Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Jul 1967, p. 7

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ERYTHING ED RIGHT IN 1E STORE A ONLY BS. 39° ite Fudge ftACH 3 on 20° Aron 39° '5 ilar OS, NALS" TO 9:30 VNTOWN tl. TO 9 EE PARKING | ' THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, July 5, 1967 7 Criticized PARIS (AP)--The newspaper Le Figaro says President de Gaulle may have gone too far in his efforts to get along bet- ter with the Soviet Union. In an editorial marking the July 4 anniversary of the U.S. Declaration of Independ- ence, the conservative, often- Gaullist daily says: "This anniversary of a char- ter to which Frenchmen owe so much is something we want to mention. with a particular warmth at a time when the of- ficial policy of our. country pushes America more and more from France. "It is proclaimed that. France is a great nation, and that be- cause of this it must have a policy totally independent of ev- eryone, and this is a way of justifying the hostile. positions taken in regard to the United States, "The problem is that the bal- ance is less and less equal be- tween our gestures of inde- pendence vis-a-vis America -- which on two occasions saved us from disaster--and the So- viet Union, which, even if it did contribute to the (Second World War) victory, joined its destiny with that of Germany in 1939. The desire is expressed that it (the Soviet Union) became the privileged associate of France. Can we always count on it? Won't it be subject to new and spectacular developments? "Today or tomorrow at the United Nations France will cast its vote with that of the U.S.S.R. to have the international organ- ization approve a resolution un- favorable to Israel. "This gesture places us once again in the camp which is hos- tile to our traditional friends, America, Britain and others. "It threatens to strike a fatal blow to Europe. "It leads us clearly to pose the question: Where is Gen. de Gaulle taking us? By what route? And why this leap to- ward adventure?" Canoeists Meet At Expo MONTREAL (CP)--Five ca- noeists--three in a 43-foot kayak and two in a 16-foot canoe--met at Expo during the weekend. What's unusual about that with the Expo marina jammed with craft of all kinds? Just that the men in the kayak had paddled and walked all the way from Rocky Moun- tain House in Alberta and the canoé men had paddled and portaged their little craft from Lake Banook in Nova Scotia. They were two of Centennial Year's most exacting and at times hazardous projects, Navymen Brent Gallagher and Lionel Fillion left Lake Ba- nook on May 24 with a tent, sleeping bags and a small stock of supplies. Unknown to them, three On- tario men, Joe Meany, Art Morris and Gene Tetrault had shoved off from Rocky Moun- tain House in the world's larg- est kayak, and their destination was Expo too. The Maritimers paddled up- stream through old Indian wa- terways and portaged along trails on their 1,200-mile jour- ney. They crossed the Bay of Fundy without difficulty despite fits dangerous tides. SLEPT IN KAYAK The men from Atikokan, Ont., made a_ swift, mainly downstream, voyage as they lived, ate, and slept in their huge kayak. "We hoped to do the 2,000 miles in 40 days," said Joe Meany. Their actual.time was thirty-nine days, 13 hours and 55 minutes. One day about two weeks ago, the three were carefully run- ning a series of rapids in the Ontario bushland when their boat was caught in a funnel of cascading water. Bouncing wildly, it crashed into a shallow pool at the bot- tom of the rapids, throwing the men out on the rocks, "T escaped death by inches," said Joe Meany, rubbing his lacerated check. "We were forced to halt a few days to repair the kayak, It was pretty severely damaged." Driving ahead of the kayak in a small truck with supplies was Bob Macintosh, also from Atikokan. He acted as advance guard for the trio at different cities and towns along the route. They calculate that the proj- ect cost upwards of $12,000, part of which was underwritten by the people of Atikokan and the surrounding region. Enough Oxygen For 2,000 Years VANCOUVER (CP) -- Law- rence Park Watkin, a Los An- geles attorney specializing in pollution cases, said the world's oxygen supply will support hu- man life in its present form for only another 2,000 years if pol- lution continues at its present rate. Mr, Watkin was speaking at the annual meeting of the For- est Products research Society. 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