Sunday, September 23, 2012

Wife Of Vice President Amissah-Arthur On Political Platform

Declaring that her husband had divine favour, Mrs Matilda Amissah-Arthur, better half of Vice President Paa Kwesi Bekoe Amissah-Arthur, on Saturday asked Ghanaians to retain the governing National Democratic Congress (NDC) in power at the next December general polls.

?God has blessed my husband; God has also blessed Cape Coast,? Mrs Amissah-Arthur said, when she made a debut on a political platform at a rally in Cape Coast.

The rally was to introduce the Vice President, who is the Running Mate of President John Dramani Mahama, the NDC Presidential Candidate, for Ghana?s December 2012 polls at which the NDC is seeking to retain power for a second term from 2013-2016.

Sporting red apparel with NDC symbol of the royal umbrella (akatamanso), in the colours of red, white, green and black embossed on it, accompanied the Vice President throughout trip to introduce the Vice President.

The trip went through Mankessim, Anomabu and Cape Coast where the Vice President met with the chiefs and addressed separate rallies.

The Second Lady paid tribute the late President John Atta Mills for his peace and patience, and described the Vice President as blessing to the people, because he had similar blood links with Cape Coast as that of the late President Mills.

She praised her husband for espousing the virtues if peace and patience. Mrs Amissah-Arthur asked the electorate to give their vote to the NDC on December 7, for a ?one touch? victory.

Source: http://www.ghanamma.com/2012/09/wife-of-vice-president-amissah-arthur-on-political-platform/

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Friday, September 21, 2012

Obama gaining in battleground state contributions

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Showing impressive momentum, President Barack Obama raised more in high-dollar contributions than Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney during the last two months in 10 of 11 battleground states that are pivotal to win the presidential election, according to an analysis of new campaign financial reports by The Associated Press.

Importantly, Romney's campaign has raised more money from donors who gave over $200 than Obama's organization overall since May in four of those 11 battleground states ? in some cases by wide margins, such as $21 million for Romney in Florida versus $11.2 million there for Obama. And nationally, Romney has continued to out-fundraise Obama.

Yet Obama made especially impressive gains last month in Florida, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Wisconsin.

The new financial figures, current through the end of August, do not reflect a slam dunk for Obama's campaign. But as much as the act of donating more than $200 to a politician is a measure of popular support, the figures present another challenge for Romney in key states with only six weeks before Election Day.

They also represent a precursor to what has been one of the most difficult periods in Romney's candidacy. Romney has struggled this week to quell controversy over a secretly recorded video in which he told donors that 47 percent of the country pays no taxes and is dependent on government, amid fresh signs of a national housing rebound and growing support for Obama in public opinion polls.

For example, in Florida, with its 29 winner-take-all electoral votes, Obama raised $5.5 million in itemized contributions in July and August compared to $3.7 million for Romney during the same period. In Ohio, with 18 electoral votes and also considered a keystone for a winning campaign, Obama raised $2.3 million compared to $1.3 million for Romney, during the same period.

The AP's analysis doesn't include the tens of millions of dollars in advertisements from super political action committees and doesn't include details about donors who gave fewer than $200 because they aren't required to be listed on the federal reports.

"The president's picking up traction in battleground states he carried before," said R. Donahue Peebles, a major Obama fundraiser in New York. "As the election nears, people are paying more attention. The donors who had been sitting on the sidelines are now getting involved and are more engaged."

Obama four years ago broke presidential fundraising records but has found himself financially outgunned for much of the summer, thanks in part to super PACs supporting Romney. Those groups have been largely bankrolled by wealthy Americans and have flourished under recent legal changes that loosened campaign-finance regulations. Obama has similar groups working in his favor, although not as successfully.

Obama's campaign pulled in $114 million in August, slightly more than Romney's $111.6 million. Unlike Obama, Romney raised more than $100 million nationwide for at least three consecutive months this summer.

Romney and the Republican Party had $168.5 million cash on hand versus Obama and the Democrats' $125 million left in the bank. Romney also took out a $20 million loan on Aug. 22; he had repaid at least $5 million of that by the end of August, reports show.

