"The Work we are going about is this, To dig up Georges-Hill and the waste Ground thereabouts, and to Sow Corn, and to eat our bread together by the sweat of our brows."
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A California style novel. (at Big Chicken Barn Books & Antiques)
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Igor Volsky, Deputy Director of the Center for American Progress Action Fund, spent much of yesterday calling out our lawmakers who claim to have thoughts and prayers for the Orlando victims but accepted money from the NRA. Ted Cruz’s tweet may have been the most hypocritical of all.
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I want to read this.

The Golden Spruce by John Vaillant
“Truly an excellent read, a text that’s rich, and full of Pacific Northwest folklore.”
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“I’ve just done what I damn well wanted to and I made enough money to support myself, and I ain’t afraid of being alone.” —Katharine Hepburn
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A friendly reminder about Cinco de Mayo from Pictoline.
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WATCH: Timothy Olyphant’s Masterclass On Stage Vs. Screen Acting
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24 People Who Should Never Be Allowed To Have Sex
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Harland Sanders left home when he was 13. He once gunned a man down in the street for painting over one of his signs. During the war, he fed the scientists who created the atomic bomb. And then, in his 60s and going by the moniker Colonel Sanders, he began selling fried chicken.
Alan Bellows | Damn Interesting | Mar 2016
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Jim Jim from Art class is almost definitely an evil robut
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Today is the day that the Guinness flows freely, tough brisket is transformed into tender corned beef, and we celebrate the Emerald Isle with humble cabbage. This holy trinity of meat, veg and stout is the communion of St. Patrick’s Day.
But the history of that meal is relatively short, going back mainly to trade and immigration in the 18th and 19th centuries. Want to feast like St. Patrick would have celebrated more than 1,600 years ago?
Feast Like It’s 399: What Would St. Patrick Eat?
Illustration: Katherine Du/NPR
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