lionel Messi.

— Christine Armario — Twitter http://twitter.com/cearmario

___

PAPAL DRAMA

Pope Francis' transition will be much smoother than others in the pontificate's bumpy two-millennium history.

— In 897, Pope Stephen VI hated his deceased predecessor, Pope Formosus, so much he had his minions dig up his corpse. The new pope then held a mock trial for the old one, stripped the corpse of its vestments, cut off the two fingers that bestowed papal blessings and threw the body into the Tiber — before he himself was strangled to death.

— Pope Sergius III in the 10th century seized the papacy through armed force, and he had his imprisoned predecessor, Pope Leo V, strangled.

— Alexander VI won the papacy just before the 16th-century Protestant Reformation by bribing cardinals and promising lucrative jobs. The cardinals who elected his successor included his illegitimate son.

___

JUST FRANCIS

The Vatican says the new pope's official name is Pope Francis, without a Roman numeral.

The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, sought to clear up any possible confusion, noting that Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, who announced the name to the world, said simply "Francis." It is also listed that way in the first Vatican bulletin on the new pope.

"It will become Francis I after we have a Francis II," Lombardi quipped.

___

SEASONED PASTOR

In choosing a 76-year-old pope, the cardinals clearly decided that they didn't need a vigorous, young pope who would reign for decades but rather a seasoned, popular and humble pastor who would draw followers to the faith.

— Nicole Winfield — Twitter http://twitter.com/nwinfield

___

SPEECHLESS IN PUERTO RICO

At the St. Francis of Assisi church in the colonial Old San Juan district in Puerto Rico, church secretary Antonia Veloz exchanged jubilant high-fives with Brother Jose Antonio Cruz, a Franciscan friar.

"This is something exciting," the 50-year-old Veloz says of the new Argentine pope. "I'm speechless."

— Danica Coto — Twitter https://twitter.com/apdcoto

___

SURPRISE IN THE CROWD

The flag-waving crowd at St. Peter's Square was cheering madly but many people admitted they didn't know anything about the new pope.

"I really don't know him, but it doesn't matter. We have a new pope," cried Marben Moralias from the Philippines. "God surprised us."

Federica Giusti, a 46-year-old housewife from Rome, drove to St. Peter's Square, getting there just in time to see the new pope emerge.

"I expected someone else but I'm happy anyway," she said, wiping away tears.

"I like him, I like him," Luisa Guerrera, a 45-year-old teacher from Rome, said after the pope started speaking. "I don't know him ... but he seems like a beautiful man."

— Karl Ritter — Twitter —http://twitter.com/karl_ritter

___

CHAVEZ INFLUENCE?

The man Hugo Chavez tapped to succeed him as president says the socialist leader's death may have influenced the choice of a pope from South America.

"We know that our commander reached those heights and he's face to face with Christ," says Nicolas Maduro, who was sworn in as acting president on Friday.

"Something had an influence on the choosing of a South American pope. Some new hand came, and Christ said, 'South America's time has come,'" he says.

— Christopher Toothaker

___

INSIDE SCOOP

WikiLeaks long ago gave the inside scoop on the U.S. opinion of the new pope.

A report by the deputy chief of the U.S. Embassy in Argentina on then-Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio was slapped onto the Internet along with roughly a quarter million other classified U.S. State Department cables.

"Observers have praised his humility: he has been reluctant to accept honors or hold high office and commutes to work on a bus," Brent Hardt says in a note before the 2005 conclave that elected Pope Benedict XVI.

But Hardt notes that Bergoglio's membership in the Jesuit order could count against him.

"Some senior prelates, especially conservatives, are suspicious of a liberal streak in the order, perhaps most pronounced in the U.S., but also present elsewhere," Hardt writes.

— Raphael Satter — Twitter http://twitter.com/razhael

___

QUICKQUOTE: 'FACE OF GOD'

"On behalf of the American people, Michelle and I offer our warm wishes to His Holiness Pope Francis as he ascends to the Chair of Saint Peter and begins his papacy. As a champion of the poor and the most vulnerable among us, he carries forth the message of love and compassion that has inspired the world for more than 2,000 years_that in each other we see the face of God."— President Barack Obama.

___

THE INSTALLATION MASS

The pope's installation mass — the first in his new role — will likely be a morning-long affair of pomp and prayer. VIPs will line the pews, with as many as some 200 foreign delegations expected.

The ceremony is traditionally held on a Sunday, when the city's streets can be closed to traffic near the Vatican.

—France D'Emilio — Twitter http://twitter.com/fdemilio

___

FRANCIS OF ASSISI

Francis, the name the new pope has chosen, is a much-beloved Italian saint who is identified with peace, poverty and a simple lifestyle.

