NASA Supercomputer Gets A Boost

June 20, 2012

Image Caption: Pleiades Westmere-based racks: The addition of the Westmere and Nehalem nodes increased the computing capacity available on Pleiades by 170%.

NASAs flagship Pleiades supercomputer just received a boost to help keep pace with the intensive number-crunching requirements of scientists and engineers working on some of the agencys most challenging missions.

Pleiades is critical for the modeling, simulation and analysis of a diverse set of agency projects in aeronautics research, Earth and space sciences and the design and operation of future space exploration vehicles. The supercomputer is located at the NASA Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) facility at Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif.

An expansion completed earlier this month has increased Pleiades sustained performance rate by 14 percent to 1.24 petaflops or a quadrillion calculations per second. To put this enormous number into perspective, if everyone in the world did one calculation per second for eight hours a day, it would take about 370 days to complete what this supercomputer can calculate in 60 seconds.

As we move toward NASAs next phase in advanced computing, Pleiades must be able to handle the increasing requirements of more than 1,200 users across the country who rely on the system to perform their large, complex calculations, said Rupak Biswas, chief of the NAS division at Ames. Right now, for example, the system is being used to improve our understanding of how solar flares and other space weather events can affect critical technologies on Earth. Pleiades also plays a key role in producing high-fidelity simulations used for possible vehicle designs such as NASAs upcoming Space Launch System.

Since Pleiades installation in 2008, NAS has performed eight major upgrades to the system. The latest expansion adds 24 of the newest generation systems containing advanced processors. More than 65 miles of cabling interconnects Pleiades nodes with data storage systems and the hyperwall-2 visualization system.

Recently, scientists have counted on Pleiades for generating the Bolshoi cosmological simulation the largest simulation of its kind to date to help explain how galaxies and the large-scale structure of the universe have evolved over billions of years. The system also has proven essential for processing massive amounts of star data gathered from NASAs Kepler spacecraft, leading to the discovery of new Earth-sized planets in the Milky Way galaxy. The upgraded capability of Pleiades will enable NASA scientists to solve challenging problems like these more quickly, using even larger datasets.

For more information about NASA Advanced Supercomputing, visit: http://www.nas.nasa.gov

For more information about Pleiades, visit: http://go.nasa.gov/MJ4NvN

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NASA Supercomputer Gets A Boost

Chemist explores nanotechnology in search of cheaper solar cells

(Phys.org) -- Luke Hanley is a big believer in harnessing solar energy to produce electricity. Doing it more efficiently is his goal.

"If you could make solar cells cheaper and more efficient, then you could think about putting them on a much wider variety of surfaces," said Hanley, professor and head of chemistry at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

"There's only a certain amount of energy that falls from the sun per square meter. You can't increase that amount of energy, but you can make it less expensive to capture it," he said.

Hanley received a $390,000 grant from the National Science Foundation to test methods of coating solar panel films using nanoparticles from a chemical group called metal chalcogenides. The inexpensive films could be wrapped over everything from vehicles to buildings to gain maximum sunshine exposure and produce electricity.

Chalcogenides are fairly abundant, relatively cheap, and don't contain toxic elements like cadmium or tellurium, which are often used in solar cells.

"Using less expensive, less toxic materials -- and using processes where you could coat inexpensively and not use much of the material -- could make these solar cells more viable," Hanley said.

Working with Igor Bolotin, research assistant professor of chemistry, and graduate students Mike Majeski and Doug Pleticha, Hanley developed a method for depositing metal chalcogenide nanoparticles by cluster beam deposition. The process uses a magnetically confined electrical discharge of argon gas ions to knock metal atoms into the gas phase and react with hydrogen sulfide or hydrogen selenide. The metal-sulfide or metal-selenide then condenses into nano-sized clusters that land on a surface to produce the film.

"If you can do everything from the gaseous deposition stage, you might make the process less expensive, Hanley said. You also may make a novel material that has a better efficiency."

