Link to: Greene, C. (2024, June 3). "In Mi’kma’ki, fighting to save the hemlock ‘grandmothers’ from a deadly pest: Ninety per cent of the hemlock trees in Nova Scotia could disappear. A Mi’kmaq-led effort is ensuring at least one forest will survive." The Narwhal. https://thenarwhal.ca/nova-scotia-mikmaq-hemlock-forest/
Link to: d'Entremont, Y. (2024, January 25). "Exploring how language and health connect in two Nova Scotia Acadian communities: Is there a thread that connects these two regions?" Halifax Examiner. https://www.halifaxexaminer.ca/francophone-nova-scotia/exploring-how-language-and-health-connect-in-two-nova-scotia-acadian-communities/
... where shipwrecked survivors lived fourteen days in the woods, eating only two potatoes a day (each) and a "little pork got from the wreck" and then finally made their way to Cheticamp, by boat, where French and Indians there helped them out. Source: Jackson's Oxford Journal (Oxford, Oxfordshire, England) · 7 Feb 1818, Sat · Page 4
Downloaded on Feb 10, 2024 Clipping was re-printed with the express permission of Newspapers.com. Monday, February 26th 2024 3pm to 5pm
Vous êtes invités à l'ouverture officielle du Centre acadien, qui aura lieu le lundi 26 février 2024 de 15h à 17h au Centre acadien dans l'édifice de la Bibliothèque Louis-R.-Comeau au campus de Pointe-de-l'Église. Portes ouvertes à partir de 10h. Au plaisir de vous voir! You are invited to the official opening of the Acadian Center, which will take place on Monday, February 26, 2024 from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the Acadian Center in the Louis-R.-Comeau Library building on the Pointe-de-l'Église campus . Doors open from 10 a.m. Hope to see you! https://www.usainteanne.ca/evenements/communaute/ouverture-du-centre-acadien As advertised in the Clare Shopper, December 14, 2023.
Call 902-746-3652 or email [email protected] to apply. |
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