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Showing posts from August 20, 2016

Picture of the day for August 21, 2016

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Picture of the day on August 21, 2016: Gonates Cave at the bay of Plakias, Crete. The Gonates caves and tunnels were dug by the German army during the occupation of Crete in World War II.

victory lap: Word of the day for August 21, 2016

victory lap , n : (sports) An extra lap of the race track taken after the conclusion of a race. (US, education, slang) One or more years of study beyond the traditional four taken to complete one's undergraduate degree. On today, the last day of the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, the marathon event takes place.

Popular Mechanics is guest curating Digg today. Check out their picks.

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Popular Mechanics is guest curating Digg today. Check out their picks. Digg Editions gets you the most out of the internet with top news and the most interesting stories handpicked by our editors

victory lap: Word of the day for August 21, 2016

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Word of the day is victory lap : (sports) An extra lap of the race track taken after the conclusion of a race. (US, education, slang) One or more years of study beyond the traditional four taken to complete one's undergraduate degree. On today, the last day of the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, the marathon event takes place.

Picture of the day for August 21, 2016

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Gonates Cave at the bay of Plakias, Crete. The Gonates caves and tunnels were dug by the German army during the occupation of Crete in World War II..

Article of the day for August 21, 2016

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Article of the day is United States v. Kagama. Check it out: http://ift.tt/1oWeX6W

Popular Mechanics is guest curating Digg today. Check out their picks.

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Popular Mechanics is guest curating Digg today. Check out their picks.

Article of the day for August 21, 2016

The Article of the day for August 21, 2016 is United States v. Kagama . United States v. Kagama was a United States Supreme Court case that upheld the constitutionality of the Major Crimes Act of 1885, which gave jurisdiction to the federal courts in certain cases involving Native Americans. Kagama, a Yurok, was accused of murdering another Yurok on an Indian reservation. His case was selected by the Department of Justice as a test case for the Act. The court opinion, authored by Justice Samuel Freeman Miller (pictured), confirmed the authority of Congress over Indian affairs. Plenary power over Indian tribes, supposedly granted to the U.S. Congress by the Commerce Clause of the Constitution, was not deemed necessary to reach the decision; instead, the Court found the power in the tribe's status as a dependent domestic nation. In the year following the decision, Congress passed the Dawes Act, intended to force assimilation and weaken tribal sovereignty. The case has been criticize