Hanley and his coworkers will evaluate the electrical properties of these new films and study how they respond to light. He thinks that using different chemicals for nanoparticle-embedded solar films could create new products some two to three times more efficient than products now on the market, making solar energy more competitive.

But Hanley noted there are other factors to consider besides price.

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Chemist explores nanotechnology in search of cheaper solar cells

Scientist unlocks the quantum secrets of the moon's bizarre soil, which hangs suspended above the surface when touched

Soil would hang above the surface, withstand heat - and would stick to astronauts like glue

By Eddie Wrenn

PUBLISHED: 02:51 EST, 20 June 2012 | UPDATED: 05:44 EST, 20 June 2012

A soil scientist has uncovered the mechanics behind some of the weird properties of lunar soil.

When the Apollo 11 astronauts landed on the moon in 1969, they discovered curiosities within the layers of dust, which had laid completely still and undisturbed - except for the occasional meteorite impact - for millennia.

But when it was disturbed, strange behaviour was witnessed: The dust would hang above the surface far longer than the moon's weak gravity could account for, it would cling to clothing and equipment as though it had been glued to the surface.

It could also resist heat - the temperature of the surface when in direct sunlight could be near the boiling point of water, but just a few feet under the surface it would be colder than the freezing point of water.

Marek Zbik studies the nanoparticles found in lunar dust bubbles

The unusual properties have never been properly understood, until soil scientist Dr Marek Zbik, of Queensland University of Technology's Science and Engineering Faculty, travelled to Taiwan to investigate the soil under nano-microscopes - a technology which had not been invented in those heady days of the Space Race.

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Scientist unlocks the quantum secrets of the moon's bizarre soil, which hangs suspended above the surface when touched

Penn Study Describes Molecular Machinery that Pulls Apart Protein Clumps

PHILADELPHIA Amyloid fibers are protein aggregates associated with numerous neurodegenerative diseases, including Parkinson's disease, for which there are no effective treatments.

However, on the flip side, the fibers can also play beneficial, protective roles. In yeast, they are associated with increased survival and the evolution of new traits. In humans, they form biological nanostructures to house pigments and other molecules and may also be central to long-term memory formation and storage. Amyloid fibers are among the most stable protein-based structures in nature, and so when they are detrimental, as in Parkinson's disease, they are notoriously difficult for cells to break down.

In a new study published in PLoS Biology this week, James Shorter, PhD, assistant professor of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, and colleagues address an urgent need to find ways to promote beneficial amyloid fiber assembly or to reverse its pathogenic assembly, at will.

In the paper, Shorter and colleagues define the mechanisms by which small heat-shock proteins (hsp) collaborate with other molecular chaperones to regulate the assembly and disassembly of a beneficial yeast prion (an amyloid that can spread between individuals).

Yeast harbor a declumping protein called Hsp104, which rapidly disassembles amyloid fibers, and this activity is greatly enhanced by small heat shock proteins. Humans and other animals, however, lack Hsp104, and so the puzzle has always been: Can human cells also disassemble these exceptionally stable amyloid fibers?

In this study, Shorter and colleagues establish that in the absence of Hsp104, the yeast small heat shock proteins collaborate with other molecular chaperones to slowly depolymerize the amyloid fibers by removing one fiber subunit at a time from the tips of the fibers. This activity was extremely surprising as traditionally the small heat shock proteins and other molecular chaperones are famous for their duties in preventing protein clumping. They were not previously known to reverse the assembly of exceptionally stable amyloid fibers that were already formed.

Importantly, the proteins of the amyloid-depolymerase machinery is conserved to humans. Thus, even without Hsp104, human small heat shock proteins can collaborate with human molecular chaperones to slowly depolymerize amyloid fibers. For example, it is now clear that human cells harbor the necessary machinery to clear amyloid fibers connected with neurodegenerative disease.

