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4:04pm Friday 18th July 2008
Paul McCartney told Quebec nationalists "to smoke the pipes of peace" over their opposition to his free concert celebrating the city's 400th anniversary.
Several artists and politicians have questioned McCartney's participation in the weekend birthday celebrations of French-speaking Quebec City because of his British roots.
But McCartney said he was unmoved by their claim his presence evokes painful memories of Britain's conquest of New France, which included Quebec, in 1760.
"I think it's time to smoke the pipes of peace and to just, you know, put away your hatchet because I think it's a show of friendship," McCartney said on Radio-Canada.
McCartney tried to deflate the political rhetoric around Sunday's show on the Plains of Abraham, site of the pivotal 1759 battle between British General James Wolfe and France's Marquis Louis-Joseph de Montcalm.
"The kind of thing I read about in the schoolbooks when I was a kid was...who was General Wolfe?" he said jokingly. "I still haven't figured it out."
Since the celebrations of the city's four centuries of uniquely French culture kicked off in July, Francophones criticised elements of the festivities they feel are too English.
The ex-Beatle said he has been working on expanding the few lines of French he used in the 1965 hit Michelle.
"Come on Quebece-ins (Quebecers), love me baby," said McCartney.
The open-air concert is his only scheduled appearance in North America this year. Organisers are expecting a crowd of around 200,000.
All the top tip columns make being green sound so easy: just change your light bulbs, walk to the shops and do your recycling, but it never really works out like that. SARAH LEWIS turns agony aunt and answers some of your pressing eco-questions.
When the new NHS dental contract was introduced, large numbers of dentists left the NHS and focused on private patients.
Woolworths, one of the best-known names on the British high street, has been put into administration with £385 million of debt. As company bosses and administrators Deloitte wrestle with the task of rescuing the business, RICHARD GURNER takes a look back at the company’s history in Sussex and asks business leaders what needs to be done to revive its fortunes.
From the village of Horsted Keynes, this walk heads eastwards to encircle the nearby settlement of Danehill, crossing and recrossing two well-wooded valleys before returning along part of the Sussex Border Path, a longdistance walking route which sticks fairly closely to the boundary between East and West Sussex.
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