9 quick start. i : are club quotas in two weeks. a. oa: Und raisin your fou, Qssij PT drive Is now on! 3 @ The fund drive opens April 1, and as we goto press there Reecdy $400 in towards our $22,000 goal. Send your nations right away and set a high tempo for the drive, through @ Almost without exception, press clubs have accepted the Boe listed below and are making plans fora variety of fund — ees including socials, film showings, and dinners. Most tick Shave already been issued PT donation cards and contest ets. The winner of the contest will be announced at the wind “P, Victory Banquet, Sat., June 9. We will print the final revisions Re.” This yearasin past years, we want to encourage the | -Xtmum of socialist competition between clubs, and individuals hited the drive. Shields willbe awarded totheclub withthe + gat achievement in both Vancouver area, and the Province. aie riauals who raise $35 or more will be awarded a PT Press ne erPin; those whoraise $65 or more willreceive a PT Premier eed . Builder Pin; and those who raise $100 or more will be Gimed PT Honor Press Builders. Ri = This year’s financial drive offers an opportunity to bring Ss to thousands of people. There can be no substitute for g events that reach new people. If you have not made Plans — doit right away. Remember that new subs count rds quotas. If you need contest tickets, donation cards, or eeecnce in any of your plans — contact Fred Wilson, drive | “i 9er, at the PT office. —__DRIVE QUOTAS Cly ; GRE ATE quotas achieveo CLUB QUOTAS ACHIEVED VANcor VAN ISLAND Bill Be UVER Alberni 400 fiat 800 Campbell River 275 enten 650 Cowichan 150 Frank a 450 Nanaimo 600 Kingsy Ogers 650 Victoria 500 ilo Ae 900 Van. Island Tot. 1,925 Cate 225 DEWDNEY Ste 275 Maple Ridge 150 t or 700 Mission : 275 imber IND 300 Dewdney Total 425 ssa oe OKANAGAN VALLEY Vig ‘ANcouver Kamloops 220 Non” Square 500 Notch Hill 110 Edne Purnaby bse Penticton 110 s Vernon 385 ye . Okanagan Total 825 oo SS Ra et is . oquitiam Cresto ISC. Ft. ie 350 Stnig 100 Fraser Indust. 400 So ell Rive 50 Fraser Valley Club 350 Mula 275 New Westminster | 550 el 100 Surrey 1,200 ne Pondence 385 White Rock-Delta 350 E Dalta Total 3,650 Prov. Total 19,660 Unpledged 2,340 Grand Total 22,000 ae nt \ Se Ales CL KEEP THEM LOCKED UP FOR THEIR OWN Goop! OTHERWISE, THEY’D FLEE BACK To COMMUNIST sLAveRy!” ‘Scrap NORAD’ Withthe North AmericanAir Defence Treaty (NORAD) com- ing up for renewal this spring, a major campaign is underway sparked by peace organizations, urging that Canada not renew the agreement. The Canadian Peace Congress is circulating a national peti- tion which is being sponsored by the B.C. Peace Council on the coast. The petition addressed to Prime Minister Trudeau states: “‘We, the undersigned, call upon your Government not to renew the NORAD Agreement which places our Canadian armed forces under the control of the U.S. Pentagon. We support the position taken by the Cana- dian Labor Congress which states: ‘‘We doubt that the present NORAD Agreement should remain the framework for cooperation and understand- ing between Canada and its largest and most powerful neighbor on matters of defence and respective military respon- sibilities!” Copies of the petition are avail- able from the B.C. Peace Council, Rm. 712— 207 W. Hast- ings St., Vancouver 3. The Vancouver Voice of Women and the Peace Action League are sponsoring a con- ference Saturday, March 3lon the subject, ‘““Can we afford NORAD?”’ It willbe heldinthe Unitarian Church, 49th and Oak, between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Beynon in hospital Jim Beynon Sr., of North Van- couver, a veteran Communist and long time supporter of the working class press, was ad- mitted to Lions Gate Hospital on Monday suffering from an expected coronary of the heart. He is undergoing tests this week. The PT extends its warmest regards to Jim, ang expresses its hopes for a speedy and full recovery sothathe canresume his activities in the struggle for socialism. PT going color Starting with next week’s edi- tion the PT will be going color. Arrangements have been made with our print shop to use color each week during the next two months as an experiment. We expect that the color will brighten the appearance of the paper and make it more attrac- tive. Whether we will be able to continue with color after the two months trial period will depend on finances and the successful outcome of the current finan- cial drive. CP candidate presents brief Eric Waugh, Communist candidate for the Federal riding of Burnaby-Seymour presented a brief Thursday at the Seymour Planning Association hearing at Windsor High School audi- torium on issues surrounding development of the eastern portion of the North Shore. In his brief Waugh outlined pro- posals advanced by the North Shore club and Vancouver region of the Communist Party. He also expressed support for Bill 42, the Land Commission Act. MEMORIAL Cont'd from pg. 3 Canada’s two nations in keeping with Lenin’s teachings on the national question. It was to Tim’scredit that he grasped the character of the Abbott Plan which launched a new direction for Canada’s ruling circles towards inte- gration with U.S. imperialism, and exposed it as the path towards destruction of Canada’s independence. He raised the banner of the nation and pioneered in the fight for the working class to play a leading role in the struggle for Canadian independence, said Kashtan. Tim Buck’s favorite song, ““Commonwealth of Toil’’ was sung by the Young Communist League Choral Group and ‘‘Hymn toa Fallen Comrade”’ was sung by Evelyn Bezubiak and Audrey Moysiuk of the Asso- ciation of United Ukrainian Canadians. Messages expressing sorrow at the death of Tim Buck was- read from a group of Doukhobor people from Thrums, B.C.; the Finnish Organization in Van- couver; and the Veterans of the MacKenzie-Papineau Batta- lion in Vancouver. Admission $2.50 SMORGASBORD SUPPER Sunday, April 8th 5:30-6:30 p.m. (Supper) Grandview Community Centre 3350 Victoria Drive “ORBITING PRICES — WHY?” Speaker: MAURICE RUSH, Editor, Pacific Tribune THE IMMIGRANT (Charlie Chaplin film) Children, Students $2.00 Auspices: Kingsway Press Club Classified advertising — COMING EVENTS APRIL 14 — See and Hear “KOREA TODAY & SOVIET UNION.” SLIDE SHOWING, Saturday, April 14th at 8:00 p.m. the Vints, 2086 Qualicum Dr. (Fraserview). SMORGAS- BORD and REFRESHMENTS Admission $1.50 — Children $1.00. Ausp: Vancouver South Trib. Boosters. APRIL 14—Keep this date open for PT Social in New West- minster. Details Next Week. APRIL 14 — FILM NIGHT at the BJARNASONS 3446 W. 19th Ave., April 14 at 8 P.M. Keep this evening reserved. Refreshments. $1.50 admis- sion. Proceeds to PT. April 6 and 7 — SPRING BA- ZAAR — APRIL 6th and 7th at RUSSIAN PEOPLES HOME 600 Campbell Avenue. ON APRIL 7th. Dine from 6:30 and Dance from 9:00. HALLS FOR RENT: UKRAINIAN CANADIAN CULTURAL CENTRE - 805 East Pender St., Vancouver 4, Available for banquets, wed- dings, meetings. Phone 254- 3436. WEBSTER’S CORNER HALL — Available for banquets, meetings, weddings, etc. For rates, Ozzie 325-4171 or 685- 5836. RUSSIAN PEOPLE’S HOME. Now available for rentals. For reservations phone 254-3430. VINCE’S MOVING & STOR- AGE. Call anytime, reason- able rates. 253-0336. PACIFIC TRIBUNE—FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1973—PAGE 11