"Remarkably, the human small heat shock protein, HspB5, stimulates other heat shock proteins, Hsp110, Hsp70, and Hsp40, to gradually depolymerize amyloid fibers formed by alpha-synuclein, which are implicated in Parkinson's disease, from their ends on a biologically relevant timescale. Because monomers [shorter segments] are released by this system and not toxic oligomers [longer segments], we believe this is an extremely safe way to dissolve amyloid" explains Shorter.

This newly identified and highly conserved amyloid-depolymerase system could have important therapeutic applications for various neurodegenerative disorders, suggest the researchers. The goal is to stimulate the machinery in humans to pull apart the fibers where and when needed by increasing the expression of heat shock proteins to hopefully pull apart already-formed amyloid fibers. The next step will be to boost the activity of the newly discovered amyloid-depolymerase system, perhaps with drug-like small molecules, in animal models of neurodegenerative disease.

The research is supported by the American Federation for Aging Research; the William Wood Foundation; the Hereditary Disease Foundation; an NIH Director's New Innovator Award (1DP2OD002177-01); an Ellison Medical Foundation New Scholar in Aging Award; a National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke grant (1R21NS067354-0110); a Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Grand Challenges Explorations Award; and a University of Pennsylvania Diabetes and Endocrinology Research Center Pilot and Feasibility grant.

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Penn Study Describes Molecular Machinery that Pulls Apart Protein Clumps

Study describes molecular machinery that pulls apart protein clumps

An image of molecular chaperones (Hsp110, Hsp70, and Hsp40) dissolving Sup35 prions. Credit: James Shorter, PhD, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

Amyloid fibers are protein aggregates associated with numerous neurodegenerative diseases, including Parkinson's disease, for which there are no effective treatments.

However, on the flip side, the fibers can also play beneficial, protective roles. In yeast, they are associated with increased survival and the evolution of new traits. In humans, they form biological nanostructures to house pigments and other molecules and may also be central to long-term memory formation and storage. Amyloid fibers are among the most stable protein-based structures in nature, and so when they are detrimental, as in Parkinson's disease, they are notoriously difficult for cells to break down.

In a new study published in PLoS Biology this week, James Shorter, PhD, assistant professor of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, and colleagues address an urgent need to find ways to promote beneficial amyloid fiber assembly or to reverse its pathogenic assembly, at will.

In the paper, Shorter and colleagues define the mechanisms by which small heat-shock proteins (hsp) collaborate with other molecular chaperones to regulate the assembly and disassembly of a beneficial yeast prion (an amyloid that can spread between individuals).

Yeast harbor a declumping protein called Hsp104, which rapidly disassembles amyloid fibers, and this activity is greatly enhanced by small heat shock proteins. Humans and other animals, however, lack Hsp104, and so the puzzle has always been: Can human cells also disassemble these exceptionally stable amyloid fibers?

In this study, Shorter and colleagues establish that in the absence of Hsp104, the yeast small heat shock proteins collaborate with other molecular chaperones to slowly depolymerize the amyloid fibers by removing one fiber subunit at a time from the tips of the fibers. This activity was extremely surprising as traditionally the small heat shock proteins and other molecular chaperones are famous for their duties in preventing protein clumping. They were not previously known to reverse the assembly of exceptionally stable amyloid fibers that were already formed.

Importantly, the proteins of the amyloid-depolymerase machinery is conserved to humans. Thus, even without Hsp104, human small heat shock proteins can collaborate with human molecular chaperones to slowly depolymerize amyloid fibers. For example, it is now clear that human cells harbor the necessary machinery to clear amyloid fibers connected with neurodegenerative disease.

"Remarkably, the human small heat shock protein, HspB5, stimulates other heat shock proteins, Hsp110, Hsp70, and Hsp40, to gradually depolymerize amyloid fibers formed by alpha-synuclein, which are implicated in Parkinson's disease, from their ends on a biologically relevant timescale. Because monomers [shorter segments] are released by this system and not toxic oligomers [longer segments], we believe this is an extremely safe way to dissolve amyloid" explains Shorter.

