Canada | Liberal Party of Canada | Prime Minister of Canada | government | Government of India | Progressive Conservative Party of Canada | Governor General of Canada | local government area | Conservative Party of Canada | Federal government of the United States | church (building) | Government of Canada | Upper Canada | Public school (government funded) | Order of Canada | National Film Board of Canada | Supreme Court of Canada | Church (building) | Government | Canada men's national soccer team | Empire State Building | Air Canada | Canada Reads | Lower Canada | Government of Maharashtra | Trans-Canada Highway | Provinces and territories of Canada | Moncton | New Democratic Party (Canada) | National Ballet of Canada |
Vancouver, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Ottawa, Montreal, and Moncton have been named as hosts of the 2015 Women's World Cup.
Moncton: (506) - 204 227 229 232 233 314 378 380 381 382 383 384 386 387 388 389 588 777 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807 830 850 851 852 853 854 855 856 857 858 859 860 861 862 863 864 866 867 869 870 871 872 874 875 877 878 893 899 961 962 980 988
Assumption Place is an office building in the Canadian Province of New Brunswick in the city of Moncton.
The Atlantic Ballet Theatre of Canada is a professional award winning touring ballet company based in Moncton, New Brunswick.
•
In 2010, dancer Leigh Alderson created a new work for the company for the Grant Thornton Gala held at the Capitiol Theatre, Moncton, NB.
In 1885 the first Canadian lodge was established in Moncton, New Brunswick.
Bruno Thériault (November 25, 1917 in Grande-Anse, New Brunswick - May 14, 2005 in Moncton, New Brunswick) was a blind piano tuner and former regional administrator for the Canadian National Institute for the Blind.
The Moncton Garrison survived into the Cold War and was renamed Canadian Forces Base Moncton (CFB Moncton) in February 1968 following the unification of the Canadian Army, Royal Canadian Navy and Royal Canadian Air Force to create the Canadian Forces.
It is a more recent development of the French language, spurred by exposure to dominant English-language media (radio, television, internet) and increased urbanization to Moncton and contact with the dominant Anglophone community in the area since the 1960s especially.
He studied drama at the Université de Moncton, did some acting with the Théâtre l'Escaouette in Moncton and on the television show Samuel, broadcast on Radio-Canada, the French CBC.
•
He was also awarded the Prix Rideau-Acadie in 2006 and the winner of the competition “Le choix du future” organised by Moncton’s CHOY-FM.
CKCW-FM, a radio station (94.5 FM) licensed to Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada
He was president or director for a number of businesses in the Moncton area, helped found the Central Trust Company Limited and the Petitcodiac Hydro Development Company and also helped establish Moncton radio station CKCW.
“Moncton City Council considered this decision very carefully,” says Moncton Mayor George LeBlanc.
The Government of Canada Building is one of the tallest buildings in Moncton, New Brunswick.
At the 2010 World Junior Championships in Moncton, Canada she placed fourth with her personal record 5705 points, just one point behind Helga Margrét Thorsteinsdóttir.
Budget cuts in 1981 saw the Atlantic service cancelled, however it was restored in 1985 and the Ocean was dropped from Halifax when its eastern terminus was moved west to Moncton.
The federal government itself built the National Transcontinental Railway, a line from Moncton to Winnipeg, passing through the vast and uninhabited hinterland of the Canadian Shield.
The channel covers big events live and also rebroadcasts the main supper-hour bulletins from CBVT Québec City, CBAFT Moncton and CKTV Saguenay.
On January 12, 2008, seven members of a high school basketball team from Bathurst, New Brunswick, Canada and their coach's wife were killed in a highway crash when the 15-seat van they were traveling in collided with a tractor-trailer while returning from a game in Moncton in snowy conditions.
At the 2009 Curling World Championships in Moncton, Canada, Shuster and his team finished in fifth place.
Kiwanis Park is a 3,500 seat (expandable to 7,500) baseball field located in Moncton, New Brunswick.
The National Transcontinental Railway constructed its mainline from Winnipeg to Moncton along the western and southern shores in 1912 - today this line forms the mainline of CN Rail between Halifax and Montreal.
The band's most prominent show to date was in September 2005, when they were an opening act for The Rolling Stones in Moncton, New Brunswick.
He was a general merchant and operated a shipping business at the Bend of Petitcodiac (later Moncton).
The brothers went to Panaccadie, New Brunswick, where a few Acadian families were in hiding.
Moncton Golden Flames - the former name of a defunct professional ice hockey team based in Moncton
Morrigan Press Inc. is a pen and paper roleplaying game publisher headquartered in Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada.
Purchased over a span of 10 years: 31 different Eaton's properties/stores across Canada from Victoria, B.C. to Moncton, N.B. The larger ones included a downtown Vancouver Store, (redeveloped, constructed $100M project downtown Winnipeg catalogue store, redeveloped into $50M retail complex, etc.)
Panago currently has two Customer Contact Centres located in Abbotsford and Burnaby, servicing calls from British Columbia, most of Alberta, Fredericton, Moncton and parts of Ontario.
The economy of New Brunswick was concentrated in the cities of Fredericton, Saint John and Moncton, while the eastern and northern parts of New Brunswick, predominantly Francophone, was relatively poorer as a result of an economy based primarily on entrenched and seasonal commercial fishing and lumber industries.
The trail, along with several Moncton streets, is used annually for Legs For Literacy, a Boston Marathon qualifying race also featuring a half marathon, 10km, and 5km.
With their 2001 victory, the Saint John Flames became the second AHL team based in New Brunswick to win the Calder Cup, the first being the New Brunswick Hawks of Moncton in 1982 against the Binghamton Whalers.
That November saw the ICR complete a new line from Truro to Moncton and by 1876 the line would be extended to Quebec.
Howe retired from hockey and became a constable with the Canadian National Railway Police in Moncton, New Brunswick.
It was only a grassy field called the Moncton Commons when it was donated to the City of Moncton by the Moncton Land Company (John A. Humphrey, Michael Spurr Harris and Christopher P. Harris) in 1901.