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November 2009

Cap Cana Villa

Cap Cana is located in the Eastern region of the Dominican Republic known as Juanillo. The site was founded as a new and more ambitious touristic site with contributions from international investors and strategic partners such as Ritz-Carlton, Sotogrande, Donald Trump and many others. The site has a Marina, Large resorts, beaches, and many others. Primarily founded as a site to attract international visitors. The Cap Cana Championship, a Champions Tour golf tournament, is held at Punta Espada Golf Club in Cap Cana, a course designed by Jack Nicklaus.

Cap Cana's area includes more than one-hundred and twenty millon square meters of land, of which twenty-five million will be developed in its first phase. It also includes 8 kilometers of beach and coasts, 5 of which are considered to be among the most spectacular in the Caribbean, locally considered to be neck-in-neck to the beaches of Bahia de Las Aguilas (literally, Bay of the Eagles) located in the southwestern municipality of Perdernales- often referred by past visitors as some of the most beautiful in the world.

Cap Cana Villa

Israel approves new homes in east Jerusalem

JERUSALEM (AFP) –
Israel approved the construction of hundreds of new housing units in annexed east Jerusalem on Tuesday, driving another stake into troubled US efforts to restart Middle East peace talks.

The interior ministry said it approved the construction of 900 new units in Gilo, one of a dozen of Israeli settlements in mostly Arab east Jerusalem, adding that the project still faced review.

Earlier, Israeli media reported that hawkish Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had refused a request from main ally Washington to halt construction in Gilo. It was not clear whether the request concerned the project approved on Tuesday.

The approval is likely to further hamper Washington's so-far futile efforts to get Israelis and Palestinians back to the peace table, amid deep disagreements over the thorny issue of settlements.

The Palestinians demand that Israel freeze all settlement construction, including in east Jerusalem, before resuming the talks, while Israel has so far offered only a temporary and limited ease in building.

Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas said on Tuesday that the impasse has given him no choice but to seek international recognition of a Palestinian state, even as Europe and Washington discouraged the move.

"We feel we are in a very difficult situation," he said in Cairo after talks with Egyptian counterpart Hosni Mubarak. "What is the solution for us? To remain suspended like this, not in peace? That is why I took this step."

Palestinian officials said earlier this week they intended to ask the UN Security Council to recognise a state in a move analysts said was aimed at pressuring Israel amid the floundering US peace efforts.

The European Union, the Palestinians' biggest donor, joined the United States in discouraging the move and urged instead a return to peace talks with Israel.

"I don't think we are there yet," Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, whose country holds the EU's rotating presidency, told reporters in Brussels.

"I would hope that we would be in a position to recognise a Palestinian state but there has to be one first, so I think it is somewhat premature," he said.

The United States said it opposed any unilateral moves.

"We support the creation of a Palestinian state that is contiguous ... We are convinced that has to be achieved through negotiations between two parties," State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said on Monday.

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, who is due to meet with Abbas in Amman later on Tuesday and with Israeli leaders in Jerusalem the next day, said he will insist on a resumption of negotiations.

"We have to find ways to surmount the current obstacles," he told the Palestinian Al-Quds daily.

Netanyahu has warned that "any unilateral action will undo the framework of past accords and lead to unilateral actions from Israel."

And the Islamist movement Hamas, a bitter rival of Abbas's Fatah rival, also poured cold water on the move for international recognitiion.

"The proclamation of a Palestinian state should be the result of the resistance putting an end to the occupation ... and not a decision taken by (the Palestinian Authority) to fill the void after the political option has failed," Hamas's exiled political supremo Khaled Meshaal said in a statement.

Tuesday's construction approval will make the relaunching of talks more difficult because the issue of settlements in east Jerusalem is particularly sensitive.

Israel, which captured the eastern part of the city in 1967 and later annexed it in a move not recognised by the international community, sees the Holy City its "eternal, indivisible" capital and does not view Jewish construction in the east as settlements.