For Obama, pulling ahead of Romney hasn't been easy, particularly for a campaign that has repeatedly and publicly acknowledged it will be outspent. Romney showed remarkable successes in some battleground states earlier this year. He raised $7.6 million in Florida in May, compared to $1.5 million for Obama; Romney raised $3.7 million in Ohio in June compared to $545,000 for Obama.

In Virginia, which broke tradition in 2008 and awarded its 13 electoral votes to Obama, Obama out-raised Romney by roughly 2-to-1 during the last two months. Romney had raised more in Virginia than Obama during the preceding May and June.

The new financial reports also showed that some wealthy executives who have given tens of millions of dollars to super PACs this election didn't give any more money last month, including Las Vegas casino mogul Sheldon Adelson and Texas businessman Harold Simmons. Some major donors have chosen to give instead to super PACs' nonprofit arms, which don't have to reveal their donors but must focus their ads on political issues.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-gaining-battleground-state-contributions-200456887--election.html

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Jerusalem: Why Israelis and Palestinians, Democrats and Republicans fight over it

By leaving support for Jerusalem as Israel's capital off its platform, the Democratic party sparked the latest fierce debate on the much-disputed city. What's the back story?

By Christa Case Bryant,?Staff writer / September 5, 2012

Jerusalem has been perhaps the world?s most coveted ? and contested ? piece of real estate for 3,000 years. In the latest battle, the city?s status has become a point of contention between Democrats and Republicans, who are vying for the support of American Jews, an influential and well-heeled bloc of voters.?

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The latest furor erupted after the Democratic National Committee (DNC) released a draft copy of the party platform earlier this week that made no reference to Jerusalem as Israel's capital, which it included in its 2008 platform.?The exclusion brings the party in line with White House policy on Jerusalem, but it still generated a firestorm, as well as confusion about whether it signals a policy change.?

?The Obama Administration has followed the same policy towards Jerusalem that previous US administrations of both parties have done since 1967,? a DNC statement said, according to the Jewish Telegraph Agency. ?As the White House said several months ago, the status of Jerusalem is an issue that should be resolved in final status negotiations between the Israelis and the Palestinians -- which we also said in the 2008 platform."

At the heart of the issue is whether the US should support Israel?s claim to the city as the ?eternal and undivided capital? of the Jewish people. If the US did support that claim, it would almost certainly base the US Embassy in Jerusalem, as Mitt Romney promised to do on his recent campaign visit there.?

But every American administration since Israel?s founding has resisted taking that step, as have a majority of other countries.

Jewish claims to the city

Jerusalem, the seat of power for the biblical King David in roughly 1,000 BC, saw a succession of Jewish rulers until the Romans conquered the city in 70 AD and destroyed the Jewish temple.

When the United Nations approved a blueprint for a modern Israeli state in 1947, it partitioned historic Palestine between Jews and Arabs, with Jerusalem envisioned as part of an international enclave administered by trustees. Zionist leaders accepted the plan and declared independence in 1948, sparking a war with Arabs, who rejected the proposal. By the time the fighting stopped a year later, Jews were in control of west Jerusalem, while Jordan held the eastern part of the city, including the walled Old City.

When Arab aggression provoked another war in 1967, Israel fought back decisively, capturing all of east Jerusalem, the West Bank, the Gaza Strip, and the Sinai Peninsula in six days. Israeli leaders heralded Jerusalem as the ?eternal and undivided capital? of the Jewish people. They redrew the city?s borders to include holy sites and strategic high ground but few Arabs, tripling the city?s territory and giving it a strong Jewish majority.

International opposition

In 1980, Israel formally annexed East Jerusalem with the passage of the ?Basic law.??This elicited a strong reaction from the United Nations. The UN Security Council passed Resolution 478 with only one abstention (from the US), declaring the Basic Law ?null and void? and calling on Israel to rescind it in the interest of making peace with Palestinians.

Palestinians also lay claim to Jerusalem as the capital of a future Palestinian state. The city is considered to be the third-holiest city in Islam, home to the Dome of the Rock and the Al-Aqsa Mosque ? located on the very site where the Jewish temple is believed to have been built ? and long ruled by the Ottoman Empire.