Jorge Bergoglio is the first pontiff from Latin America and the first pontiff to adopt the name of Francis — the name of the rich young man from Assisi who renounced wealth and founded the Franciscan order of friars in 1290. The choice could foretell the pope's priorities in striving to bring a sense of serenity to the troubled church.

Choosing a name shared by one of Italy's patron saints also ties the new pope to Italy, the homeland of all popes of the last few centuries until 1978.

— Frances D'Emilio — Twitter —http://twitter.com/fdemilio

___

'RIDICULOUS'

"It's ridiculous, this pomp and circumstance and smoke from the chimney. It's so archaic." Jennifer Rogers, a New Orleans resident.

— Stacey Plaisance — http://twitter.com/splaisance

___

SECOND TRY?

Months after former Pope Benedict XVI was elected in 2005, excerpts of an anonymous cardinal's diary were published. Among the unverifiable revelations: Argentine Jesuit Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio was the German's closest rival in the voting.

Now he's Benedict's successor.

— Frances D'Emilio — Twitter https://twitter.com/fdemilio

___

JOY IN BUENOS AIRES

TV presenters in Argentina screamed on the air and cars in the street blared their horns at the news that an Argentine cardinal had been chosen as the new pope.

"It's incredible!" says Martha Ruiz, 60, who was weeping with emotion in Buenos Aires after learning that the cardinal she knew as Jorge Mario Bergoglio will now be Pope Francis.

She said she had been in many meetings with him. "He is a man who transmits great serenity," she says.

___

QUICKQUOTE: 'END OF THE EARTH'

"You know that the work of the conclave is to give a bishop to Rome. It seems as if my brother cardinals went to find him from the end of the earth. Thank you for the welcome." — Pope Francis, addressing the crowd in St. Peter's Square.

— Nicole Winfield — https://www.twitter.com/nwinfield

___

BETTORS WRONG

Bettors gambling on Pope Benedict's replacement were very much wrong.

Argentina's Jorge Bergoglio, now Pope Francis, was a consensus 25-1 underdog to be selected at the conclave, gambling expert R.J. Bell of Pregame.com says.

At least 15 names were considered ahead of Bergoglio in 12 books accepting wagers on the papal election in Europe and online outside the United States. "Everyone was paying attention to the top dozen or so favorites," Bell says.

Now, at least one online bookmaker is letting bettors speculate on Pope Francis' future. Ireland-based Paddy Power is offering 16-1 odds that Catholics will see a third pope in 2013, and 5-2 odds that Pope Francis will eventually resign.

— Oskar Garcia — Twitter http://twitter.com/oskargarcia

___

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Thứ Ba, 12 tháng 3, 2013

First Quantum extends Inmet offer after strong support

TORONTO (Reuters) - First Quantum Minerals Ltd said it will extend its C$5.1 billion ($4.97 billion) hostile bid for its smaller rival Inmet Mining Corp by a few days after a majority of Inmet shareholders tendered shares in favor of the offer.

Vancouver, British Columbia-based First Quantum said in a statement on Tuesday that a total of 43.2 million Inmet shares, representing about 61.5 percent of outstanding shares, had been tendered in favor of its offer. The offer has now been extended to 11:59 p.m. EDT on March 21.

The strong endorsement from Inmet shareholders takes First Quantum a step closer toward acquiring Inmet and winning control of the prized Cobre Panama project. The $6.2 billion project in the Central American country has one of the world's largest undeveloped copper deposits, which would ease First Quantum's dependence on mines in Africa, particularly Zambia.

Inmet had strongly urged its shareholders to reject First Quantum's offer, arguing that the bid was inadequate.

First Quantum also said its offer has been varied to allow the minimum tender condition to be satisfied if more than 50 percent of Inmet's outstanding shares have been deposited before the new expiry time of the offer. The offer was previously contingent on more than two-thirds of the shares being tendered in favor of the deal.

The cash-and-stock bid, which was earlier set to expire at 11:59 p.m. EDT on Monday, was worth roughly C$5.1 billion, or C$72 a share, when it was announced in mid-December, above First Quantum's two previous offers for Inmet.

Inmet has said it would be willing to enter into discussions with First Quantum, if the company made a "fair" offer.

"While the long-term fundamental value of Inmet has not changed, the value of the First Quantum offer has declined," said Inmet in an open letter to shareholders last week.

Inmet shares rose 1.9 percent to C$69.90 in early trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Tuesday, while First Quantum's shares were roughly flat at C$20.65.

