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A Home Security Cam Captured A Team Of Construction Workers Catching A Thief

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A Home Security Cam Captured A Team Of Construction Workers Catching A Thief

steampunk: Word of the day for March 26, 2017

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Word of the day is steampunk : (uncountable, neologism) A subgenre of speculative science fiction set in an anachronistic 19th-century society. (countable) A writer of steampunk fiction. (countable, cosplay) A person cosplaying as a steampunk character. American science fiction and horror author K. W. Jeter, who coined the word, was born on this day in 1950.

Canadians Adopted Refugee Families for a Year — Then Came ‘Month 13’

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Canadians Adopted Refugee Families for a Year — Then Came ‘Month 13’ Everyday Canadians spent a year embracing Syrians in the world’s most personal resettlement program. Letting them go might be the biggest test yet.

Canadians Adopted Refugee Families for a Year — Then Came ‘Month 13’

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Canadians Adopted Refugee Families for a Year — Then Came ‘Month 13’

A Home Security Cam Captured A Team Of Construction Workers Catching A Thief

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A Home Security Cam Captured A Team Of Construction Workers Catching A Thief The tool thief tried to make a getaway when one of the workers jumped on the hood of a car. Make sure you watch until the very end of the video to see ultimate karmic conclusion. March 25, 2017 at 04:07PM

steampunk: Word of the day for March 26, 2017

steampunk , n : (uncountable, neologism) A subgenre of speculative science fiction set in an anachronistic 19th-century society. (countable) A writer of steampunk fiction. (countable, cosplay) A person cosplaying as a steampunk character. American science fiction and horror author K. W. Jeter, who coined the word, was born on this day in 1950.

Article of the day for March 26, 2017

The Article of the day for March 26, 2017 is Interstate 8 . Interstate 8 (I-8) is an Interstate Highway in the southwestern United States. From the southern edge of Mission Bay in San Diego, California, it runs eastward across the Cuyamaca Mountains and the Imperial Valley. Crossing the Colorado River into Arizona, it continues through the city of Yuma across the Sonoran Desert, to the junction with I-10, between Phoenix and Tucson. The first route over the Cuyamaca Mountains was dedicated in 1912, and a plank road served as the first road across the Imperial Valley to Yuma; east of there, the Gila Trail continued east to Gila Bend. Several controversies erupted during I-8's construction process; questionable labor practices in Imperial County led to the federal conviction of mobster Jimmy Fratianno, and the Arizona government was found to have mismanaged financial resources by a U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee. The route was completed in 1975 through California, and by...