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Astarte
10-19-04, 09:55 PM
Superstore east is the one by the staples, yes? (Forgive me, I live in Quispamsis :)) The one up there sells the stuff too. Including the soy ice cream and cuties. All of their products I've tried kick some serious booty.

space cadet
10-20-04, 10:07 AM
Hello again,
Yes I was referring to the the super store by staples.
I agree that Tofutti makes some delicious vegan products. Mmmmm I :smitten: vanilla fudge tofutti ice cream.

Astarte
10-20-04, 04:29 PM
Vanilla fudge is my favourite too! I only wish they had the wildberry because I heard that was the best one.. only conventional flavours.

The one in Quispam has tofurkey feasts too. They have those in town?

bad
10-20-04, 04:47 PM
omg someone from kv?

Astarte
10-20-04, 04:56 PM
Yup :) I think you PMed me a while ago! You live in Rothesay, right?

bad
10-21-04, 04:41 PM
omg yeah!!! lol i'm a tiny bit dence, but ya whoo rothesay :eyeroll: well at least rhs is cool, and the boats intresting....... except i think thats in quispam too.....

Astarte
10-24-04, 09:17 PM
I wouldn't know much about RHS! I went to KVHS. Which boat?

bad
10-25-04, 04:11 PM
River boat bowling and theater place next to big jumbo super cool new super store, with the big organic section :drool: mmmmmmm organic.... oh yeah lol anyway the boat as in the river boat with the bar bowling resturant pizza/tacobell express movies and arcade boat

Astarte
10-25-04, 07:28 PM
Oh, yes.. should've known! Never heard it called the boat..but then I don't go there too often. That organic section in superstore is awesome!

bad
10-26-04, 07:21 AM
yeah i wish sobeys would get one :grr: yea actually i havent been their in a while either, now with studio ten it seems they never get the newer movies
:down: , also you should check out sessions the little cafe owned my jim simpson right next to sobey. they make killer soylattes or chia teas or w/e coffee drink normaly has milk mmmmm :smitten: i love sessions soo goood :drool: oops now i need a coffee fix later!

Astarte
10-29-04, 08:31 PM
I've been to sessions a couple times! You're right, they have really good coffee but I don't get down there much. Kinda shocking for a cafe in a strip mall, huh? Superstore kicks Sobeys' butt.. except the bakery. Sobey's has the better bakery.

bad
10-30-04, 11:13 AM
is there anything vegan in sobeys bakery???? i only attempted to get info once it was too much of a pain, the girl when across the room got the book and read it to me from over there when i as to see the book she said no sorry not alound and when back over to yell out some more ingredients

Mtnjam
11-21-04, 08:13 PM
I'm moving to the Woodstock area and just wondering if anyone is aware of any veggie restaurants or food stores there. I assume there is at least a Superstore.

Astarte
11-21-04, 10:39 PM
Welcome Mtnjam :) There should be a superstore, but the only veggie restaurant I know of in the area is Cafe Calactus in Moncton. There will likely be a Sobey's too, and they sometimes have a decent selection (sometimes).

MJM
11-22-04, 02:19 AM
Hi all,
For all of those who may not have been following the CBC has a TV series called The Greatest Canadian. Over the summer Canadians voted and the CBC has made episodes about the top ten nominees. Among them is David Suzuki.

In the next few days voting will stop (maybe on Wednesday, maybe later on in the week, CBC hasn't been clear) and the person with the most votes will win.

David Suzuki is probably best known to Canadians as the long time host of the program The Nature of Things. His life story is of course much larger than the television program. Suzuki grew up in a Japanese internment camp in British Comumbia. He went on to become a highly regarded genetisist, who wasn't shy to become involved in the civil rights movement in the United States, or to take on big corporations and government for their abuse of the environment. He also thought it was important to disseminate the information he learned in a an academic context to the public, rather than a more traditional root of academic work for purely academic sake.

There are a few great Canadians in the list of the top ten. One of the reasons I will vote for Suzuki is that it sends a message to CBC that there are a lot of Canadians who would like to see more of David Suzuki on the channel. Most of the other candidates on the list are dead and while a number of them are true heros a vote for them would likely bring little tangible change to our world. A vote for Suzuki sends a message to CBC that Canadians think he is important and may help to give Suzuki a little publicity in the media.

Picking a greatest Canadian isn't easy, but if you feel like me and think David Suzuki is deserving, then vote as soon as you can. If not vote for who you think is best. For those of you voting for someone else, or for Suzuki, I'd love to hear your pick.
MJM

Below I've included some information on how to vote and on David Suzuki.

For all the details on voting visit. http://www.cbc.ca/greatest/

If you would like to learn more about Suzuki there are some great video clips at:
http://archives.cbc.ca/IDD-1-74-663/people/david_suzuki/
The videos have all kinds of info on Suzuki, from death threats, his his early life, his love of the environment, his teaching philosophy, his battles against discrimination, a semi nude pose he did for a magazine to show the benefits of healthy living, even a skit he did with the Royal Canadian Air Farce etc....

TIME TO VOTE! (From CBC Site)

There are THREE ways to vote for your Greatest Canadian.

1. On the Web : All you need is a valid email address. You can vote once per episode, per email address.

2. By Toll-Free Telephone : Dial 1-866-303-VOTE (8683) and follow the instructions. The first five votes, per phone number, per episode will be counted (don’t forget to vote using your cell phone, too!).

3. By Text Message : Using your text-enabled cell phone, text the first or last name of the nominee to CBC10 (22210). You can text your vote once per episode, per text device.


DAVID SUZUKI (From CBC site)

A world-renowned geneticist, academic and broadcaster, Dr. David Suzuki has spent the past 40 years educating the public about environmental issues, both in the classroom and over the airwaves.


