Oblq Author Margaret Atwood is here answering your questions today
 Nearly 100 potential jurors in Scott Peterson s double-murder trial began answering questionnaires Thursday about their views on the death penalty and their opinions on extramarital affairs.The judge started the day by introducing the defendant.  This is Mr. Peterson,  said 
stanley mug  Judge Alfred A. Delucchi as the prospective jurors sat in the courtroom gallery. Hello, good morning,  said Peterson with a slight smile as he stood to greet them.The nearly 30-page questionnaire given to the prospective jurors also includes such questions as whether they read Field and Stream, what did they know about boats, what stickers grace their car bumpers and whether they have lost a child.If convicted, Peterson faces the death penalty, so the questionnaire also asks whether they are comfortable with sentencing a person to death even if the crime is the defendant s first offense. Peterson has no criminal record.        Delucchi said jurors would not be sequestered and warned that those who are selected should not discuss the case. He said the jury would  
stanley cup  be asked to look at some very graphic photographs  during the trial.Jurors will be chosen from a pool drawn from a combination of the county s approximately 327,000 registered voters and about 509,000 licensed drivers, according to the court.Since the trial could last  
stanley cup up to six months some of the jurors claimed financial hardship and were sent home, reports CBS  Chris Lawrence.Authorities allege Peterson, 31, murdered his wife in their Modesto home Drsq Report: Elon Musk Is Next In Line To Connect The Third World
 In part on 
stanley hrnek e of this series, Laurel C. Allen heads into the Peruvian Amazon in search of science. What she finds are big bugs, dragon   blood and pisco sours.     
https://gizmodo/into-the-amazon-boats-breakfast-and-blowguns-1623974867 Through the plane   windows, rivers are suddenly plunging through dense forest, coming in from all corners, doubling back on themselves, curling in impossible directions. The trees go all the way to horizon, darkening from bright green to black as they reach away. The whole landscape seems both deliberately designed and totally out of control. It also seems to pulse with intent 鈥?a stage set for something, on a scale too big to take in. We ;re dropping down into Iquitos, Peru 鈥?the largest city in the world that connects to no roads whatsoever. Located deep in the Amazon basin where three massive rivers meet, you get into  and out of  this place by plane, by boat, or not at all. What   going on: I ;m not usually a group-travel kind of person, but that   what this is and I ;m weirdly okay with it, because science. This trip   being led by famed canopy biologist Meg Lowman of the California Academy of Sciences, a 
stanley becher  cheerful, can-do badass who picked up a slingshot and rope in the  ;70s and became one of the first people to study trees from above instead of below. This is her thirty-first trip to the Am 
botella stanley azon, and by bringing 25 of us with her, she ;ll collect more environmental data in one week tha