Police Shoot And Kill Andy Lopez, 13-Year-Old Boy Carrying Pellet Gun

Sheriff’s deputies in Santa Rosa, Calif. shot and killed a 13-year-old boy who was holding a pellet gun that resembled an AK-47 assault rifle on Tuesday.

In a press conference Wednesday, Lt. Paul Henry of the Santa Rosa Police Department said that two Sonoma County Sheriff’s Deputies were patrolling a neighborhood when they spotted Andy Lopez, 13, carrying what they said appeared to be a rifle. Henry said that officers called for backup and repeatedly ordered Lopez to drop the weapon. Lopez reportedly turned towards the officers and one of them opened fire. Lopez was pronounced dead at the scene.

Authorities allegedly found a plastic toy handgun in the boy’s waistband.

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Service Employees International Union Bypasses Health Care Website To Reach Uninsured

By Andy Sullivan

WASHINGTON, Oct 23 (Reuters) – As the Obama administration scrambles to fix a balky healthcare website that has frustrated millions of Americans, one of the nation’s largest unions is trying to persuade hundreds of thousands of uninsured people to begin signing up for health coverage by phone and on paper.

The Service Employees International Union, which represents about 2.1 million workers, is working in 23 communities across the United States to help its members and others sign up for insurance under the law known as “Obamacare,” SEIU President Mary Kay Henry told the Reuters Summit this week.

She described a massive outreach effort that could wind up as a crucial backstop in the troubled rollout of one of the most ambitious social safety-net programs since the 1960s.

The Obama administration hopes to sign up at least 7 million Americans before a March 2014 deadline, and is counting on allies such as the SEIU for help in reaching the 25 million Americans who would qualify for benefits.

Henry said the glitches plaguing the healthcare.gov website have not been much of a factor in her union’s efforts so far.

At county fairs and inner-city farmers’ markets, and through door-to-door canvassing, the union has found that most of those who would benefit from the law generally are not ready to sign up because they first need to learn how it works, Henry said on Tuesday.

“The website is an issue, but in our experience it’s not really the way people are choosing to enroll,” Henry said.

“It’s sort of like buying a car, or assessing car insurance. People check in with their family, friends or neighbors in order to navigate a system that they have no experience with,” she said.

The SEIU, which represents healthcare, building-services and public-sector workers, has trained hundreds of union members to explain the law’s benefits to families, friends, neighbors or people they meet at health fairs, she said.

Some 300,000 of the union’s workers who currently lack insurance could benefit from the law, either through an expansion of the Medicaid program for low-income Americans or through subsidized private insurance, Henry said.

The administration set up its website to enable uninsured Americans to easily find healthcare options and prices, but the site has been plagued by technical problems since its launch on Oct. 1. The process generally has worked more smoothly in the 14 states that have set up online exchanges of their own rather than relying on the federal government’s site.

‘NOT THE HUGE DEBACLE’

For those who have spent their lives one costly hospital visit away from financial ruin, the law’s shaky rollout has been dwarfed by the possibility of getting affordable health insurance, Henry said.

“It is not the huge debacle that you hear in Washington,” she said. “People want health coverage, and they’re going to figure out how to get through the obstacles to make it happen.”

Insurance executives, policy specialists and former administration officials say the website’s problems need to be sorted out by mid-November to ensure that large numbers of enrollees, especially young adults, can be processed by a Dec. 15 deadline for those seeking coverage starting Jan. 1.

In the meantime, the SEIU has resorted to paper forms to sign up those who are interested, or telephoning applications in to the government’s call centers.

“We’re running phone banks, much as we do in a political election, driving people to community centers. We’re doing sort of group orientation because it’s the way around the website,” Henry said.

That approach could buy time for the Obama administration to fix the website, but it also could lead to complications in processing applications for coverage in the coming weeks.

Paper applications must be mailed to the government, which matches applicants with available insurance programs. The results are supposed to be mailed back about two weeks later, and at that point applicants have to pick which type of coverage they want and mail their choices back to the government.

Henry said that SEIU workers will have to ensure that applicants who they are helping take that second step of mailing in their insurance choices.

In the coming weeks, she said, the union will tout Obamacare’s benefits before launching a big push to sign up people in the first part of December.