This newly identified and highly conserved amyloid-depolymerase system could have important therapeutic applications for various neurodegenerative disorders, suggest the researchers. The goal is to stimulate the machinery in humans to pull apart the fibers where and when needed by increasing the expression of heat shock proteins to hopefully pull apart already-formed amyloid fibers. The next step will be to boost the activity of the newly discovered amyloid-depolymerase system, perhaps with drug-like small molecules, in animal models of neurodegenerative disease.

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Study describes molecular machinery that pulls apart protein clumps

BucHan – Heavy Rain – Video

18-06-2012 11:43 || Heavy Rain || MrDUBandBASS || Dubstep || HD || Subscribe || Join || Man alive, we've got an absolutely sick beat here from BucHan, as soon as i heard this track i had to skip it straight to the front of my upload queue. Serious 'purple' vibes, could just imagine myself cruising through the downpour into Las Vegas with a mission on my mind and a score to settle, like something out of Sin City. Available for FREE DOWNLOAD along with an entire EP when BucHan hits 3000 likes (only 50 off). So get on over to his page and show so love and we can get these beats in no time!! Like: Enjoy. Comment, rate and subscribe 🙂 - Join MrDUBandBASS - Facebook || Soundcloud || Subscribe || - Follow the artist/label - In association with Full Screen COPYRIGHT DISCLAIMER: ***All the content uploaded on this channel including musical compositions, vocal samples, lyrics and visual artwork is permitted for upload directly by all the parties involved in owning the content, including the producers, vocalists, record labels, and distribution companies. If any content on this channel is not permitted by all of the owning parties, it is uploaded for the entertainment of myself of others, and is not uploaded inorder to make money or take credit from the original artist. Under Section 107 of the 'Copyright Act of 1976' allowance is made for 'fair use' including the use for ...

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dZ Crave’s "LOLS and TROLLS" Episode 1 | Funnies And Fails – Video

18-06-2012 14:24 Thumbs up & Favorite for dZ Crave! (Open Description for Info!) dZ Crave: "Hey guys this is my new episode that I have started everybody seems to be doing them so I decided I might as well. Hope you guys enjoy this if you do don't forget to LIKE, COMMENT, SUBSCRIBE. **UPDATE** My Episode 10 is being edited right now and is going to be finished by the end of the week. " dZ Crave's Channel: dZ Crave's Twitter: Note: Please keep in Mind that this is NOT MY Video, i got the Permission to Upload this. If you're the owner of this Video, and don't want it uploaded anymore, contact me and I'll remove it as soon as Possible. Thanks. Follow us on Twitter:

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dZ Crave's "LOLS and TROLLS" Episode 1 | Funnies And Fails - Video

Grey’s Anatomy S04E15 Losing My Mind – Video

19-06-2012 16:28 All the episodes I've uploaded for this show, and many others, can be found on in neatly organized lists - YTEpisodes is a completely free, community-built directory of episodes of over 320 different TV shows (and over 12000 episodes) aired/airing in US and UK that have been uploaded to YouTube. Each series has its own page, with episodes listed in chronological order. You can watch the shows from the website with no ads or commercials, without having to search YouTube for the next episode. Only full episodes are listed here; not ones broken into 10-minute pieces. Stop by and see if I have your favorite show on here, and see if you can help out by submitting your own episodes [no uploading required]. 🙂

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Grey's Anatomy S04E15 Losing My Mind - Video

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Medicine dean candidate stresses education, research, patient care

Medicine dean candidate stresses education, research, patient care

BY ERIC LIGHTNER | JUNE 20, 2012 6:30 AM

Jack Elias says education, research, and patient care will provide for a better University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine.

"We cannot achieve excellence in one area without achieving excellence in the other areas," he said.