The Palestinians want east Jerusalem as the capital of their promised state and insist Israel stop building houses there.

The international community considers all Israeli settlements on occupied Palestinian land illegal.

A guide to who gets whacked (Politico)

Sarah Palin may claim to scorn elites, but her new book will ring familiar to its Beltway readership.
Getting even with those who crossed her, praising her allies and generally putting a self-serving sheen on last year’s presidential campaign, “Going Rogue” is typical of the political memoir genre of recent vintage. It’s the sort of book that will send the political class scurrying to bookstores, eager to see how they fared in what’s known as “the Washington read.”
With no index, though, Palin’s book has made that ritual more difficult.
So POLITICO, having obtained a copy of the book before its Tuesday release, has created a reader’s guide to “Going Rogue,” grouping the many characters into three categories, based upon that familiar question insiders are already whispering to those who managed to snag a copy of the book: How did I come out?
FRIENDS:
The construct Palin uses to describe the 2008 presidential campaign pits most of her advisers, the endearingly-named “B Team,” against the dreaded staffers running John McCain’s campaign back in suburban Washington, often simply derided as “headquarters.”
She has especially kind words for the campaign officials she bonded with during the campaign and, in some cases, remains in contact with.
This “B Team” includes such aides as Jason Recher, Chris Edwards, Tracey Schmitt, Jeannie Etchart, Bexie Nobles, Matthew Scully, Randy Scheunemann, Steve Biegun.
All receive generous treatment.
Biegun is even spared by a key omission in the book. Even though it has been reported that he was responsible for the embarrassing prank call Palin took from a pair of French Canadian DJs posing as the President of France, Palin only identifies the aide as “a campaign adviser.”
“I felt bad for him because he was an absolutely stellar professional, so I knew these radio guys had to be really good to get around him,” she writes.
John and Cindy McCain receive fulsome praise throughout the book from Palin, him as a brave American hero and her as a mix of elegant lady and Every Mom.
But the Arizona senator is also portrayed as the final enforcer of the decision not to let Palin speak on Election Night, something that plainly pained her.
She recounts telling McCain in the campaign’s hotel suite in Phoenix on Election Night that she wanted to use her remarks to thank him:
“’No these guys have it covered,’ he said, nodding in [campaign chief Steve] Schmidt’s direction. ‘They’ve got it handled.’”
Palin then writes: “I knew that was that. I thanked John again for everything and walked out of the room.”
McCain’s close friend Joe Lieberman, the Connecticut senator, also won accolades from Palin for soothing her during a stressful debate prep session.
“God is going to see you through this,” Palin recalls Lieberman telling her, noting that she found it “so heartfelt, so genuine, so sincere.”

FOES:

Much of the portion of the book devoted to Palin’s time as vice presidential nominee and her last year in Alaska is filled with her grievances against a handful of McCain campaign aides and the media.

In particular, Palin trains her fire at Steve Schmidt, campaign advisers Mark and Nicolle Wallace and CBS news anchor Katie Couric.

Schmidt, especially, receives the brunt of Palin’s blasts.

She describes him as variously quick-tempered, profane, overweight, threatening and incompetent. Plus, she notes, he was a smoker. (Though she does allow at one point that he can inspire loyalty and manage the press).

Complaining about being muzzled, she writes: “I questioned Schmidt about what headquarters would and would not allow me to say. Schmidt was a busy guy; he didn’t have a lot of time to elaborate, no doubt. He replied coolly, ‘Just stick to the script.’”

Taking issue with what she said was Schmidt’s attempt to get her a nutritionist, Palin observes: “As he lectured, I looked at his rotund physique and noted that he used nicotine to keep his own cognitive connections humming along.”

Schmidt also comes in for rough treatment in an anecdote Palin says took place between the campaign aide and Scheunemann after reports in POLITICO and CNN detailed the tensions between the veep candidate and McCain’s staff.

