D Friday, December 4, 2009 METRO 11 Chocolate lovers Roberta Rowat and Andrea Roche unveil the new Cadbury Dairy Milk Pop Up Art Gallery at 53 Dawson Street, which will open its doors to the public and host a free exhibition of more than 50 works from a competition to design packaging design for Dairy Milk JUST POPPING OUT... Puppycam is top dog on internet A WEBCAM set up to monitor nine police puppies has attracted more than 320,000 hits. Puppy watch has been viewed by internet users as far away as Papua New Guinea, Peru and Iran. The camera was set up by Northumbria Police, in the UK, to show how the litter of five dogs and four bitches are trained. Were delighted its proved so popular, said Chief Insp Andrea Henderson. Man looks at dead bodies to find love A heArtbroken man broke into a mortuary and examined corpses under the mistaken belief that a woman he fancied had died. benjamin barton, from Sussex, pleaded guilty at Southampton Crown Court, Uk, to a charge of criminal damage. barton was placed under a 12-month community supervision order and had to pay 1,000 compensation. Rights boost to rail users rAIL users in europe can claim compensation for lost luggage or delayed journeys under new rights that came into force yesterday. the european Commission said passengers can get a refund of a quarter of their ticket if trains are delayed by between 60 minutes and two hours. they will get half the price back for delays of more than two hours. And passengers can now claim up to 1,285 for each piece of lost baggage. While governments must begin implementing the rights, they could delay their introduction for up to 15 years. Boy blinded in glassing after school rugby gameBy SONyA McCLEANA TEENAGER smashed a glass in the face of an- other schoolboy after a rugby game, leaving him permanently blind in his left eye. The two teenagers were in a large group on a night out during their mid-term break in a city-centre nightclub and many were under 18. There had been an atmosphere of tension as there had been a match that day between the two Dublin schools and there had been fierce rivalry between the two teams. Detective Garda Brian Sheerin told the court the victim went upstairs in the nightclub and noted that a school friend was surrounded by a group of four boys from another school. There were raised voices and general slagging, so the victim turned around to avoid the situation but ended up with a glass smashed in his face. The teenager later told garda the glass broke around the bridge of his nose in between his eyes. The victim could not open his eyes after the im- pact and initially thought this was caused by grit or dirt. He was brought to the Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital and had surgery that night in an attempt to save his eye, but it failed. The attacker was later arrested and admitted he had struck the teenager but claimed he had thrown the glass rather than smashed it in his face. He pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to intentionally or recklessly causing serious harm to the teenager on February 8, 2008. He has no previous convictions. Judge Katherine Delahunt adjourned the case to next March and ordered a probation report after de- scribing the offence as most serious. index.html2.html3.html4.html5.html6.html7.html8.html9.html10.html11.html12.html13.html14.html15.html16.html17.html18.html19.html20.html21.html22.html23.html24.html25.html26.html27.html