(Reporting by Euan Rocha; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe and Grant McCool)


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Thứ Hai, 11 tháng 3, 2013

First Quantum bid for Inmet wins Investment Canada approval

TORONTO (Reuters) - First Quantum Minerals said on Friday its C$5.1 billion ($4.97 billion) hostile takeover bid for rival Canadian base metal miner Inmet Mining Corp has won approval under the Investment Canada Act.

The act, which requires a buyer to prove to the government that its takeover of a Canadian company will be of net benefit to Canada, typically only applies to large foreign acquisitions of companies or assets. Vancouver, British Columbia-based First Quantum had to win approval under the law, however, as the majority of its directors are based overseas.

The cash-and-stock bid is set to expire at 11:59 p.m. (EDT) on Monday, March 11. The bid was worth about C$5.1 billion, or C$72 a share, when it was announced in mid-December, topping First Quantum's two previous offers for Inmet.

On Friday, Inmet once again called on shareholders to reject the First Quantum offer, saying it was inadequate.

"While the long-term fundamental value of Inmet has not changed, the value of the First Quantum offer has declined to C$67.70 (a share) as of yesterday's closing price," said Inmet in an open letter to investors.

"The special committee and the board would be prepared to meet with First Quantum to discuss a supported transaction if First Quantum is prepared to make a fair offer to Inmet," the company said.

(Reporting by Euan Rocha; Editing by Peter Galloway)


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Chủ Nhật, 10 tháng 3, 2013

Cricket-Double edged sword for NZ after credible first test

DUNEDIN, New Zealand, March 11 (Reuters) - New Zealand's credible performance in forcing England into a position where they had to bat to save the first test in Dunedin will be a double-edged sword when the two teams arrive in Wellington later on Monday to prepare for the second test.

The positive side will be the way in which they outclassed England in both facets of the game in the first innings of the rain-effected match.

Dismissing a team that includes two players with more than 7,000 test runs each and three with more than 3,000, for just 167 showed they created some pressure with the ball on a relatively flat pitch.

England's approach when they batted in their first innings was cavalier, but the way they were forced to dig in to save the match in their second innings showed they had realised they could not just show up to win the match, or series.

New Zealand's attack would ask questions of their batsmen and the way Neil Wagner and Trent Boult continued to charge in despite their second innings workload indicated their desire to keep the England batsmen honest for the rest of the series.

"This is a big step for us to look at where we were and where we are now and show ourselves and also our fans what were capable of achieving against good teams too," New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum said.

"The challenge now is to back it up for test two and test three and continue to put yourself in positions where you're dominating and dictating the test match."

New Zealand's batsmen also performed with all of the top six getting starts, though Hamish Rutherford's 171 on debut was particularly important to help McCullum declare at 460 for nine and then give his bowlers a chance to dismiss England again.

"Yeah, 170 off 230 balls, it's a dream debut," McCullum said of the left handed Rutherford, who paid back the faith in the selectors when he was named in the squad ostensibly because Martin Guptill was injured.

"It was an amazing effort to turn up on debut and in an area where we've struggled in the past. And not just make runs but the way he made the runs.

"To have someone who scores at such a clip put us in a position in a four-day test match where we able to try and push for a result. He was outstanding."

The bad news for McCullum is that England now know what to expect for the remainder of the series. No more left field selections. No more surprises from the team they face on Thursday in Wellington.

"We don't expect anything. They've shown in this test match, if you don't play well you get punished," England captain Alastair Cook said. "We've been, not lucky, lucky in one sense to escape with a draw certainly.

"That's a huge reminder that if you don't perform, you don't deserve to win anything."

Batting for almost two days to save the match and forcing New Zealand's bowlers to charge in for 170 overs, would help with their confidence as they prepared for the match, Cook added.

"It certainly gives us some confidence, especially when you get bowled out for 160 in the first innings, as a batting unit you can start to have negative thoughts," he said.

"To bounce back straight away, especially when you've got such a mountain of time to bat, yes on a flat wicket, you don't want that to snowball.

"I'm really happy with the way the batting lineup has put a really good marker down." (Editing by Patrick Johnston)


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Thứ Năm, 7 tháng 3, 2013

Cricket-New Zealand v England first test - scoreboard

DUNEDIN, New Zealand, March 8 (Reuters) - Scoreboard at

lunch on the third day of the first test between New Zealand and

England at University Oval on Friday.

New Zealand won the toss and chose to bowl

England first innings 167

New Zealand first innings (overnight 131-0)

P. Fulton c Prior b Anderson 55

H. Rutherford not out 167

K. Williamson b Panesar 24

R. Taylor not out 1

Extras (lb-8) 8

Total (for two wickets, 77 overs) 255

Fall of wickets: 1-158 2-249

Still to bat: Dean Brownlie, Brendon McCullum (captain), BJ

Watling, Bruce Martin, Tim Southee, Neil Wagner, Trent Boult.

