The Commercial Appeal

Owner of killer dogs sues neighbors

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A Texas woman whose four pit bulls entered her neighbors’ yard through a hole in the fence and killed their 10-year-old beagle is suing them for $1 million.

Emerald White says in her lawsuit filed this week in Galveston County district court that she was “seriously injured” on Oct. 27 trying to stop the attack and retrieve her dogs. She says she suffered “multiple serious bite and scratchtyp­e injuries” and accuses her neighbors of failing to securely confine and restrict their dog, Bailey.

The pioneering lander Philae completed its primary mission of exploring the comet’s surface and returned plenty of data before depleted batteries forced it to go silent, the European Space Agency said Saturday.

“All of our instrument­s could be operated and now it’s time to see what we got,” ESA’s blog quoted lander manager Stephan Ulamec as saying.

Since landing Wednesday on comet 67P/Churyumov- Gerasimenk­o some 311 million miles away, the lander has performed a series of scientific tests and sent reams of data, including photos, back to Earth.

In addition, the lander was lifted on Friday by about 1.5 inches and rotated about 35 degrees in an effort to pull it out of a shadow so that solar panels could recharge the depleted batteries, ESA’s blog said.

ESA spokesman Bernard von Weyhe on Saturday confirmed the lander’s difficult rotation operation. It’s still unclear whether it succeeded in putting the solar panels out of the shade.

Even if the lander was rotated successful­ly and is able to recharge its batteries with sunlight, it may take weeks or months until it will send out new signals. Regular checks for signals will continue.

ESA’s mission control center in Darmstadt, Germany, received the last signals from Philae on Saturday morning.

Before the signal died, the lander returned all of its housekeepi­ng data as well as scientific data of its experiment­s on the surface — which means it completed the measures as planned, the ESA blog said.

During a scheduled listening effort on Saturday, ESA received no signals from Philae, ESA’s mission chief Paolo Ferri said.

“We don’t know if the charge will ever be high enough to operate the lander again,” Ferri said. “It is highly unlikely that we will establish any kind of communicat­ion any time soon.”

Now it’s up to ESA’s team of scientists to evaluate the data and find out whether the experiment­s were successful — especially a complex operation Friday in which the lander was given commands to drill a 10-inch hole into the comet and pull out a sample for analysis.

“We know that all the movements of the operation were performed and all the data was sent down” to ESA, Ferri said Saturday. “However, at this point we do not even know if it really succeeded and if it (the drill) even touched the ground during the drilling operation.”

Material beneath the surface of the comet has remained almost unchanged for 4.5 billion years, so the samples would be a cosmic time capsule that scientists are eager to study.

Scientists hope the $1.6 billion project will help answer questions about the origins of the universe and life on Earth.

One of the things scientists are most excited about is the possibilit­y that the mission might help confirm that comets brought the building blocks of life — organic matter and water — to Earth.

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