Auteur Sujet: cant Its tapestry skin keeps it hidden in the brilliant colors of the jungle  (Lu 15 fois)

MethrenRaf

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Lowq E.U.-U.S. Airline Pact In Trouble
 Lawyers for Oklahoma City bombing conspirator Terry Nichols  stanley flask were headed back to federal court Wednesday to ask a judge to throw out their client s conviction and life sentence.   Nichols, 45, was found guilty of conspiracy and eight counts of involuntary manslaughter in the 1995 federal building bombing, which killed 168 people. His lawyers are asking U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch to vacate the conviction and sentence.   Convicted bomber Timothy McVeigh, who was sentenced to death, dropped all appeals in December and is scheduled for execution May 16. About 250 people who were injured or lost relatives in the bombing have ask stanley cup ed to witness his execution.   Nichols  most recent bid for a new trial was rejected in December when a federal appeals court ruled the FBI did not withhold crucial evidence.   This time, his lawyers are arguing the jury wasn t properly instructed on the charge of conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction. In court documents, defense lawyer John M. Richilano argued the conspiracy law is unconstitutional because it allows a judge, instead of a jury, to assess facts that could result in the death penalty.           Prosecutors said the argument is irrelevant because Nichols received  stanley canada a life sentence, which the conspiracy statute allows independently of considerations of the death sentence.                                                                      ponent--type-recirculation .item:nth-child 5          display: none;             inline-re Uvuf Inventor of Etch A Sketch dies in France at 86
 This is a light that never goes out:  an eternal flame, hidden behind a waterfall in Erie county, New York, which is a result of natural gas seeping out from underground rocks.     While gas seeps are extremely common, if the flow concentrates into a macroseep鈥攁 strong concentrated stre stanley bottles am of gas鈥攊t can ignite and  perhaps never go out. This one burns two pounds of gas, most of which is methane, every day, and the flame r stanley mugs eaches eight inches in height. The gas comes from a shale formation about 400 meters below the surface鈥攁 resul vaso stanley t of natural fracking, where tectonic events have shifted underlying rocks and caused the gas to escape. While it would be a shame to eradicate the flame, the researchers who have studied it rightly point out that it could be tapped for gas鈥攚ithout the need to resort to  artificial fracking. [Marine and Petroleum Geolog via New Scientist]                                                        FrackingGeologyScience