Citing Scheunemann, who remains a Palin adviser, she writes: “Schmidt issued a threat that was veiled enough for deniability but clear as day if you were on the receiving end: if there were are any more leaks critical of anybody in the handling of Sarah Palin, then a lot more negative stuff would be said about Sarah Palin.”

When Palin got prank-called by the two disc jockeys impersonating the president of France, she again paints Schmidt in a negative light.

“One of the first calls was Schmidt, and the force of his screaming blew my hair back. ‘How can anyone be so stupid?! Why would the president of France call a vice presidential candidate a few days out?

“Good question, I thought. Weren’t you the ones who set this up?

“As Schmidt’s rant blazed on, I pictured cell towers between D.C. and Florida bursting into flame. I held the phone slightly away from my head.”

Schmidt is also singled out on election night as the heavy who told Palin she wouldn’t be able to deliver a speech along with McCain’s own concession.

“Absolutely not,” Schmidt said. “I don’t even know why you wrote a speech. Nobody told you to.

“That set me back on my heels. I was surprised that he was surprised.”

Of Nicolle Wallace, a former top Bush administration official, Palin writes, “I had to trust her experience, as she had dealt with national politics more than I had. But something always struck me as peculiar about the way she recalled her days in the White House, when she was speaking on behalf of President George W. Bush. She didn’t have much to say that was positive about her former boss or the job in general.”

Palin also casts Nicolle Wallace as something of an insensitive snob, recalling that the campaign adviser informed her that her clothing was inappropriate for a vice-presidential nominee.

“She flipped through my wardrobe with raised eyebrows,” Palin writes of Wallace from a scene in the candidate’s bedroom after she returned to Alaska for her interview with ABC’s Charlie Gibson. “No…no…no,” [Wallace] said as she slid each garment aside on its hangar.”

And so as to make unmistakable her disdain for Mark Wallace, Nicolle’s husband, the former Alaska governor includes a picture of the aide holding up his arms at her during a hotel room debate preparation session during a photograph montage otherwise devoted to upbeat images of Palin, her family and supporters.

“This picture says it all,” Palin writes in the caption. “A dark hotel room in Philadelphia and a frustrated Mark Wallace trying to tell me which of his non-answers I should give during debate prep.”

Palin never flatly accuses any of the top McCain advisers as being responsible for the leaks against her, but she comes close in recounting a scene from the hotel pool in Phoenix on the day after the election when the Wallaces stopped to say their good-byes.

“’I think you should know that for the next few days it’s going to get really nasty,’” Palin recalls Nicolle Wallace saying. “’Negative stories in the press. You should just be ready, that’s always how it goes. Hang on your hats!’

“That made no sense to Todd—why would anything ‘get nasty?’ And how could anyone know what would be coming in the media?

“But the Wallaces waved good-bye, and that was that.”

Often, names weren’t necessary to make the point—criticizing the generic “headquarters” sufficed, as in this lament from the last weeks of the campaign: “We asked whether we could expand the message, but by then it seemed, at least according to reports like the New York Times Magazine piece by Robert Draper, that headquarters might have already given up.”

Or from campaign’s end: “Since headquarters had micromanaged everything I did and said for weeks…”

Her home state of Alaska, its denizens and trusted aides like Meg Stapleton get much softer and kinder treatment, but Palin does take after some liberal opponents from back home—and a former colleague as well.

Though not mentioned by name, John Bitney is easily identifiable as the former aide whom Palin writes “turned out to be a BlackBerry games addict who couldn't seem to keep his lunch off his tie."

The policy director on Palin’s gubernatorial campaign, Bitney was her first legislative director in Juneau but is now a critic who is frequently interviewed by reporters.

Yet is CBS news anchor Katie Couric who is singled out for special treatment, emerging among media figures as Palin Enemy Number One.

“As for Katie Couric — where do I begin?” Palin writes, recounting what she concedes was an awful interview with the network anchor.