David Suzuki

As the long-running host of CBC's The Nature of Things and the author of more than 30 books, Suzuki has been called a 'gladiatorial geneticist' who mixes education with entertainment to get his ideas across to the public. Never one to step down from a fight, the passionate and often controversial Suzuki has earned a well-deserved reputation as an environmental guru for two generations of Canadians.

David T. Suzuki and his twin sister Marcia were born in Vancouver, B.C. in 1936. His early years were spent living with his family in the back of their dry-cleaning business in Marpole, a primarily white neighbourhood. His father Kaoru "Carr" Suzuki, an avid outdoorsman, helped shape Suzuki's interest in nature early by taking his son on camping and fishing trips.

His life was uprooted in 1942 when the Suzuki family was sent to an internment camp following the Japanese attacks on Pearl Harbour. The next three years of Suzuki's life were spent living in an abandoned hotel in a former gold rush town. On top of the indignities he and his family experienced, he also became a target for other Japanese youth for his refusal to disavow his Canadian roots.

After the war, Suzuki and his family were relocated to Ontario where they eventually settled in London. A bright student from a young age, Suzuki enrolled in Amherst College in Massachusetts on a scholarship in 1954. Originally intending to go on to medical school, a third-year genetics class altered his course after he learned of the "detective story" behind genetics research. After graduating from Amherst in 1958, he earned his PhD in Zoology from the University of Chicago before returning to Canada, with his young family in tow. He took on his first teaching jobs, at University of Alberta in 1962, then at the University of British Columbia the subsequent year.

It was around this time that he began appearing as a guest on several TV shows, in part out of curiosity and in part as an effort to drum up public support for what he considered the woefully under-funded sciences. After seeing what effect he was having, he made the move to national broadcasting in 1971 as host of the weekly CBC Television show Suzuki on Science. Four years later he founded CBC Radio's Quirks and Quarks, which gained a loyal audience thanks to its irreverent attitude and use of news headlines as the basis of its science stories.

In 1979, Suzuki became the host of The Nature of Things, which became one of CBC Television's most popular and respected shows. In the three decades since the award-winning program began, it has featured in-depth documentaries on such topics as the birth of the human mind; the language of animals; the pathology of psychopaths; medical marijuana; the growth of big business farming; and the future of the Arctic. A groundbreaking 1987 episode focused on the emerging AIDS/HIV epidemic, providing many Canadians with their first understanding of the disease.

In 1990, he founded the David Suzuki Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to finding innovative solutions to help conserve the natural world. Most recently the organization has advocated for Canada to back the implementation of the United Nations Kyoto Protocol on greenhouse gas reduction.

Suzuki has been awarded numerous recognitions, including a UNESCO prize for science, a United Nations Environment Program medal and an induction as an Officer of the Order of Canada. He has 15 honorary doctorates from universities in Canada, the U.S. and Australia. In addition, Canada's First Nations people have honoured him with five native names and he has been formally adopted by two tribes.

Now retired from teaching, Suzuki has dedicated himself full-time to educating the public about the importance of the natural world. It's a role that places him alongside the likes of Carl Sagan and Jacques Cousteau, and makes him one of the world's most effective ambassadors of science - and our future.

fyvel
08-03-05, 10:04 PM
:up: I voted for Suzuki!! (But he didn't win :()

I'm not in NB right now, but I lived there my whole life up until two years ago (I'm in PEI right now).

Originally from Miramichi, but spent a couple of years in Fredericton as well.

fyvel
08-05-05, 07:33 PM
What school will you be going to? (If you don't mind me asking?)

I went to MVHS for high school, and then did the first year of my degree at NBCC.

fyvel
08-05-05, 07:58 PM
Oooh nice !! Are you enjoying it?

fyvel
08-05-05, 08:42 PM
Yeah I couldn't wait to get out of Miramichi either! I have no plans on going back :p

Any plans on where you want to go to work when you are done?

veggie_can
08-06-05, 09:50 AM
Well banana_popsicle that makes at least two vegetarians in the Miramichi.

banana_popsicle
08-06-05, 06:13 PM
haha, well we might be the only ones!!

bad
08-19-05, 11:44 PM
Greetings all!:bobo:
I have returned from the great beyond :D, actualy i just stoped using my old e-mail account and completely got cut off from veggie boards :(, but i'm back now, to the boards and to N.B., Rothesay to be exact. just thought i'd drop a line to all my fellow nb veg*n, and ask what i've missed? is there anyone new?

Astarte
08-23-05, 06:55 PM
Ah, sussex! Good ol' sussex. I believe there was a thread that said the Suave brand doesn't test on animals, though it's not very good for your hair. Herbal Essences is also vegan, I think, but it also isn't great for your hair. I'd suggest Kiss My Face, which is totally vegan and organic as far as I know, but that tends to be pricey.

banana_popsicle
08-23-05, 07:55 PM
where could i get Kiss my face? i havent seen that one... i have pretty long hair, so i do need something good.

Astarte
08-23-05, 09:31 PM
If you wanted to make a trip into SJ, I know for a fact that they carry it at Hayward and Warwick (85 Princess St). I work there. Will for the next week, anyway! Going back to school.

The owner of Kiss My Face is actually the owner of Haywards' brother-in-law. They also carry toothpastes, bubble baths, face/hand creams.. all sorts of things. Anything they don't have in stock, they can always order in as well. But if you went the way from sussex, you'd want to make sure they had what you wanted, so I'd suggest calling first.

I'd imagine they'd ship it to you if you couldn't drive in, and you can pay with a credit card over the phone. You just have to ask, and they can quote you the charges.. but make sure you call on a weekday if you want to do that because the shipping guys don't work on weekends.