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         New Brunswick Culture:     more books (17)
  1. Rebels & Royalists : The Live and Material Culture of New Brunswick's Early English-Speaking Settlers 1758 - 1783
  2. Reflections of Old Portugal in Old Town New Brunswick - A Taste of Portuguese Culture and Cuisine
  3. Folksongs from Southern New Brunswick (Publications in folk culture) by Helen Creighton, 1971
  4. Coming of Age in New Jersey: College and American Culture by Michael Moffatt, 1989-03-01
  5. Tiny Abegweit hosts popular powwow. (All My Relations).(Abegweit First Nation on Lennox Island (PEI) host 3rd annual powwow): An article from: Wind Speaker by Heather Andrews Miller, 2003-06-01
  6. The oyster population of the public fishing area, Caraquet Bay, New Brunswick (Technical report - Fisheries and Marine Service) by R. E Lavoie, 1977
  7. Discussion on the role of the Salmon Genetics Research Program (SGRP) in the breeding of stocks for the cage culture industry (SGRP technical report) by G. W Friars, 1985
  8. Use of geothermal seawater in salmon culture (SGRP technical report) by J. M Anderson, 1986
  9. Use of photoperiod manipulation to stimulate growth of salmon parr (SGRP technical report) by J. M Anderson, 1986
  10. Off Limits: Rutgers University and the Avant-Garde, 1957-1963 by Joseph Jacobs, Jackson Lears, et all 1999-03
  11. Jamelie, Jamelie: A Life Story by Margaret Shamy Angelo, 2002-02-01
  12. Legal methods for promoting local salmon farming operations in Down East Maine by Tim Eichenberg, 1992
  13. Language of Journalism, Volume One: Newspaper Culture. by Melvin J. Lasky, 2000
  14. Sold separately : children and parents in consumer culture / Ellen Seiter by Ellen (1957-) Seiter, 1993

101. Fiddleheads Are In: New Brunswick's Rivers Produce A Wild Spring Harvest - Barry
Indeed, the fiddlehead perhaps is a more common symbol in folk and popular culturethan the violet (new brunswick s official flower) or even the maple leaf.
http://www.worldandi.com/specialreport/1993/May/Sa10923.htm
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Fiddleheads Are In: New Brunswick's Rivers Produce a Wild Spring Harvest
Article # : Section : CULTURE Issue Date : 2,836 Words Author : Barry Parkinson
For a few weeks every year, usually in May, the riverbanks and mud flats of New Brunswick are the setting for an ancient spring ritual. "Fiddleheads" search for the tender green shoots of the ostrich fern, the first indigenous vegetable to appear in the province. The shoots (called "fiddleheads" because they resemble the tuning end of fiddle) have been harvested and celebrated for centuries. And why not? In a province where winter temperatures plunge to minus thirty degrees Celsius and snow drifts two meters high, the fiddlehead is a fine harbinger of the arrival of spring and a new season.
The ostrich fern grows throughout much of North America and in temperate zones throughout the Northern Hemisphere. But oddly, New Brunswickers are the only people who have wholeheartedly adopted the fiddlehead as a cultural and economic symbol. In a world of increasing homogeneity, the fiddleheadNew Brunswick's answer to the trufflespeaks to a sense of regional identity and pride. In the words of one New Brunswicker, "You're not a Maritimer till you've eaten a fiddlehead!"

102. Culture And Language Studies -- Faculty Of Arts

http://www.unbf.ca/arts/departments/culture.html

103. Canadian Consumer Information Gateway - What's New
Lists recent content additions to our site and links you to the What's new sites of our partners.
http://consumerinformation.ca/cgi-bin/whatsnew.cgi?Language=E&Province=113

104. BrowseJobs
Search Results. Posting , Date Posted, Title, View Job. 49179, Apr 27,Supervising Producer (French programming RCJB135W, Click Here for Details.
http://www.careerowl.ca/Job Seekers/BrowseJobs.aspx?loclvl=2&ren=NB&occcat=2&

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