Though she accepts some culpability for the disastrous interview, Palin accuses Couric of having gone easier on Democratic vice presidential nominee Joe Biden, and twice claims that the newswoman’s own clothing stylist was actually part of the team hired by the GOP to outfit the vice-presidential candidate for the campaign. Palin even takes a swipe at Couric’s patriotism.

Palin writes of a National Press Club event where Couric addressed journalists about the news media’s behavior immediately following the Sept. 11 attacks.

According to Palin’s account, Couric told her media colleagues: “The whole culture of wearing flags on our lapel and saying ‘we’ when referring to the United States and, even the ‘shock and awe’ of the initial stages, it was just too jubilant and a little uncomfortable.”

Writes Palin of this assessment: “Unbelievable.”

Among journalists, Couric may have come in for the most personal criticism but Palin also devotes considerable space to bemoaning the press corps in general. When, for example, she details her return to Alaska after the campaign, Palin grumbles about unnamed “pundits and reporters” who criticized her for “not attending the celebrity-packed events we were invited to Outside.”

Disputing some of the analysts who said then-Sen. Barack Obama outperformed McCain at the first presidential debate, Palin writes: “Granted, 90 percent of the newspeople covering the debate were liberal.”

At other times, Palin flatly accuses reporters as stalking and harassing her family.

IN BETWEEN:

Palin seems to spare those individuals who, unlike Schmidt, haven’t criticized her since the campaign or who she doesn’t seem to suspect as leakers who disparaged her, like the Wallaces.

So even though senior campaign aides Mark Salter and Rick Davis played a pivotal role in the campaign—and at “headquarters”—they are largely absent from the book.

Of Salter, she does allow that her first impression was that he seemed “friendlier and quieter than Schmidt” and was a loyal and influential adviser to the senator.

As she does with Biegun and the prank call incident, Palin appears to offer Salter anonymity in recounting the scene on election night when she was told she would not be speaking.

Even though Salter has been identified in other reports as one of the heavies who delivered the news, Palin writes only that a “senior staffer” said: “’You know you won’t be giving a speech.’”

Even though he was a Schmidt friend, her traveling chief of staff, Andrew Smith, isn’t bloodied too badly either.

"It seemed odd that we were being put in the hands of a man who had never run a campaign before, but Andrew seemed like a nice guy, and it wasn't my call,” she said of Smith, a Wall Street veteran.

Another of Palin’s top traveling aides, Tucker Eskew, doesn’t receive the praise that her other “B Team” allies do yet he isn’t scorned like other senior officials.

While calling him a “Southern gentleman,” Palin writes that Eskew stuck to her “like gum on a shoe.”

After events, she recalls, “he’d be waiting for me on the campaign bus steps with an indulgent smile that said, ‘Come over here and let me tell you what you did wrong, bless your heart.’”

Read More Stories from POLITICOBishops reprise old abortion fightThe diplomacy of deferenceWhen a hug becomes a kiss of deathPalin: 'So much bull crap out there'Conservative club targets GOP

In-orbit inspection scheduled for space shuttle

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – Space shuttle Atlantis is circling Earth in pursuit of the International Space Station.
Atlantis and its crew of six will hook up with the space station Wednesday. In the meantime, the astronauts will pull out an inspection boom Tuesday and check their ship's thermal shielding. They will be on the lookout for any damage that might have occurred during liftoff the previous day.
NASA officials say a quick look at the launch images shows nothing to be worried about. Tuesday's survey will provide additional data. The space agency has been extra cautious ever since the Columbia disaster six years ago.
Atlantis is delivering big spare parts to the space station. It's an 11-day flight, which will keep the crew in orbit over Thanksgiving.

United, Chelsea eye next phase of Champions League

PARIS (AFP) –
Compared to the domestic and European woes of five-times European kings Liverpool, life is bliss for Manchester United and Chelsea as Premier League glory and the knockout phase of the Champions League beckon.

Liverpool, six defeats in seven games, have run into a brick wall in the Premier League where a first title in 20 years already looks beyond them.

