Van Marwijk resigns as Netherlands coach - Football Van Marwijk resigns as Netherlands coach - Football
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Van Marwijk resigns as Netherlands coach - Football

Van Marwijk resigns as Netherlands coach - Football

Published: 27 Jun 2012 - 22:47:20

Bert van Marwijk has stepped down as Netherlands coach after his team's first round elimination from the European football championships, the Dutch Football Federation (KNVB) announced on Wednesday.

A statement on the KNVB's website said: "On the initiative of Bert van Marwijk, the KNVB and Bert van Marwijk decided on Wednesday to end the coach's contract with immediate effect."

The 60-year-old former Feyenoord and Borussia Dortmund coach took over the national side in 2008 and his contract had been due to run until the 2016 European championships.

His resignation follows a disappointing Euro 2012 campaign, in which the Oranje, who arrived in Poland and the Ukraine among the tournament favourites after finishing runners-up to Spain at the 2010 World Cup, were knocked out at the group stage.

Van Marwijk said that he felt "responsible" after the team lost all three of their matches to Group B rivals Germany, Denmark and Portugal to finish bottom of the table without a point.

"I have severe doubts, but have decided to take this step anyway," van Marwijk said in a statement.

Under his guidance the Oranje had lost just four of 45 matches.

The head of the KNVB, Bert van Oostveen, added: "The KNVB are grateful to Van Marwijk. He has performed exceptionally well in the World Cup finals and took them to first place in the FIFA rankings.

"I personally had a very good feeling about our co-operation. Of course it is sad to part early, but we must be realistic."

Since winning the European title in 1988, the Netherlands have reached the semi-finals three times and have twice been quarter-finalists.


AFP

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How to Add a Twitter Feed to Google RSS Reader - valuewalk.com

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When the above method doesn’t work, enter the below URL in your subscribe box. Don’t forget to replace “valuewalk” with the Twitter username that you want to follow.

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UPDATE 1-Mississippi's sole abortion clinic sues over new law - Reuters UK

Wed Jun 27, 2012 9:18pm BST

* Clinic challenges abortion law as unconstitutional

* Some lawmakers say hope law will end abortions in state

* State has low abortion rate, high teen pregnancy rate (Updates with lawsuit filed)

By Emily Le Coz

TUPELO, Miss., June 27 (Reuters) - The lone abortion facility in Mississippi asked a federal court on Wednesday to block a new state law that will require doctors who perform the controversial procedure to have admitting privileges at a local hospital.

The law, set to take effect on Sunday, threatens to make Mississippi the only U.S. state without an abortion clinic. Some anti-abortion state lawmakers say they hope that would mean an end to abortions there.

The state's sole clinic, Jackson Women's Health Organization, says the new measure is unconstitutional because it aims to effectively ban abortions in Mississippi.

The clinic is also seeking immediate relief from the court to be given more time to try to comply with the law, according to the lawsuit filed on its behalf by the New York-based Center for Reproductive Rights.

Clinic representatives said they began applying for the necessary privileges after Mississippi's Republican Governor Phil Bryant signed the measure into law in mid-April. But they have struggled to obtain them at any of the half-dozen hospitals within a 30-minute drive of the clinic, located in Jackson, the state capital.

"We have been attempting to comply with the law, but we just have not had adequate time for the privileges to come through, if they come through," clinic owner Diane Derzis told Reuters. "We've not been turned down outright, except on a few hospitals that had religious beliefs that didn't coincide."

The state legislator who sponsored the law said he was not surprised by the legal challenge, and he felt confident it would withstand the court test.

"It's been over 70 days since Gov. Bryant signed this legislation," Republican Representative Sam Mims said. "For them to say we don't have time, I just don't buy that argument."

Mississippi already has some of the country's strictest abortion laws and one of the lowest abortion rates. It also has the highest teen pregnancy rate in the United States - more than 60 percent above the national average in 2010.

The state became a battleground for reproductive rights last fall when voters weighed in on a constitutional "personhood" amendment that defined life as starting at the moment eggs are fertilized. Voters handed abortion opponents a setback by rejecting the proposed amendment.

Undeterred, state lawmakers this spring passed legislation requiring abortion providers to be board certified in obstetrics and gynecology and to have staff with admitting privileges at a nearby hospital.