Bowling: J. Anderson 19-2-67-1, S. Finn 19-3-64-0, S. Broad

16-2-39-0, M. Panesar 17-1-69-1, J. Trott 2-0-4-0, J. Root

4-1-4-0

- -

Remaining fixtures

March 14-18 - second test, Wellington

March 22-26 - third test, Auckland

- -

(Compiled by Greg Stutchbury; Editing by Nick Mulvenney)


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Thứ Sáu, 1 tháng 3, 2013

Cricket-New Zealand add Wagner to squad for first England test

March 2 (Reuters) - Left-arm paceman Neil Wagner has been rewarded with a place in New Zealand's squad for the first test against England after taking six wickets in the ongoing tour match in Queenstown.

The South Africa-born 26-year-old joins a squad of 13 for the March 6 test in Dunedin, New Zealand Cricket said in a statement on Saturday, and could earn his fourth test cap if the hosts elect to field an all-pace attack.

The four-day tour match between a New Zealand XI and England XI finishes later on Saturday. (Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by Frank Pingue)


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Thứ Hai, 25 tháng 2, 2013

RPT-UPDATE 1-Cricket-NZ name uncapped trio for first England test

(Repeats with no changes)

* Rutherford, Latham to battle for opening spot

* Uncapped Martin likely to make debut at 32

WELLINGTON, Feb 24 (Reuters) - New Zealand will head into their first test against England on March 6 with an new opening partnership after the recall of Peter Fulton and inclusion of the uncapped Hamish Rutherford and Tom Latham in their squad on Sunday.

New Zealand's opening batsmen have struggled against the England new ball attack of James Anderson and Steve Finn in the lost limited over series and the selection panel were forced to look elsewhere after a thumb injury to Martin Guptill.

Fulton, who has played 10 tests as a top or middle order batsmen but averaged just 20.93 with one half century, went to South Africa last year before a knee injury forced him home, though a strong first class season where he has averaged more than 50 had prompted his recall.

"We picked Peter to tour South Africa and he would have played there if he hadn't been injured," New Zealand coach Mike Hesson said.

Rutherford, the son of former New Zealand captain Ken, is expected to join Fulton for his debut on his home ground at Dunedin's University Oval, though Latham is also in contention for the spot, Hesson said.

Rutherford and Latham have both played limited overs cricket for New Zealand but never played a test match.

Left arm spinner Bruce Martin is also expected to make his debut after the 32-year-old toured South Africa late last year but did not play in the test series.

Martin, who replaces the dropped Jeetan Patel in the squad, is likely to play due to an Achilles' injury to Daniel Vettori that is expected to keep him out of action until the tour of England in May.

Tim Southee, who missed the South African tour due to a thumb injury but was recalled to play the final two one-day internationals against England after a side strain to Mitchell McClenaghan, will again link up with Trent Boult and Doug Bracewell in a young pace attack.

Captain Brendon McCullum, who suffered a side strain in the final one-day match in Auckland on Saturday, will bat at number five with BJ Watling to resume the wicketkeeping role in the longer form of the game and bat at seven.

A fast bowler will be added to the squad after the match in Queenstown between a New Zealand XI and England, which starts on Wednesday.

Squad: Brendon McCullum (captain), Trent Boult, Doug Bracewell, Dean Brownlie, Peter Fulton, Tom Latham, Bruce Martin, Hamish Rutherford, Tim Southee, Ross Taylor, BJ Watling, Kane Williamson. (Reporting by Greg Stutchbury; Editing by Mark Meadows)


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Chủ Nhật, 24 tháng 2, 2013

First female South Korean president takes office

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Park Geun-hye has become South Korea's first female president and returned to the presidential mansion where she grew up with her dictator father.

As president, Park will face stark divisions both in South Korean society and with rival North Korea, which detonated an underground nuclear device about two weeks ago. South Koreans worry about a growing gap between rich and poor, and there's pressure for her to live up to her campaign suggestion that she can return the country to the strong economic growth her strong-man father oversaw.

Park technically took over as the clock struck midnight. Her swearing-in ceremony Monday was to be attended by tens of thousands, including international dignitaries.


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UPDATE 1-Cricket-NZ name uncapped trio for first England test

* Rutherford, Latham to battle for opening spot

* Uncapped Martin likely to make debut at 32 (Adds details, quotes)

WELLINGTON, Feb 24 (Reuters) - New Zealand will head into their first test against England on March 6 with an new opening partnership after the recall of Peter Fulton and inclusion of the uncapped Hamish Rutherford and Tom Latham in their squad on Sunday.