That could lead to crushing traffic at the healthcare.gov site. It’s also unclear whether contractors handling paper and phone applications for the Obamacare program will be able to keep up with the volume if the website does not improve soon.

So far, most visitors to the online exchanges seem to be window shopping. About 58 percent of visitors said they just wanted to learn more about their coverage options, while 32 percent said they were looking to purchase healthcare insurance, according to a survey by the Pew Research Center.

The SEIU says it is talking to tens of thousands of Americans each week about the law. Union members in Illinois made 7,000 phone calls on Oct. 1 and activists in California have reached more than 100,000 households so far, SEIU officials said. Members also are knocking on about 1,800 doors a day in New York City. (Editing by David Lindsey and Will Dunham)

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More on Barack Obama

Engadget HD Podcast 372 – 10.22.13

With this week’s big keynote failing to produce any Apple TV-related products, our hosts Ben Drawbaugh and Richard Lawler are left to speculate on the reasons behind Amazon’s recent stock issues with the little hockey puck. As the discussion moves over to the streaming front, U-Verse live TV arrives …

Cristina Fernandez De Kirchner Making ‘Strong Recovery’ After Surgery

Argentine President Cristina Kirchner, who had surgery two weeks ago to remove a blood clot on her brain, is making a strong recovery, a senior government official said Wednesday.

Vice President Amado Boudou did not specify when the 60-year-old head of state would resume her duties.

But “she is still making a strong recovery and that is very positive,” he told reporters.

Kirchner underwent surgery in a Buenos Aires hospital on October 8 after being diagnosed with a “chronic subdural hematoma” sustained during a fall in August.

Ordered discharged five days later, she is spending her convalescence — 30 days of strict rest — at Los Olivos, the presidential residence on the outskirts of the capital.

Kirchner’s medical setback and subsequent absence comes as the country prepares for Sunday’s mid-term legislative elections, which are expected to set the tone for her final two years in office.


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Apple scores victory in Wi-Lan patent infringement case

Apple has been on the receiving end of a patent infringement from Wi-Lan Inc., which alleged that Apple had infringed upon a patent related to wireless technology via its iPhone handsets. Wi-Lan had sought $248 million from Apple in addition to a cut of each sale, and has told Bloomberg that in light of the […]

Long Lost LaserDisc Found, Features Behind-The-Scenes Star Wars Footage

Long Lost LaserDisc Found, Features Behind-The-Scenes Star Wars Footage

"Through the Force, things you will see. The future, the past, old friends long gone." Someone has just found a disc full of behind the scenes, never before seen footage from Return of the Jedi. Two clips were uploaded to a Facebook page yesterday: a silent 59 seconds of R2-D2 repairing Luke’s X-Wing on Dagobah, and a minute of Frank Oz getting fed lines and doing Yoda like only he can (which, in the end, sounds like quite a strain on the ol’ vocal cords).

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‘Friday The 13th’-Themed Engagement Photos Are A Bloody Nightmare

One look at Toronto couple Vanessa Lawson and Josh Morden’s engagement photos and it will come as no surprise that the pair has a mutual interest in horror movies.

“You could say we have a flair for the dramatic,” the bride-to-be said in an interview with Yahoo Shine. “We have an insane collection of horror films at home — I guess it’s a bond that we share.”

Their photo shoot — which has recently been making the rounds on the Internet — takes a turn for the worse when the session is interrupted by the saw-wielding Jason Voorhees from the “Friday the 13th” movies. Spoiler alert: It doesn’t end well for Lawson and Morden.

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Mathematician works out formula for perfect pizza

When the moon hits your eye like a perfectly proportioned pizza pie.

(Credit: text: Amanda Kooser/CNET, image: Nova)

You may think you know how to make a mean pizza pie. You stretch out the dough and eyeball the toppings, but you’re still operating in the realm of guesswork. To turn out a truly fine pizza, you need cold, hard math to back you up. You need Eugenia Cheng, a mathematician with the University of Sheffield in the UK.

Cheng turned her considerable skills toward the noble pursuit of figuring out a formula for creating the perfect pizza. She shares her results in a paper titled “On the perfect size for a pizza (PDF).” Go check it out for all the juicy mathematical details.