Thirty-nine other states also require that OB-GYNs perform abortions, and nine others mandate hospital privileges, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a nonprofit organization dedicated to sexual and reproductive rights.

But Mississippi, which had as many as 14 abortion providers in the early 1980s, would be the first state without a single abortion clinic should the Jackson Women's Health Organization close, Guttmacher spokeswoman Rebecca Wind said.

UPCOMING INSPECTION

Inspectors from the Mississippi Department of Health, which is the state's licensing agency for abortion clinics, still are planning to check on the clinic's compliance with the law on Monday, ag e ncy spokeswoman Liz Sharlot said.

She declined to comment on Wednesday about the new lawsuit.

The clinic's main three doctors, who all travel from outside of Mississippi to see patients, are already board-certified OB-GYNs.

If the facility has not complied with the requirement for admitting privileges by the inspection, it will get 10 working days to submit a plan outlining how it will remedy the situation within a reasonable time frame, Sharlot said.

Sharlot said the definition of "reasonable" varies from case to case, leaving some uncertainty about how soon the clinic might be forced to close if it cannot comply. Sharlot noted that the abortion clinic has been aware of the law for months.

Mims had asked the department to deny Jackson Women's Health Organization a grace period. He said he did not "want to give the facility 10 extra days to perform abortions" and was consulting attorneys on the legality of such a move.

Mims said the law was intended to protect patients by ensuring that physicians are certified and able to follow them into a local hospital in emergency cases, but added if it also "causes Mississippi to have fewer abortions, then that is a positive result."

The Jackson Women's Health Organization has been providing services in Mississippi since 1996. Clinic spokeswoman Betty Thompson said about 2,000 women received abortions at the clinic between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2011. The staff also provides state-mandated counseling services to clients, some of whom ultimately chose to keep their babies, she said.

The nearest clinics outside the state are located in Alabama, Tennessee, Arkansas and Louisiana. But Thompson said not all women will be able to access those facilities.

"It puts an undue burden on women of all classes and colors, Thompson said. "I see us going back to the early '70s and what happened to women who did not have access. They tried to induce it for themselves or they went to people who were not qualified to do the procedures, and they sometimes died."

Mims disputed that the measure could lead to such a scenario.

"I'm not at all worried," he said. "My hope is that the women that are making these choices will now choose life, that they will realize that life begins at conception." (Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Eric Walsh)



UPDATE 2-Santos LNG project cost blows out to $18.5 bln - Reuters UK

Thu Jun 28, 2012 3:03am BST

* Project needs extra $2.5 bln to drill for more gas by 2015

* Cost hike underlines challenges facing CSG to LNG projects

* Santos says can fund its $750 mln share

* Santos says no need to raise debt or equity (Adds details, analyst quote, changes dateline)

By Rebekah Kebede

PERTH, June 28 (Reuters) - Santos hiked the cost of its Gladstone LNG project on Thursday by 15 percent to $18.5 billion, saying it needs to find more gas ahead of a planned 2015 start-up, adding to evidence about the challenges facing Australia's coal seam gas industry.

Santos is the second of three coal seam gas-to-liquefied natural gas (CSG to LNG) projects to announce a big cost increase, and the news knocked its shares down 4.5 percent, even though a cost hike was widely expected.

Energy firms kicked off $50 billion of CSG to LNG projects in Australia less than two years ago, but industry experts have raised concerns that plans are running off track due to rising costs, skills shortages, patchy drilling results, regulatory hurdles and potential competition from cheap U.S. gas.

"My take is that they are short of gas and the rumours have been flying thick and fast for a year that these plants are going to be short of gas," said Peter Strachan, an analyst with Stock Analysis.

The announcement would likely be good news for smaller gas producers in the region who may be able to sell gas into Santos' project, he added.

Santos's cost blowout follows an announcement earlier this year by BG Group that its rival Queensland Curtis Island LNG project would face a 36 percent cost increase to $20.4 billion, citing regulatory costs, some changes to the project, and a stronger Australian dollar.

Analysts expect a third project, Origin Energy's Australia Pacific LNG (APLNG) to face cost increases to its development as well.

Santos said on Thursday the extra $2.5 billion for Gladstone in spending had been slated for after 2015 but was being brought forward in order to drill 300 extra wells before the end of 2015.

