Mon, Jun 29, 2009 - Page 7 News List

World News Quick Take

AGENCIES

■UNITED STATES

Under-bite helps dog win title

A prominent under-bite, scrunched face and floppy ears are the hallmarks of a winner. The winner of the World’s Ugliest Dog contest, that is. Pabst, a boxer-mix rescued from a shelter by Miles Egstad of Citrus Heights, California, won the annual contest on Friday at the Sonoma-Marin Fair in Northern California. Pabst’s owner took home US$1,600 in prize money, pet supplies and a modeling contract with House of Dog.

■ARGENTINA

Soldiers face torture charges

Some 70 Argentine soldiers are to be charged in 80 cases of torture committed by the country’s army on its own ranks during the Falklands War against Britain, a prosecutor said on Saturday. A federal appeals court in the of Comodoro Rivadavia upheld a decision by a trial court that the alleged torture are considered crimes against humanity and can therefore not be denied, the source said. “We have been fighting for 27 years for this to become known, we are really satisfied,” said Eduardo Alonso, president of the Center for Falkland Islands Veterans at La Plata, 60km south of the capital Buenos Aires. “Next week, more soldiers will report about abuses they have suffered.” He cited several types of torture, including simulated executions and death by starvation.

■UNITED STATES

New satellite heads to orbit

A sophisticated new weather satellite is on its way to orbit. An unmanned rocket carrying the nation’s latest Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite blasted off from Cape Canaveral on Saturday. The satellite is headed to a 35,400km high orbit where it will undergo six months of testing. It will circle Earth as a spare and be called into service when needed. The GOES satellite network tracks hurricanes and tornadoes, and monitors solar flares. NASA manages the development and launch of GOES satellites for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The one launched on Saturday, GOES O, will be renamed GOES 14 once it reaches its proper orbit in a week-and-a-half.

■UNITED STATES

Substance kills gulls

Hundreds of gulls were killed or maimed in Cleveland after what investigators believe was cooking oil spewed from a sewer pipe into the Cuyahoga River. Investigators said on Friday that several hundred liters of the substance killed or disabled hundreds of gulls near the Kingsbury Run tributary. Most of them were just downstream from the site where environmentalists last week celebrated the river’s comeback since floating oil and debris caught fire on June 22, 1969.

■UNITED STATES

Kittens hearten biologists

The discovery of 10 lynx kittens this spring marks the first newborns documented in Colorado since 2006, heartening biologists overseeing restoration of the mountain feline. The tuft-eared cats with big, padded feet were native to Colorado, but were wiped out by the early 1970s by logging, trapping, poisoning and development. Biologists found no kittens the past two years, possibly partly because of a drop in the number of snowshoe hares, the cats’ main food source. This year, seven male and three female kittens were found in five dens.

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