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This profile was automatically generated using 5 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 5 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Web References
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1. The NITLE News Volume 4, Number 3, Summer 2005
newsletter.nitle.org/v4_n3_sum - [Cached]Published on: 7/1/2005 Last Visited: 10/3/2006
Patricia McRae, Assistant Professor, Political Science, Muhlenberg College -
2. mcall.com - Dogs are diverse, too — make no bones about it
www.mcall.com/news/local/allen - [Cached]Published on: 1/28/2003 Last Visited: 1/28/2003
Patricia McRae swears that her rare dogs from Russia and Cuba, growing in popularity in the United States, are not now, nor have ever been members of the Canine Communist Party.
McRae, who teaches international relations at Muhlenberg College, was joking, of course, when she insisted "I have two ex-Commie dogs" Saturday at the Lehigh Valley Kennel Club's annual show at the Allentown Fairgrounds.
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McRae's comment was indicative of the lighthearted mood at the "Canine Learning Experience," which concludes today with an All Breeds Match Show in Agricultural Hall.
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"They were not working dogs," McRae explained, "and they almost didn't survive."
Both breeds are on the rebound because breeders like McRae are willing to endure the red tape involved in importing the small, wavy-haired dogs. -
3. Keystone - Division I
www.pnafoundation.org/Contest/ - [Cached]Published on: 11/14/2003 Last Visited: 6/15/2004
When the Super Bowl TV coverage begins Sunday afternoon, Patricia McRae will be admiring the sleek musculature of some fine canines at the dog show at Ag Hall in Allentown.
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Patricia McRae, a political science professor at Muhlenberg College, has it figured out. Football is a "bunch of sweaty testosterone guys banging into one another and hollering. Yeah, it works for me. I think it's pretty misogynist. Football, or any hard contact sport, are sort of martial arts in some way, an outlet for an abundance of energy, aggression and violence."
And McRae's from Texas, where being a football fan is not optional. "I had to leave the state," she says.