Elias is the third candidate the UI search committee has seen out of the four finalists to replace current Dean Paul Rothman. Each candidate has answered or will answer the question: "What is Your Vision for the Future of Academic Medical Centers?"

Elias is the Waldemar Von Zedtwitz Professor of Medicine, professor of immunobiology, and chairman of the Department of Internal Medicine at Yale University School of Medicine. He is also a member of the Council of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, with the National Institutes of Health, and a past president of the Association of American Physicians, according to a UI press release.

Elias spoke to members of faculty, staff, and students about his vision of the college using three pillars education, research, and patient care but said each are crucial.

"Academic medical centers have three equally important missions," he said.

Sue Curry, the dean of the UI College of Public Health, said the medical school is looking for a visionary leader who understands the mission.

"We've had now three outstanding candidates who were very thoughtful about their answers," she said.

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Medicine dean candidate stresses education, research, patient care

Cooper Medical School to celebrate opening July 24

CAMDEN A new medical school here will celebrate its grand opening next month.

Cooper Medical School of Rowan University will mark its opening with an 11 a.m. ceremony on July 24. The school, at Broadway and Benson Street, is a partnership between Cooper University Hospital of Camden and Rowan University of Glassboro.

Officials broke ground in October 2010 for the medical school. It would be the first medical school to open in New Jersey in more than 35 years.

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Cooper Medical School to celebrate opening July 24

Editorial: Davis medical school was way out of bounds

University of California, Davis, medical school professor Michael Wilkes doesn't shy from controversial positions, or criticism of the university where he teaches.

That's how how First Amendment free speech rights work.

That's also how academic freedom works, a bedrock principle that criticism and open competition among ideas are the "surest safeguard of truth," wrote the American Association of Universities in 1953.

But First Amendment and academic freedom principles are under challenge at the medical school.

When Wilkes penned an op-ed column in 2010, he received a document on letterhead from legal counsel, requested by UC Davis School of Medicine Dean Claire Pomeroy, saying the university could potentially sue him for defamation for hurting the reputation of the university.

That is outrageous and calls for action by Chancellor Linda Katehi.

Just what drew that overwrought response from the medical school?

Wilkes, a recognized expert on prostate cancer, co-authored an op-ed piece with a USC professor. Published in the San Francisco Chronicle, it said prostate screening not only may do no good, it may be harmful and lambasted a UC Davis men's health seminar advertising "Prostate Defense Begins at 40."

The authors labeled the seminar an "infomercial endorsement" of prostate screening: "We can't say why UC Davis offers this course that ignores scientific evidence, but we wonder whether it just might have to do with money."

Wilkes has been outspoken in questioning marketing by medical industries in Bee columns, too.

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Editorial: Davis medical school was way out of bounds

Pondexter leads Liberty past Dream

ATLANTA The Libertys awful performance in their last game embarrassed Cappie Pondexter.

She was determined not to let it happen again.

I brought a great deal of energy tonight, which has been inconsistent with us, Pondexter said. I feel like when we play with a lot of energy it allows us to play both ends of the floor the way we really want to.

Pondexter had 14 points and a season-high 13 assists and Essence Carson added 14 points in the Libertys 73-60 victory over the Atlanta Dream on Tuesday night.

The Dream dropped their second straight game with Angel McCoughtry, the WNBAs leading scorer and shot blocker, injured and unable to play.

Sancho Lyttle and Lindsey Harding each finished with 13 points for Atlanta (4-7). Lyttle pulled down a game-high 13 rebounds.

The Liberty (4-7) had plenty of incentive after last Fridays debacle at Connecticut, a 42-point loss that was the worst in team history and included 34-point halftime deficit that was the largest in league history.

The Liberty, who snapped a two-game skid, never trailed after Leilani Mitchell pulled up for a 15-foot fast-break jumper to make it 13-12 late in the first.