"It's important to stress that this additional capex is not a result of a significant cost overrun or any major scope changes in the project. Our life of project cost assumptions are consistent with what we had at our final investment decision," Santos Chief Executive David Knox told reporters by phone.

Knox said about 10 percent of the cost increase was due to a combination of cost and scope changes in the project, with 90 percent of the cost increase a result of pushing parts of the project development forward.

Santos said it would be able to fund its $750 million share of the extra spending and had no need or plan to raise additional debt or equity for Gladstone LNG or any other of its approved projects.

It reaffirmed it expects to spend A$3.75 billion ($3.78 billion) in capital in 2012.

The Gladstone LNG project is 30 percent owned by Santos. Malaysia's Petronas and France's Total each own 27.5 percent and Korea Gas Corp owns 15 percent.

Developers of Australia's new gas export projects are under pressure to deliver, having sold most of the gas from the first phase of the three coal seam projects to Asian customers through long-term deals starting around 2015.

All three projects have consistently held they are on schedule to export gas between 2014 and 2015. ($1 = 0.9929 Australian dollars) (Additional reporting by Sonali Paul; Editing by Richard Pullin)



Muse unveil official Olympic song - BBC News

British rock band Muse have announced their new single Survival will be the official song for the London 2012 Olympic Games.

Writing on their website, the Devon band said they were "excited" and "honoured" to have been chosen.

Frontman Matt Bellamy "wrote the song with the Olympics in mind".

Watch a 30-second clip of Muse's song

The song, which premieres on Radio 1 later, will be played during the games when athletes enter the stadium and in the run-up to medal ceremonies.

Bellamy said the track "expresses a sense of conviction and determination to win".

Survival will also be used by international broadcasters covering the games, and spearheads a programme of music called London 2012 Rock The Games.

Special singles from Elton John vs Pnau, Dizzee Rascal, The Chemical Brothers and Delphic will also be released during July and August.

More details are also due to be announced about a series of surprise live concerts at London 2012 venues, featuring Scissor Sisters, Rizzle Kicks and Soft Focus.

The Muse track will get its first radio play on Radio 1's Zane Lowe show after 19:00 BST on Wednesday, along with an interview with the band.

The song will then go on sale to the general public online.

Last month, thousands of people turned out to see the rock band carry the Olympic flame through their home town of Teignmouth, on day two of the 70-day relay.

Since forming in 1994, Bellamy and bandmates Dominic Howard and Chris Wolstenholme have sold in excess of 15 million albums worldwide.

The band, best known for tracks such as Supermassive Black Hole, Uprising and Knights of Cydonia, release their forthcoming studio album The 2nd Law in September.

Muse announced earlier this month that they will play five UK arena dates in October as part of a European tour.

With a month to go until the London 2012 Games, organisers have also unveiled plans for other performances at Games venues.

They include leading dancers from the English National Ballet, award-winning street dance crews and cheerleaders.

Music will also be provided by military bands and DJs, while short films will be shown on games days, explaining the rules of upcoming events.

A "goodbye" video, featuring safety and travel advice, has also been filmed, with contributors including Simon Pegg, Daley Thompson and Dame Helen Mirren.



Berry Gordy Motown musical set for Broadway - BBC News

A musical based on the life of Motown Records founder Berry Gordy is set to open on Broadway next year.

Producers said Motown the Musical would feature songs made famous by artists who found fame with the label including Stevie Wonder and the Jackson Five.

Gordy will write and co-produce the show, which will open next spring.

The 82-year-old mogul said the production was "a challenging and exciting opportunity to tell my story and share the magic of Motown".

"I can't wait to feel that same Motown spirit come alive on stage every night," he added.

Producers described the show as "a gripping story about the proteges and stars of a uniquely talented musical family who, under Gordy's guidance, began as the Sound of Young America and went on to become some of the greatest superstars of all time".

Other songs to feature in the musical include those made famous by Diana Ross and the Supremes, Smokey Robinson, The Temptations and Marvin Gaye.

Producer Doug Morris said: "This is an amazing opportunity for everyone to experience the Motown phenomenon through the eyes of the man who lived it."

Casting for the show has yet to be announced.



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