New Zealand's opening batsmen have struggled against the England new ball attack of James Anderson and Steve Finn in the lost limited over series and the selection panel were forced to look elsewhere after a thumb injury to Martin Guptill.

Fulton, who has played 10 tests as a top or middle order batsmen but averaged just 20.93 with one half century, went to South Africa last year before a knee injury forced him home, though a strong first class season where he has averaged more than 50 had prompted his recall.

"We picked Peter to tour South Africa and he would have played there if he hadn't been injured," New Zealand coach Mike Hesson said.

Rutherford, the son of former New Zealand captain Ken, is expected to join Fulton for his debut on his home ground at Dunedin's University Oval, though Latham is also in contention for the spot, Hesson said.

Rutherford and Latham have both played limited overs cricket for New Zealand but never played a test match.

Left arm spinner Bruce Martin is also expected to make his debut after the 32-year-old toured South Africa late last year but did not play in the test series.

Martin, who replaces the dropped Jeetan Patel in the squad, is likely to play due to an Achilles' injury to Daniel Vettori that is expected to keep him out of action until the tour of England in May.

Tim Southee, who missed the South African tour due to a thumb injury but was recalled to play the final two one-day internationals against England after a side strain to Mitchell McClenaghan, will again link up with Trent Boult and Doug Bracewell in a young pace attack.

Captain Brendon McCullum, who suffered a side strain in the final one-day match in Auckland on Saturday, will bat at number five with BJ Watling to resume the wicketkeeping role in the longer form of the game and bat at seven.

A fast bowler will be added to the squad after the match in Queenstown between a New Zealand XI and England, which starts on Wednesday.

Squad: Brendon McCullum (captain), Trent Boult, Doug Bracewell, Dean Brownlie, Peter Fulton, Tom Latham, Bruce Martin, Hamish Rutherford, Tim Southee, Ross Taylor, BJ Watling, Kane Williamson. (Reporting by Greg Stutchbury; Editing by Mark Meadows)


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Kings win historic first Super Rugby encounter

PORT ELIZABETH (Reuters) - South Africa's Southern Kings made a stunning Super Rugby debut with a 22-10 victory over Australia's Western Force at the Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium on Saturday.

Winger Sergeal Petersen, still a schoolboy two months ago, scored a brace of tries while the boot of flyhalf Demitri Catrakilis added four penalties.

The Port Elizabeth-based side have replaced the Lions in this year's Super Rugby competition but were expected to struggle with an inexperienced squad under New Zealand-born coach Matt Sexton.

However, what they lacked in star quality they made up for with a high work-rate and structured defence.

"We knew it was our crucial to get a win today to get the public behind us," Kings centre Andries Strauss said. "We must keep our feet on the ground, it is only our first step into this competition.

"There is still big pressure on us but I hope we can take the momentum from this win further into the competition."

Petersen scored his side's first points in the competition when he showed great anticipation to run in a try. Force winger Alfie Mafi dithered over collecting a charged-down grubber and Petersen nipped the ball from his grasp and ran in unopposed.

The score was against the run of play and the Perth-based side began to flex their muscles. They took the ball through the phases from a scrum in the Kings' 22 and Pek Cowan scored with a pick-and-go from the base of the ruck.

Six minutes later, the Australians were in again and once more it came from patient buildup play. Mafi completed the try in the corner as they spread the ball wide.

All three tries went unconverted and the Force led 10-5 at the break.

The home side had suffered a blow in the first half when captain Luke Watson was forced off just past the half-hour mark with a throat injury and did not return.

But, if they were second best in the first half, the Kings put in a gutsy display after halftime to score 14 unanswered points.

"We spoke at halftime about keeping the ball better and putting pressure on the Force and we did that," Strauss said.

Catrakilis added two penalties to give his side the lead, before Hugh McMeniman received a yellow card for a high tackle on Ronnie Cooke.

With the Force a man down, the lead was extended when Petersen scored his second try on the hour mark. Kings scrumhalf Shaun Venter coughed up the ball over the goalline, but the home side won it back following a Force knock-on and spread the ball wide.

Petersen kept Will Tupou at bay with an excellent hand-off before darting in at the corner.

"It is an incredible start to my Super Rugby career. It gives me great passion and heart to know that I am coming from this region. We are such a unit, playing in this team is a dream," Petersen said.

The Force were penalised at the scrum twice in quick succession, with Catrakilis slotting both kicks to take the score to 22-10 and out of sight of their visitors.


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