Israel?s annexation of East Jerusalem, its support for a growing number of Jewish neighborhoods in the predominantly Arab area, and plans for new Israeli-run archeological parks in some of the most sensitive areas of the city are all seen by the international community to be prejudicing any eventual peace agreement with the Palestinians.?

For this reason, most nations have kept their embassies in Tel Aviv, Israel?s largest and most prosperous city and far less controversial a location than Jerusalem. According to one tally, only two countries ? Greece and Italy ? have their embassies in Jerusalem proper.?

If Gov. Romney were to deliver on his campaign promise to move the US embassy to Jerusalem, that would make three.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/3WkwojbjewU/Jerusalem-Why-Israelis-and-Palestinians-Democrats-and-Republicans-fight-over-it

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Thursday, September 20, 2012

Serenity and Adventure await you in Costa Rica - Recreation, Travel ...

Have you been looking for one of the best hotels in costa rica? Then imagine yourself in a luxurious boutique resort nestled at the base of the Arenal volcano. The area is about a 3 hour drive outside the capital of San Jose providing close proximity to the airport but far enough away to allow you to enjoy the countryside, rain forests, and culture of the country. The Springs Resort and Spa is the perfect destination for your next adventure.

Why this destination? Whether you are looking for a relaxing environment or one filled with diverse activities, this resort has it all. The resort grounds include 18 free-form pools complete with rock landscaping, waterfalls and breath-taking views of the Arenal volcano and jungle. Each of these pools is fed by the mineral springs. These springs have been rated as the best for in the area for both their therapeutic mineral content and low sulfates leaving your skin feeling better and cleaner than ever. Each pool has it?s own unique temperature allowing you to choose what suits your mood or fits the day?s weather conditions. The Springs Resort & Spa was built with relaxation and rejuvenation characteristics.

What about all those diverse activities for the active-minded traveler? Just below The Springs Resort &amp Spa is the newly opened Club Rio Outdoor Center. Whether you want to be in the water or on the land, or both, this facility has it all. You can enjoy horseback riding in the morning through some of the most lush rain forest and spend the afternoon kayaking down the river and around Arenal lake. Plan the next day?s trip for wandering around the many paths into the rain forest, camera ready for birdwatching, then spend the afternoon on a relaxing tube ride where you had kayaked the day before.

Yes, there are many hotels in costa rica, but none match both the serenity and the adventures that you can enjoy while staying at The Springs Resort and Spa. The resort is both romantic for the honeymoon couple and family-friendly for bringing along multi-generations. click here to find out more about this highly acclaimed Costa Rican destination.

Source: http://www.inntownmotel.net/travel-and-leisure/serenity-and-adventure-await-you-in-costa-rica/

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Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Dark energy camera opens its eyes

The most powerful sky-scanning camera yet built has begun its quest to pin down the mysterious stuff that makes up nearly three-quarters of our Universe.

The Dark Energy Survey's 570-million-pixel camera will scan some 300 million galaxies in the coming five years.

The goal is to discover the nature of dark energy, which is theorised to be responsible for the ever-faster expansion of the Universe.

Its first image, taken 12 September, focussed on the Fornax galaxy cluster.

In time, along with its massive haul of individual galaxies, it will study 100,000 galaxy clusters - the largest stable structures we know of - and 4,000 supernovae, the bright dying throes of stars.

This enormous survey is a collaboration between US, UK, Brazilian, Spanish and German astronomers.

The phone box-sized Dark Energy Camera or DECam is mounted on the 4m Victor M Blanco telescope at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile's Atacama desert.

While it is not the highest-resolution camera - that honour goes to the Pan-Starss instrument in Hawaii - its high resolution and extraordinary sensitivity make it arguably the world's most powerful camera.

DECam is particularly sensitive to red and infrared light, to better study cosmic objects as distant as eight billion light-years away.

Continue reading the main story

What is redshift?