We were so hungry for a win, Mitchell said. We were just playing harder. We were taking it easy in the last couple of practices trying to save our legs for this game.

The Liberty went up 36-30 on Pondexters 19-foot fadeaway in transition in the final minute of the second period.

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Pondexter leads Liberty past Dream

Liberty 73, Dream 60

UpdatedJun 19, 2012 10:24 PM ET

The New York Liberty's awful performance in their last game embarrassed Cappie Pondexter.

She was determined not to let it happen again.

''I brought a great deal of energy tonight, which has been inconsistent with us,'' Pondexter said. ''I feel like when we play with a lot of energy it allows us to play both ends of the floor the way we really want to.''

Pondexter had 14 points and a season-high 13 assists and Essence Carson added 14 points in the New York Liberty's 73-60 victory over the Atlanta Dream on Tuesday night.

The Dream dropped their second straight game with Angel McCoughtry, the WNBA's leading scorer and shot blocker, injured and unable to play.

Sancho Lyttle and Lindsey Harding each finished with 13 points for Atlanta (4-7). Lyttle pulled down a game-high 13 rebounds.

New York (4-7) had plenty of incentive after last Friday's debacle at Connecticut, a 42-point loss that was the worst in team history and included 34-point halftime deficit that was the largest in league history.

The Liberty, who snapped a two-game skid, never trailed after Leilani Mitchell pulled up for a 15-foot fast-break jumper to make it 13-12 late in the first.

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Liberty 73, Dream 60

Pondexter, Carson lead Liberty past Atlanta 73-60

ATLANTA (AP) The New York Liberty's awful performance in their last game embarrassed Cappie Pondexter.

She was determined not to let it happen again.

''I brought a great deal of energy tonight, which has been inconsistent with us,'' Pondexter said. ''I feel like when we play with a lot of energy it allows us to play both ends of the floor the way we really want to.''

Pondexter had 14 points and a season-high 13 assists and Essence Carson added 14 points in the New York Liberty's 73-60 victory over the Atlanta Dream on Tuesday night.

The Dream dropped their second straight game with Angel McCoughtry, the WNBA's leading scorer and shot blocker, injured and unable to play.

Sancho Lyttle and Lindsey Harding each finished with 13 points for Atlanta (4-7). Lyttle pulled down a game-high 13 rebounds.

New York (4-7) had plenty of incentive after last Friday's debacle at Connecticut, a 42-point loss that was the worst in team history and included 34-point halftime deficit that was the largest in league history.

The Liberty, who snapped a two-game skid, never trailed after Leilani Mitchell pulled up for a 15-foot fast-break jumper to make it 13-12 late in the first.

''We were so hungry for a win,'' Mitchell said. ''We were just playing harder. We were taking it easy in the last couple of practices trying to save our legs for this game.''

New York went up 36-30 on Pondexter's 19-foot fadeaway in transition in the final minute of the second period.

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Pondexter, Carson lead Liberty past Atlanta 73-60

Ron Paul plans his own RNC event to calm the waters

By WILLIAM MARCH | The Tampa Tribune Published: June 19, 2012 Updated: June 20, 2012 - 6:15 AM

Libertarian presidential candidate Ron Paul is planning his activities at the Republican National Convention in Tampa with an eye to making sure his supporters are part of the mainstream GOP process and not a disruptive force, a top campaign official said Tuesday.

Partly for that reason, Paul intends to hold his own rally the Sunday before the convention and avoid a three-day Paul Festival to be held at the state fairgrounds even though the event is intended to celebrate his 77th birthday.

A third libertarian-oriented event also is being planned to precede the convention. Competition or overlap among the three is likely.

The third event, called Freedom Festival, will be held at the Fantasy of Flight aviation attraction off Interstate 4 near Lakeland and will feature another libertarian candidate, former Gov. Gary Johnson of New Mexico, who has some political views markedly different from Paul's.