The paper’s abstract is short and sweet: “We investigate the mathematical relationship between the size of a pizza and its ratio of topping to base in a median bite. We show that for a given recipe, it is not only the overall thickness of the pizza that is is affected by its size, but also this topping-to-base ratio.”

Cheng’s work assumes that the same amount of dough and toppings go into each size of pie. Her formula uses “t” to designate the constant volume of toppings, “d” to designate the constant volume of dough, and “r” for radius. The formul… [Read more]

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New Mexico Supreme Court Hears Same-Sex Marriage Arguments

(Recasts with comments from attorneys and judge)

By Zelie Pollon

SANTA FE, N.M., Oct 23 (Reuters) – The New Mexico Supreme Court heard arguments on Wednesday on whether same-sex couples should be allowed to wed in a state where such unions are, for the time being, neither expressly recognized nor prohibited by law.

Stepping into an intense and often bitter national debate, the court agreed last month to settle the matter for the state of New Mexico after some counties began issuing marriage licenses to gay and lesbian couples.

Jim Campbell, counsel for 12 Republicans contesting same-sex unions, argued that the purpose of the marriage statutes was to encourage procreation. Allowing same sex-couples to marry would, he said, “discourage” couples of the opposite sex from marrying and procreating.

Attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, Maureen Sanders, countered that same-sex marriage was protected under constitutional and statutory principles barring discrimination.

“The state of New Mexico has never made a promise to have children as a condition of being married and so it should not be offered as a reason why same-sex couples ought not to be able to be married in New Mexico.”

Justice Charles Daniels appeared sympathetic to the argument, noting that marriage entailed “many other benefits,” most of which had “nothing to do with whether we have children.” He mentioned tax benefits, inheritance and property rights.

Currently, eight New Mexico counties allow gay couples to wed, and more than 900 couples have applied for same-sex marriage licenses since clerks in those jurisdictions began issuing them in recent months.

A number of Republican state lawmakers have responded by filing a lawsuit challenging the authority of the clerk of Dona Ana County, which includes the state’s second-most populous town, Las Cruces, to issue marriage licenses to gay couples.

The debate reached a crescendo when all 33 county clerks in the state joined the ACLU and the National Center for Lesbian Rights in petitioning New Mexico’s high court to decide the issue on a statewide basis.

Wednesday’s oral arguments come two days after New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, a Republican, agreed to drop his appeal of a court decision that effectively legalized gay marriage in his state. Including New Jersey, same-sex marriage is legal in 14 states and the District of Columbia.

STATE CONSTITUTION VAGUE

Some gay marriage opponents have welcomed the intervention of the state Supreme Court.

“We need to have a ruling one way or the other instead of, ‘My county can, yours can’t,'” said state Representative Anna Crook, a Republican from the town of Clovis and one of the state lawmakers participating in the lawsuit in Dona Ana County.

The state’s constitution is non-specific on the issue, referring to marriage simply as a union between two people.

Republican state Senator Bill Sharer argues that New Mexico’s constitutional definition of marriage, which he said is unique among the states, is a century-old construct intended primarily to outlaw polygamy, or plural marriage.

Confining marriage exclusively between men and women went without saying, according to Sharer, who has led the charge against same-sex unions in the state.

Others, including Republican Governor Susana Martinez, have said the issue should be put to voters. Gay rights advocates counter that the courts are the most appropriate forum for deciding civil liberties.

Alex Hanna and his partner, Yon Hudson, were among those who went to court after initially being denied a marriage license in Santa Fe County, before a district judge ordered the county clerk to issue licenses to same-sex couples.

“Obviously we’re very happy the Supreme Court is finally stepping in,” Hanna said. “We’re confident the Supreme Court will uphold the district court rulings and that it will be a state law very soon.”

The justices did not rule at Wednesday’s hearing. Lawyers expect the court to render a decision by year’s end. (Reporting by Zelie Pollon; Editing by Steve Gorman, Cynthia Johnston, Jackie Frank and Gunna Dickson)

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More on Gay Marriage

Undead Teddy Ruxpin and Elmo: Thrift Shop

If Furbies have taught us anything, it’s that felt-covered animatronics are not to be trusted—they are to be feared. Especially when two of your childhood icons are revived as hip-pop-spouting zombies, as they are in this nightmare-inducing cover of the Macklemore and Ryan Lewis hit.

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