  • The term "redshift" arises from the fact that light from more distant objects shows up on Earth more red than when it left its source
  • The colour shift comes about because of the Doppler effect, which acts to "stretch" or "compress" waves from moving objects
  • It is at work in the sound of a moving siren: an approaching siren sounds higher-pitched and a receding one sounds lower-pitched
  • In the case of light, approaching objects appear more blue and receding objects appear more red
  • The expansion of the Universe is accelerating, so in general, more distant objects are moving away from us (and each other, and everything else) more quickly than nearer ones
  • At cosmic distances, this "cosmological redshift" can greatly affect the colour - the factor by which the wavelength is "stretched" is called redshift

More distant objects are moving away from us - and each other - faster than nearer objects, which causes a shift of their apparent colour toward the red end of the spectrum - a "redshift". But the very stretching of space can cause the same effect.

Careful studies of the shifted light from distant supernovae were what first demonstrated this expansion of the Universe, leading to the 2011 Nobel prize in physics.

What is believed to be causing this increase in the speed of expansion is called dark energy, making up more than 70% of the mass-energy - all of the "stuff" - of the Universe and the focus of the DECam's mission.

Other efforts hope to get to the bottom of the mystery, including the Boss survey and a future space telescope dedicated to the effort called Euclid.

But for now, Will Percival from the University of Portsmouth, a Dark Energy Survey collaborator, said DECam is an exciting prospect.

"This will be the largest galaxy survey of its kind, and the galaxy shapes and positions will tell us a great deal about the nature of the physical process that we call dark energy, but do not currently understand," he said.

The survey will tackle the problem in four ways.

It will study the same kind of supernovae that led to the Nobel prize, in a bid to unravel the "expansion history" of the Universe - when its expansion increased and decreased over billions of years.

It will also map out in 3D the distribution of galaxy clusters, measuring what are known as baryon acoustic oscillations - literally relics of the sound echoes of the Big Bang.

Continue reading the main story

Dark energy and dark matter mysteries

  • Gravity acting across vast distances does not seem to explain what astronomers see
  • Galaxies, for example, should fly apart; some other mass must be there holding them together
  • Astrophysicists have thus postulated "dark matter" - invisible to us but clearly acting on galactic scales
  • At the greatest distances, the Universe's expansion is accelerating
  • Thus we have also "dark energy" which acts to drive the expansion, in opposition to gravity
  • The current theory holds that 73% of the Universe is dark energy, 23% is dark matter, and just 4% the kind of matter we know well

By counting the clusters and plotting out when they evidently formed, the survey can feed back to computer models that map out how we think the Universe organised itself in its earliest years.

And studies of the way galaxies and galaxy clusters bend passing light - in a process called weak gravitational lensing - will help to pin down the equally mysterious "dark matter" that is believed to make up more than 80% of the Universe's mass - most of the Universe's stuff that is not energy.

DECam will now be run through a series of tests and will begin the official survey in December.

With each snapshot it acquires, it will see an apparent area of the sky 20 times larger than the full moon.

In its full five-year run, it should capture an eighth of the full sky.

"The achievement of first light through the Dark Energy Camera begins a significant new era in our exploration of the cosmic frontier," said James Siegrist, associate director of science for high-energy physics at the US Department of Energy, which oversaw the instrument's construction.

"The results of this survey will bring us closer to understanding the mystery of dark energy and what it means for the Universe."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-19634700#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Judge decides against lifting US injunction on Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1, for now

Image

While Samsung wasn't happy with everything in the billion dollar jury decision concerning its case vs. Apple back in August, it did find some use in a ruling that the Galaxy Tab 10.1 did not infringe Apple's design patents. Based on that, it's trying to get the months-old injunction on sales of the device lifted, but CNET and AllThingsD report Judge Lucy Koh has declined to do so at this time, citing a lack of jurisdiction. She did state that Samsung's motion raised a "substantial issue" with the injunction, but will apparently need to wait for the appeals court to send it back to her court room. The two companies still have a court date on Thursday, as well as the December 6th hearing where they'll argue about possible injunctions for some of the other devices involved in this case.

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Judge decides against lifting US injunction on Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1, for now originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 18 Sep 2012 00:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/09/18/samsung-apple-galaxy-tab-10.1-injunction/

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