Failure to win at Lyon on Wednesday could derail their Champions League ambitions after defeats to the French side and also Fiorentina.

Meanwhile it's been relatively plain sailing for United and Chelsea, both at home and abroad.

Sir Alex Ferguson's 2008 European champions are just two points off the Blues in the league while in Europe both sides have posted three wins already.

Despite veterans Ryan Giggs and Rio Ferdinand both being ruled out of Tuesday's game United will expect to polish off rivals CSKA Moscow at Old Trafford having already secured full points in Moscow.

Chelsea, having already humiliated Atletico Madrid at Stamford Bridge, will be confident they can get the point they need to advance from Group D, particularly with Didier Drogba having completed the three-match ban imposed for an on-pitch outburst after last season's semifinal loss to Barcelona.

Frank Lampard says the Ivorian is the true ace in the pack.

"Having Didier back in the Champions League this week will be great for us. It's a big boost, he's a top-class player in great form," the England midfielder said, dubbing Drogba the best striker in the world.

"He's neck and neck with Fernando Torres in the goals chart, but for me Didier is the best in the world because of his all-round game."

Nine-times champions Real Madrid should ultimately emerge from Group C even if AC Milan, with seven titles, complete the double Tuesday over the expensively reconstituted 'Meringues' at the San Siro.

Both sides have six points from three games but Real will again be without the world's most expensive player Cristiano Ronaldo as he has not recovered from a nagging right ankle injury.

Veteran midfielder Guti will also miss the game after falling out with coach Manuel Pellegrini during last week's humiliating 4-0 Spanish Cup defeat at third division Alcorcon.

Assuming Milan - already shocked at home to Zurich before redeeming themselves in Madrid - qualify along with the Spanish giants, whose last crown came in 2002, that would mean the end of the road for Marseille, the 1993 champions, who should nonetheless beat Zurich at the Stade Velodrome.

Also teetering on the brink are four-times winners Bayern Munich, who are labouring to make an impression in Group A where Bordeaux are setting the pace after beating the Bavarians in France.

With Italian former champions Juventus unbeaten in the same group and a point clear of Bayern, the latter cannot afford to drop points against Laurent Blanc's Bordeaux as Juve will expect to pinch full points at Israel's Maccabi Haifa.

Bayern team manager Uli Hoeness admits the struggle will be an uphill one if neither of their playmakers, Franck Ribery and Arjen Robben, can shrug off injuries in time.

"Bayern without Franck Ribery or Arjen Robben is not the same team. When they return, we will return very quickly to a higher level."

Ribery will miss out with a knee injury though Robben may make thew date at the Allianz Arena as he has recovered largely from a knee operation at the start of last month.

Bayern Munich will be without banned pair Daniel van Buyten and Thomas Mueller after their dismissals during the loss in France.

Champions League fixtures (1945 GMT)

Tuesday:

Group A

Bayern Munich (GER) v Bordeaux (FRA)

Maccabi Haifa (ISR) v Juventus (ITA)

Group B

Manchester United (ENG) CSKA Moscow (RUS)

Besiktas (TUR) v VfL Wolfsburg (GER)

Group C

AC Milan (ITA) v Real Madrid (ESP)

Marseille (FRA) v FC Zurich (SUI)

Group D

Atletico Madrid (ESP) v Chelsea

Apoel FC (CYP) v Porto (POR)

Clinton: US to support next Afghan president

WASHINGTON – Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton says it's up to Afghan officials to decide the way ahead after the top challenger to President Hamid Karzai pulled out of next weekend's runoff election.
Clinton said in a statement released by the State Department on Sunday that former Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah ran "a dignified and constructive campaign" and won the support of the Afghan people.
She said the U.S. will support the next Afghan president and the Afghan people. She said they are seeking a better future and deserve one.
Clinton said Afghan officials must conclude the electoral process in a way that's in line with the Afghan constitution.
The statement was released while Clinton was traveling in Morocco.

