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253 in all provinces except British Columbia, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia where there are 254 working days in 2012 (source www.workingdays.ca )
In Nova scotia Canada
west is the direction i think... check the map on this site www.needtoknowmap.ca if it does not work go to this site, www.imap.com if that does not work go to google for a map search up what direction would i go to get from Cancun-Mexico-Ameria to Nova Scotia Canada.
A restaurant in Nova Scotia is allowed to hire employees as young as 14 years old. The restaurant must, however, make sure that the employee is not operating cooking equipment and is provided with adequate safety training.
If you live in Nova Scotia, you can get a lab technician certification from Medmira labs. All it requires is several hours of part time work in the production lines and $300.
William Bernard Ross is known for his work in the field of philosophy of language. He is particularly famous for his contributions to the study of linguistic conventions and the theory of meaning.
If you live in Nova Scotia, you can get a lab technician certification from Medmira labs. All it requires is several hours of part time work in the production lines and $300.
he doesn't..he used to work for the one in east brunswick..he doesnt do that anymore though
This may depend on each location or state to work for Bowlmor, who owns the Brunswick Recreation Centers.
Albert Karvin Anderson was a Norwegian heading to New York for work on another ship. He died, his body was recovered, and is now in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Peggy's Cove is popular as a very scenic tourism location, calendar photo, and for the SwissAir 111 crash off shore there in 1998. However Nova Scotia has much more than that to be famous for - to name just a few: Joe Howe, the father of representative government in North America; Sidney Crosby, the final goal scorer at the 2010 Olympics Gold Medal hockey game; the highest daily tidal change in the world in the Bay of Fundy - up to 50'; Dalhousie University in Halifax; Alexander Graham Bell did much of his work in Cape Breton, NS , most famously inventing the telephone but also for organizing the first powered flight in the British Empire; Samuel Cunard ran his huge steamship line from Nova Scotia; many of the recovered bodies from the Titanic are buried in Nova Scotia; Halifax Harbour and the adjoining Bedford Basin was the staging area for all trans-Atlantic convoys of troops and supplies for both the WWI and WWII effort; it was also the site of the Halifax Explosion during WWI with remnants still visible; Stanfield's Knitting Mills in Truro has supplied long-johns (and other garments) to Canadians for decades; Nova Scotia had the first province-wide, all public safety agency, two-way radio system in North America; and perhaps the most visible famous Nova Scotian is the schooner Bluenose which appears on the obverse of the Canadian dime and has been there for years - and she still sails every summer between Halifax and her home in Lunenburg.
dick and fries