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Monday 17 November 2014

The Elvis Coverup

The Elvis Presley Coverup: What America Didn't Hear About The Death Of The King, Husband Secretly Tapes Wife's Awesome Rendition Of Salt N' Pepa's 'None Of Your Business', Don't You Hate Drugstores?, What You Missed This Weekend, The Invention Of The Jewish Nose, Harvard Students Fail A Literacy Test Louisiana Used To Suppress The Black Vote In 1964
The Daily Digg
Monday, November 17, 2014
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HE HASN'T LEFT THE BUILDING
The Elvis Presley Coverup: What America Didn't Hear About The Death Of The King
salon.com
After Presley's death, an effort was launched to protect the reputation of the hospital that had treated him.
THE PERFECT SONG CHOICE
Husband Secretly Tapes Wife's Awesome Rendition Of Salt N' Pepa's 'None Of Your Business'
digg.com
You think you're safe in your car, jamming out to your favorite Salt N' Pepa tune. Then you notice that your husband has been taping you all along and all trust is gone.
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STARTUPS WE DIGG
Don't You Hate Drugstores?
dollarshaveclub.com
Of course you do. They're crowded, understocked, and you can never find the things you want. Do yourself a favor and skip the hassle with Dollar Shave Club. Shave Time, Shave Money.
DIGG PICKS
What You Missed This Weekend
digg.com
This weekend, James Franco let you control him for an hour, Bill Cosby's lawyer issued a statement and the Philae probe shut down.
WE SMELL A STEREOTYPE
The Invention Of The Jewish Nose
nybooks.com
Failure to be properly moved by portrayals of Christ's affliction was identified with "Jewish" hard-hearted ways of looking. In this and many other images, then, the Jew's prominent nose serves primarily to draw attention to the angle of his head, turned ostentatiously away from the sight of Christ, and so links the Jew's misbegotten flesh to his misdirected gaze.
WRITE BACKWARDS FORWARDS
Harvard Students Fail A Literacy Test Louisiana Used To Suppress The Black Vote In 1964
digg.com
From literacy tests to voter ID laws, the right to vote remains threatened. Watch as Harvard students attempt to pass the 1964 Louisiana literacy test as part of a project that raises awareness about barriers to voting.
Read more on Digg.com →
CHECKERED PAST, PERSONIFIED
Image: Matt Gone, known as
Matt Gone, known as "Checkered Man," poses for a photo at a during the VIII International Tattoo Artist Convention in Bogota, Colombia, Saturday, Nov. 15, 2014. Credit: AP Photo/Fernando Vergara
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