Favre savors triumphant but frosty return

GREEN BAY, Wisconsin (Reuters) –
Brett Favre savored a triumphant but frosty homecoming, tossing four touchdowns as the Minnesota Vikings (7-1) survived a Green Bay Packers (4-3) comeback to claim a 38-26 win Sunday.

For Green Bay fans, Favre's performance was a bitter reminder of the glory days when the quarterback was firing touchdown passes for the Packers and leading them to the Super Bowl title in 1997.

Back at Lambeau to face his former team for the first time since a messy split in 2007, Favre was lustily jeered by a Green Bay regular season record crowd of 71,213 from the moment he stepped off the Minnesota team bus until he exited the field.

"I had mixed emotions coming in because I know how special these (Packers) fans are," Favre admitted to reporters. "It was loud and that is what makes Green Bay such a special place.

"I want to lead this Vikings team to the Super Bowl but I also know what Packers fans, who make this organization so special and unique will never change.

"How could you not miss that."

There were some things, however, Favre will not miss about his first visit to Green Bay as a Viking.

Prior to the kickoff, some Packers' fans burned replicas of his old Green Bay jersey while entrepreneurs cashed in on the Favre bashing selling t-shirts which included "Traitor 4-Ever and "Once a Hero, Now a Zero."

"I mean, anybody but the Vikings, going to the Vikings it just borders on war," said Packers fan Bob Schaaf, as a small plane circled above Lambeau trailing a banner that read "Retire4Good."

The hostile reception, however, failed to rattle the 40-year-old Favre, who completed 17 of 28 pass attempts for 244 yards, including touchdowns to Visanthe Shiancoe, Percy Harvin, Jeff Dugan and Bernard Berrian.

After Green Bay opened the scoring on a Mason Crosby 37-yard field goal, Minnesota dominated the first half, Adrian Peterson diving over for a one-yard touchdown to give the Vikings a lead they would not surrender.

"He is an equal opportunity thrower," said Vikings coach Brad Childress. "He is going to find them if they are open, it doesn't make any difference who it is.

"There is no such thing as too many good players, or too many tools in the tool box."

Almost forgotten in the pre-game hype surround Favre was a pivotal NFC North matchup that saw the Vikings take control of the division, improving their record to 7-1 while the Packers slip to 4-3.

In the second quarter, Favre hooked up with Shiancoe on a 12-yard touchdown and Ryan Longwell booted a 41-yard field gold to send the visitors into the break leading 17-3.

Favre came out firing in the second half hitting Harvin with 51-yard touchdown strike to put the Vikings up 24-3 before the Packers launched a third quarter fight back.

The Packers, held to just 47 total yards in the first half, exploded for 17 straight points, as Aaron Rodgers, Favre's understudy in Green Bay, tossed five and 16 yard touchdown strikes to Spencer Havner.

Crosby then added a field goal to slice the Minnesota lead to 24-20 setting the stage for wild final quarter.

Favre found Dugan with a two-yard touchdown pass to open the fourth but the Packers hit back, Rodgers connecting with Greg Jennings on a 10-yard strike.

But the Packers could not complete the comeback, Favre sealing the victory with a 16-yard touchdown to Berrian.

(Editing by Julian Linden)

Beginner Piano Lessons

With the advent of powerful desktop computers, highly realistic sampled digital grand pianos have become available as affordable software modules. Some use multi-gigabyte piano sample sets with as many as 90 recordings, each lasting many seconds, for each of the 88 keys under different conditions, augmented by additional samples to emulate sympathetic resonance, key release, the drop of the dampers, and simulations of piano techniques like re-pedaling.

Almost every modern piano has 36 black keys and 52 white keys for a total of 88 keys (seven octaves plus a minor third, from A0 to C8). Many older pianos only have 85 keys (seven octaves from A0 to A7), while some manufacturers extend the range further in one or both directions.

Beginner Piano Lessons