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<title>Travel Blogs from  North America , United States , North Dakota , Rugby </title>
<link>http://www.travelblog.org/North-America/United-States/North-Dakota/Rugby/</link>
<description>Travel adventures in journals and photos from  North America , United States , North Dakota , Rugby </description>
<language>en-us</language>
<pubDate>Tue, 14 Oct 2008 09:15:44 BST</pubDate>
<lastBuildDate>Tue, 14 Oct 2008 09:15:44 BST</lastBuildDate><item>
                    <title>The Geographic Center of North America</title>
                    <description>US2This has been a good road. It apparently has been greatly improved since the description in ldquoBlue Highwaysrdquo copyright 1982 by William Least Heat Moon. He states ldquoMontanans call U.S. 2 paralleling the Canadian border all the way to Lake Huron the Highline. The most desolate of the great eastwest routes it was two lanes of patched broken rutted mindnumbing pavement </description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org//North-America/United-States/North-Dakota/Rugby/blog-210241.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>The Center of North America</title>
                    <description>Rugby was another stop on my way to the International Peace Garden.  A stone monument in Rugby North Dakota marks the geographical center of North America the world's fourth largest continent.  The location was marked in January 1931 by a US Geological Survey.  A clever mileage chart tells you how far away Mexico and some other locations are. Also located in Rugby is the Northern Lights Tower. </description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org//North-America/United-States/North-Dakota/Rugby/blog-196058.html</link>
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