Canada Provinces
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Canada’s Atlantic Provinces Adventure Guide $12.99 Covering Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, Newfoundland, Southern Labrador and Cape Breton Island, this travel guide to the Atlantic Provinces is the most comprehensive on the market. It takes in everything, from the Fundy Coast and the Acadian Peninsula to the fjords of Gros Morne and Lord Baltimore's Lost Colony. Hiking, trout and salmon fishing, skiing, snowmobiling, cycling, kayaking, exploring, puffin spotting ? discover all these adventures and more in a world of pristine waters, rugged slopes, breathtaking seascapes, sophisticated cities, historic towns and remote wilderness areas. The book also offers details on the local wildlife, including moose, caribou, bears, seals and whales. Complete restaurant and hotel information. Photos and maps. "In planning a trip to Nova Scotia (somewhere I have never been) I used this book extensively. We enjoy hiking, kayaking and general sight-seeing. This book not only provided information on outdoor activities but also on lodging, dining and driving as well as the history of the areas in Nova Scotia. It provides a wealth of information and made our stay much more enjoyable than if we just went there not knowing anything. We brought it along and it was a very important reference for us as we toured the province. I highly recommend it. After reading several travel books, this was the best one and the only one we took on our trip." — DM Dugan. "This book is excellent. What I particularly liked was that it mentioned small walks that can be taken in the areas that we visited, as well as archeological sites and wildlife viewing areas, all in my areas of interest." — Sheila Ferrari. "We love eastern Canada and have traveled there many times. There are parts described in this books that we have not seen and would love to see. " — R. Satelmajer |
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Canada $94 Canada’s energy sector faces a number of specific policy challenges. Each of them is tackled in this report, which provides policy recommendations. The country’s constitution limits federal government responsibilities in such a way that to reach national energy policy goals, a process of intensive dialogue and consultation between the federal government and the provinces is indispensable. |
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Harp Seal on the Ice in the Gulf of St Lawrence, Maritime Provinces, Canada $19.99 Harp Seal on the Ice in the Gulf of St Lawrence, Maritime Provinces, Canada Photographic Print by Rolf Hicker. Product size approximately 9 x 12 inches. Available at Art.com. Embrace your Space – your source for high quality fine art posters and prints. |
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J.A. Henckels International Provence 45-Piece Stainless-Steel Flatware Set, Service for 8 $79.95 The Provence flatware set from Henckels International Flatware Collection will add elegance to your table%2E The classic%2C timeless European design will complement any decor%2E The flatware is made from heavy gauge 18%2F10 stainless steel for superior strength and duribility%2E The continental size is larger than traditional flatware%2C adding to the elegance and sophistication of the flatware%2E… |
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WMF Provence Plus 9-Piece Cookware Set $179.95 07.2105.6380 Features: -18/10 Stainless Steel.-TransTherm Base.-Induction Safe.-Dishwasher Safe…. |
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Manitoba Canada Province Flag BBQ Barbeque Apron with 2 Pockets $19.99 … |
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Under Great White Northern Lights (CD & DVD) Under Great White Northern Lights features a CD of the first-ever live album from The White Stripes and a DVD of the film by Emmett Malloy. Disc 1: The Film “In Under Great White Northern Lights, Emmett Malloy has captured and crafted a magical, compelling, and perfectly musical document. Having never played extensively in Canada, in 2007 in support of their album Icky Thump, The White Stripes em… |
Mississauga Realty
Thanks to a remarkably stable property market, homes in Mississauga and surrounding cities including Burlington, Georgetown, Oakville and Toronto are in popular demand.
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Everyone Says No: Canadian Public Service Broadcasting and the Failure of Translation During Canada's Constitutional Crisis. $116.81 New - Between 1987 and 1992, Canadian leaders negotiated two agreements, the Meech Lake and Charlottetown accords, intended to end Canada's longstanding constitutional impasse by meeting Quebec's conditions for adhesion to the constitution. These accords would have redefined the relationships between Francophone Quebec, Canada's nine Anglophone provinces, the federal government in Ottawa, and Canada's First Nations. Both accords failed: Meech Lake died when Manitoba's and Newfoundland's legislat |
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''Everyone says no'': Canadian public service broadcasting and the failure of translation during Canada's constitutional crisis. $49.99 Between 1987 and 1992, Canadian leaders negotiated two agreements, the Meech Lake and Charlottetown accords, intended to end Canada's longstanding constitutional impasse by meeting Quebec's conditions for adhesion to the constitution. These accords would have redefined the relationships between Francophone Quebec, Canada's nine Anglophone provinces, the federal government in Ottawa, and Canada's First Nations. Both accords failed: Meech Lake died when Manitoba's and Newfoundland's legislatures refused to bring it to a vote in 1990, while Charlottetown was defeated in a national referendum in 1992.;The news departments of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's English- and French-language television networks (the CBC and Radio-Canada) faced the task of explaining not only the political and legal implications of the complex accords but also how different linguistic and cultural communities interpreted them. Two forms of translation played central roles in their coverage: linguistic translation, when journalists speaking one language quoted a politician speaking another, and cultural translation, when journalists interpreted Canada's diverse communities for viewers. In both cases, translation was characterized by a paradox: while it appeared to facilitate communication across linguistic and cultural lines, it instead worked to confirm viewers' preexisting assumptions about each other.;A historically grounded analysis of Canadian broadcasting policy and the Canadian television industry, combined with a statistical and textual analysis of coverage of the accords by the CBC's The National and Radio-Canada's Le Telejournal, reveals several points where translation failed. For instance, political and institutional pressures defeated the corporation's attempts to use its all-news cable networks to deliver subtitled programs to Anglophone and Francophone viewers. Similar pressures shaped the culturally specific techniques journalists used to incorporate translated speech |