MILAN (Reuters) - Inter Milan's Serie A title hopes suffered a setback as they conceded a stoppage-time equaliser and were held 1-1 at home by relegation-threatened Carpi on Sunday and leaders Napoli swept to a 4-2 win at Sampdoria.
Prime real estate along Charleston Harbor will be put up for bids next week as the State Ports Authority takes the first step toward selling its Concord Street offices and an adjacent site where the Fleet Landing restaurant now operates.
Jan 24 (Infostrada Sports) - Line-ups for the first One Day International between New Zealand and Pakistan on Monday in Wellington, New Zealand Pakistan won toss and decided to bowl New Zealand: Tom Latham, Martin Guptill, Kane Williamson (capt), Corey Anderson, Henry Nicholls, Grant Elliott, Mitchell Santner, Luke Ronchi, Matt Henry, Mitchell McClenaghan, Trent Boult Pakistan: Azhar Ali (capt), Ahmed Shehzad, Mohammad Hafeez, Babar Azam, Sohaib Maqsood, Imad Wasim, Sarfraz Ahmed, Anwar Al
WASHINGTON, Jan 24 (Reuters) - The blizzard that blanketed Washington over the weekend put the Congress and some local services on ice for the time being, reinforcing the U.S. capital's reputation for being easily snowed under.
SYDNEY, Jan 25 (Reuters) - Australian shares are set to open up more than 1 percent on Monday, extending a rally into a third consecutive session, buoyed by stronger oil prices and a firmer Wall Street. Local share price futures rose 1.1 percent to 4,934.0, an 18-point premium to the underlying S&P/ASX 200 index . The benchmark rose 1.1 percent on Friday. New Zealand's benchmark S&P/NZX 50 index rose 0.2 percent in early trade. For a summary of overnight action across global markets
MELBOURNE, Jan 24 (Reuters) - Kevin Pietersen could not deny Sydney Thunders a Big Bash League triumph but his blistering 74 for Melbourne Stars in Sunday's tense final reminded England what they will be missing at this year's Twenty20 World Cup in India.
* Money flowing to property, stocks, life insurance, acquisitions
SINGAPORE, Jan 25 (Reuters) - Some investors who mistakenly sensed a bottom in Asian markets in late 2015 will be shy to see one now, though others could feel this year's tumbles have made valuations attractive enough to come back in.