Californians are set to decide whether to make recreational marijuana use legal, as other Western states have done, after the California Secretar <a href=https://www.stanleymugs.us>stanley cup</a> y of States office said on Tuesday the issue could be put to voters in the November ballot. The measure would also establish a system to license, regulate and tax sales of marijuana, while allowing city governments to exercise local control over or disallow commercial distribution within their borders. Reuters/Representative Photo The proposed so-called Adult Use of Marijuana Act, which is supported by Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom among others, would allow people aged 21 and older to possess as much as an ounce of marijuana for private recreational use and permit personal cultivation of as many as six marijuana plants. Today marks a fresh start for California, as we prepare to replace the costly, harmful and ineffective system of prohibition with a safe, legal and responsible adult-use marijuana system that gets it right and completely pays for itself, initiative spokesman Jason Kinney said in a statement. The measure would also establish a system to license, regulate and tax sales of marijuana, while allowing city governments to exercise local control over or disallow commercial distribution within their borders. The initiative required just over 402,000 valid signatures to qualify for the <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.it>stanley cup</a> ballot and exceeded that number on Tuesday, the Secretary of States office said. Secretary Al <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.cz>stanley cup</a> ex Padilla is slated to certify t Edgt Students target foreign-named varsities in Nepal
There is fresh evidence pointing to life on Mars in the distant past, US scientists claim. HT Image In two new studies, the <a href=https://www.adidassamba.com.de>adidas samba</a> scientists report that Mars once hosted vast lakes, flowing rivers and a variety of other wet environments that had the potential to support life . They reached this conclusion on the basis of data from the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars CRISM and two other instruments on board NASA s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter MRO . One study, published in Thursday s issue of the international science journal Nature, shows that vast regions of the ancient highlands of Mars, which cover about half the planet, contain clay minerals that can form only in the presence of water. Volcanic lavas buried the clay-rich regions during subsequent drier periods of the <a href=https://www.stanleycups.ro>stanley cup</a> planet s history, but impact craters later exposed them at thousands of locations across the planet. The clay-like minerals, called phyllosilicates, preserve a record of the interaction of water with rocks dating back to the earliest years of the solar system about 4.6 billion to 3.8 billion years ago whe <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.ro>stanley cup</a> n Earth, the moon and Mars sustained a cosmic bombardment by comets and asteroids. Rocks of this age have largely been destroyed on Earth but the phyllosilicate-containing rocks on Mars preserve a unique record of liquid water environments - possibly suitable for life - in the early solar system , a statement by the Johns Hopkins University said, quoting its scientists wh