In an interview Tuesday, Paul campaign chairman Jesse Benton said the Texas congressman wants his backers "to be a constructive part of a coalition" and "influence the party by showing our strength in numbers" during the convention.

Last month, Paul sent a message to the RNC that he doesn't intend to disrupt the highly scripted process, typical for political conventions, of declaring Mitt Romney the Republican nominee.

At the convention, "We want to celebrate the success of the campaign and set the proper tone of decorum and respect for our delegates," Benton said. "We want to get ready to participate in the convention in a positive and constructive manner."

Benton said Paul will avoid events where his campaign doesn't set the tone and message. The event at the fairgrounds is being held by Paul supporters who aren't affiliated with the campaign.

They're likely to be disappointed at his absence, however.

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Ron Paul plans his own RNC event to calm the waters

U.K.-Argentina Feud Over Falkland Islands Intrudes on G-20 Stage

By Anastasia Ustinova - 2012-06-20T01:43:52Z

A feud over the British-controlled Falkland Islands intruded onto the Group of 20 summit, as U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron refused to accept an envelope from his Argentine counterpart containing documents that defended her countrys sovereignty claim over the archipelago.

Cameron, speaking to reporters at the meeting in Los Cabos, Mexico, said standing up for the rights of the Falkland Islands residents to choose their own form of government was the right thing to do. He said a referendum to be held next year in which the islands 3,000-plus residents will vote whether to remain a British territory or declare independence should be recognized as a game-changer for the ongoing impasse that led to war between the U.K. and Argentina in 1982.

I think this referendum is very important and I wanted to raise it specifically with the Argentine president, Cameron said. It was right to stand up for the people of the Falkland Islands, it was important to put this issue beyond doubt.

In a discussion initiated by Cameron at the convention center where G-20 leaders were gathered, Cameron approached Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, telling the Argentine president that she should respect the views of the islanders, Alfredo Scoccimarro, a spokesman for Fernandez, told the state-run news service Telam.

Fernandez responded by trying to hand him an envelope containing United Nations resolutions backing Argentinas claim of sovereignty over the Malvinas, the Spanish name for the area, Scoccimarro said.

Fernandez told him that she wasnt planning to talk about sovereignty and just wanted to give him this envelope, Scoccimarro told Telam. And at that moment, Cameron absolutely refused to accept it.

Britain defeated Argentina in a 1982 war after Argentine forces invaded the Falklands. Tensions have heightened this year, with Argentina protesting the U.K.s deployment of a modern warship to the region and Prince Williams arrival for a stint as a military-helicopter pilot.

To contact the reporter on this story: Anastasia Ustinova in Los Cabos at austinova@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Joshua Goodman at jgoodman19@bloomberg.net

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U.K.-Argentina Feud Over Falkland Islands Intrudes on G-20 Stage

Women’s Living Room Discussion (Cleveland, OH) – Video

18-06-2012 15:27 (Highlights) HHS Secretary Sebelius gathers with women in Cleveland, Ohio, to hear their stories as the economic decision-makers for their families and discuss changes in health care made available by the Affordable Care Act. Learn more about Women and the Affordable Care Act: Covered Preventive Services for Women: Sign up to receive email updates from HealthCare.gov: -- Take health care into your own hands. US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) http We accept comments in the spirit of our comment policy: HHS Privacy Policy

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Democrats, GOP Look to Court’s Health-Care Ruling – Video

18-06-2012 18:23 When the Supreme Court rules on health care some time in the next two weeks, the waves it sets off will be tricky for both parties to navigate. Jerry Seib has details on The News Hub. Photo: AP. Subscribe to WSJ Live HERE: WSJ Live brings you original programming from The Wall Street Journal. Get news directly from The Wall Street Journal's 2000 reporters across the globe. With exclusive video and daily live programming, you can stay on top of the latest in news, elections, markets, tech, opinion and lifestyle.

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Democrats, GOP Look to Court's Health-Care Ruling - Video