Earth Changes
The officers were forced to shoot the dogs after earlier attempts to scare them off using batons and a water hose had failed.
A mobile phone video of the brutal attack shows one man - believed to be the owner - desperately trying to restrain the pit bulls.
The clip then shows officers using batons in a vain attempt to stop the bloody mauling - which lasted for nearly five minutes.
Officers try clubbing the dogs repeatedly in an attempt to stop the attack before drawing their weapons and shooting them at point blank range.
"What likely happened here is this fin whale was part of a group, and it got struck outside the Strait of Juan de Fuca, and then that ship just pushed all the way into Commencement Bay in Tacoma," said Michael Harris.
Harris is the former executive director of the Pacific Whale Watch Association and has studied whales most of his life. He's not sure what to make of this latest fin whale. He says commercial hunters nearly wiped out fin whales, along with humpback, until it was banned in 1966. Since then, fins have been making a comeback on the coast.
"We've seen large congregations of fin whales pretty regularly outside the Strait of Juan de Fuca, but they're starting to work their way in more and more," said Harris.
According to information, two persons, Krushna Chandra Raul (50) and Debraj Behera (24), were killed and three others sustained injuries in Ichhapur village under Cuttack district's Athagarh police station. All these persons were in crop fields and sitting under a tree when lightning struck them. The three injured have been shifted to the SCB MCH in Cuttack. Similarly, one person was killed in a village in Kendrapada district.
Besides, three persons were killed and two others injured after explosives for stone blasting went off accidentally in lightning strike in Ganjam district.

Dirt rolls down the clay cliffs across from Canadian Tire during a May 1, 2017 earthquake in Whitehorse.
Alaska Earthquake Center seismologist Natalia Ruppert said Alaska typically experiences a "background level" of 35,000 earthquakes each year, plus any significant earthquakes and their aftershocks. The center typically sees about 3,000 quakes statewide in a month — but May has been well ahead of that pace, Ruppert said.
"Right now, with the aftershocks, we recorded close to the monthly average in just the first 10 days," Ruppert said.
The catalog of May temblors as of Wednesday included at least three larger than a 6, seven larger than a 5 and 50 larger than a 4 on the Richter scale, according to an overview compiled by the earthquake center's Ian Dickson.
The month began with a 6.2 quake and a 6.3 aftershock on May 1 under the Haines Highway in Canada that rattled much of Southcentral Alaska, causing significant damage in the Canadian city of Whitehorse. State seismologist Michael West said the quake struck along the Denali fault line, which extends from Southeast Alaska through Canada into the Alaska Range.
More than 800 aftershocks had been detected from the Southeast quake by Wednesday, Dickson wrote. The state also saw a 5.2 quake 10 miles north of Ninilchik on May 6 that was felt in Valdez and Palmer, as well as a 3.8 the following day northeast of the Fort Knox gold mine that was felt in Fairbanks.
The Negribreen glacier on Norway's Spitsbergen island has seen a dramatic increase in ice surface speed over the past year with the pace jumping from one meter a day to a staggering 13 meters every 24 hours.
This stunning surge in speed has been captured by the European Space Agency's (ESA) Sentinel-1 satellites which are providing round the clock radar imaging of land and ocean for the space agency's Copernicus program.
"When a glacier 'surges' a large amount of ice flows to the end in an unusually short time," the ESA explain.
The reasons behind these surges are not fully understood, but they are believed to be caused by increases in the amount of heat or water in the lowest layers of the glaciers.
Comment: Meanwhile in Antarctica, scientists have discovered a huge crack spreading across an ice shelf and thousands of blue lakes of melt water have formed on the surface of glaciers over the past decade. Yet a recent study indicates that the Antarctic peninsula has actually been cooling not warming. See also:
Antarctica, is it melting or not? Man-made global warming can't explain this climate paradox
Hongkongers witnessed something special in the sky just after midday on Friday, as a "halo" appeared around the sun.
The phenomenon was reported in districts to the east of Hong Kong Island, such as Sai Wan Ho, Tai Koo and Shau Kei Wan.
As people looked up, the sun appeared surrounded by a halo or bubble. The effect was down to an optical phenomenon, as temperatures hit 31 degrees Celsius.
According to the Observatory's website, it is caused by sunlight being scattered from droplets of water in clouds or fog, set against the nearly white background of the sky.
Thundershowers were continuing over some parts of Hatta on Thursday afternoon, according to the National Centre for Meteorology and Seismology.
Fujairah police urged motorist to exercise extra caution while driving on the roads and to abide by traffic rules.
Police patrols have been deployed on the roads to regulate traffic as rainwater filled many interior roads and highways.
Shaikh Khalifa Road in Fujairah witnessed heavy rain and hail causing damage to several cars.
The rotten carcass has attracted a crowd eager to debate what the mysterious carcass is - with squid and whale emerging as the front runners.
One brave man got close enough to the remains to film. Patasiwa Kumbang Amalatu posted to Facebook that he believes the remains are those of a massive whale.
The black dog , named Tiger, attacked his owner, by locking its jaws around his body and choked him to death.
Mani Ram, a farm caretaker, had bought the dog to guard his home, but as he went to untie him, Tiger turned and violently ran at him.
According to eye witnesses the dog didn't stop there and went on to "maul his face and feast on the flesh from his hands and chest for more than an hour".
This is known as a solar halo or 22° halo. It occurs when you have a sunny day with a very thin layer of cirrus clouds overhead. Those cirrus clouds are made of ice. When the sun goes through the ice, the sunlight is refracted (bent) and can sometimes create either sun dogs or a 22° halo. This can also occur around the moon.














Comment: A couple of days later pit bull terriers were involved in another nasty incident, this time in Oklahoma: Two Tulsa Children Taken To Hospital After Dog Attack