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Robert Morris University in Moon Township is a private college that has worked for some 90 years to develop programs for a student body that now numbers about 4,000
By Lima | Published 1/7/2008
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Every college has it's easy courses, Robert Morris University is no different.
By Jennifer Weiss | Published 8/5/2007
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Colleges always have places to go a study, you gotta find them.
By Jennifer Weiss | Published 8/10/2007
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How does RMU measure up to other Universities
By Jennifer Weiss | Published 10/19/2006
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Indoors and out, there are lots of people in Pennsylvania who enjoy ice skating. Here are some of the best ice skating spots in Pennsylvania for area enthusiasts to enjoy.
By Lima | Published 1/7/2008
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There's nothing quite like breaking bread while discussing tax payer dollars early in the morning, but several local businesses took advantage of the opportunity to have breakfast with a few of Pennsylvania's top politicians on Sept. 7.
By Dana Hackley | Published 9/11/2007
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How many of us walk through the doors that are open to us?
By Jennifer Weiss | Published 6/28/2007
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Is RMU for you
By Mark Johnson | Published 6/19/2007
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Todays advertisements have a negative effect on young women.
By Jennifer Weiss | Published 12/22/2006
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If it is true that great men are borne out of adverse conditions, then Robert Hayden is a sterling example.
By Rashel Dan | Published 3/16/2007
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Students at Columbia College and Robert Morris began the school year with their dormitory laundry room smelling of mildew and mold.
By Lourdes G. Vazquez | Published 12/15/2006
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The world as MG enthusiasts know it today would not be the same if it was not for a man named William Richard Morris, later Lord Nuffield. MG, as almost everyone knows, stands for Morris Garages.
By Cassie Brill | Published 3/20/2006
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The Pennsylvania State University Nittany Lion Icers have consistently traveled to the ACHA Division I National Championships. In the past nine years, they have played in the championship game nine times. Can they rebound from four consecutive second place finishes?
By J Gorman | Published 3/3/2007
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Why did North American rebels resort to privateering upon the beginning of the American Revolution? How effective were they? Did the British see them as pirates and what is the difference between a pirate and a privateer?
By Mike A | Published 2/10/2008
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Tips, techniques, and resources to safeguard yourself while on-line.
By Michael Chesbro | Published 7/9/2007
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Take a look at these schools in Chicago that offer paralegal lessons. Each one has a different degree program, some offer more that one course of paralegal lessons.
By Regina Sass | Published 4/20/2007
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Pull up stakes and move to Pittsburgh, one of the growingest and opportunity-laiden cities in all the U.S. Where to find homes, jobs, recreation, schools, businesses, and many more facts on this giant metropolis.
By Patrick | Published 6/22/2005
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A short essay about the founding of the United States and the necessity of the separation of Church and State.
By Igneousguy | Published 1/8/2008
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Two early explorers of the North American landmass were actually Spanish fortune hunters. DeSoto came in through Florida, Coronado through Western Mexico. Both left stories of amazing exploits.
By Jerry Fenton | Published 10/26/2007
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Gary Krist was born on April 29, 1945 in Pelican, AK to parents that were commercial fishers. In his lifetime he has been known as a kidnapper, auto thief and drug smuggler to name a few things.
By Johnny Waltz | Published 9/12/2007
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Every small town in the South had a Miss Emily. Many still do today. It is as if these poor little ladies are kept, by their towns, almost as evidence that they are still in the South - with no one thinking of them as real people.
By Khaki Scott | Published 9/4/2007
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Studies have found that there are five sensitive areas to a male penis. Ultimately, researchers aim to discover how circumcision affects what a man feels.
By kHong | Published 6/19/2007
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Examination of Romanticism as the adverse reaction to science and the enlightenment using the literature of nineteenth century European writers.
By Carli Guyon | Published 5/16/2007
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Bram Stoker's Dracula is one of the most popular novels of all time, yet many readers are unaware of a striking back story to the classic novel. Homeroticism, attributed to Stoker's unresolved feelings about Oscar Wilde, provides unique insights into the novel.
By Diana Kindron | Published 3/26/2007
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A look at dreams, nightmares and Sigmund Freud.
By Juniper Tree | Published 2/1/2007
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A brief history of the Texas Rangers, focusing on how they began.
By Juniper Tree | Published 1/29/2007
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The Bantu People of South African have a highly developed society.
By Maisah Robinson, Ph.D. | Published 8/7/2006
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The trial of French army captain Alfred Dreyfus remains a pivotal event in European history. Although Dreyfus regained his honor, the political climate in France was a harbinger of things to come in her neighbor to the East (Germany).
By Daniel Pinzow | Published 5/26/2006
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A detailed study of the "court packing" episode of 1936-37 and the development of American judiciary during the Depression/New Deal.
By N. Katers | Published 2/22/2006
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In a word, humankind has been �beached' awaiting atomic inevitability in Stanley Kramer's adaptation of Nevil Shute's On The Beach. A richly allegorical story about man, machine and political fallout in the Atomic age.
By Jason Cangialosi | Published 12/17/2005
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