Selasa, 07 Oktober 2014

The Trillest Teacher In School

An Analysis Of The Cost Of Raising A Child Like Calvin From 'Calvin And Hobbes', How We Got Screwed By Pumpkin Spice Condoms, Don't Be A Neckbeard, Professors Read Their Own 'Rate My Professor' Reviews, Endeavour And Me, 5% Of Religious Americans Routinely Try To Fool God
The Daily Digg
Tuesday, October 7, 2014
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SHOULD'VE JUST RAISED HOBBES
An Analysis Of The Cost Of Raising A Child Like Calvin From 'Calvin And Hobbes'
pnis.co
In total, Calvin caused an estimated $15,955.50 worth of damage over the duration of the comic strip.
BREAKING CONDOM NEWS
How We Got Screwed By Pumpkin Spice Condoms
digg.com
Like so many great condom tales, it begins with an accident.
STARTUPS WE DIGG SPONSORED
Don't Be A Neckbeard
dollarshaveclub.com
Look, we're not going to ask what you plan on shaving — that's between you and your razor (and probably your significant other). But we are going to ask that you use Dollar Shave Club to get the job done. It's a cut above on the cheap.
'HE IS THE TRILLEST TEACHER IN SCHOOL'
Professors Read Their Own 'Rate My Professor' Reviews
digg.com
Professors at the University of Alabama find out what students think of them, bad grammar and all.
AN AFFAIR TO REMEMBER
Endeavour And Me
medium.com
A quiet farewell with the last space shuttle on the last day before it became a museum piece.
WE'RE PRAYING FOR THEM
5% Of Religious Americans Routinely Try To Fool God
motherjones.com
It seems to us that it would already be difficult enough to keep something from an omnipresent and omnipotent deity.
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FRUITS OF THEIR LABOR
Image: An ultra-Orthodox Jewish man checks an etrog, a lemon-like citrus fruit, for blemishes to determine if is ritually acceptable, before buying it as one of the four items used as a symbol on the Jewish holiday of Sukkot, in Netanya, Israel, Monday, Oct. 6, 2014. The holiday commemorates the biblical story of the Israelites 40 years of wandering in the desert and decorated huts are erected outside religious households as a symbol of temporary shelter.
An ultra-Orthodox Jewish man checks an etrog, a lemon-like citrus fruit, for blemishes to determine if is ritually acceptable, before buying it as one of the four items used as a symbol on the Jewish holiday of Sukkot, in Netanya, Israel, Monday, Oct. 6, 2014. The holiday commemorates the biblical story of the Israelites 40 years of wandering in the desert and decorated huts are erected outside religious households as a symbol of temporary shelter. Credit: AP Photo/Oded Balilty
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