ERIC WAUGH, Com — ¢ampaigning in his r _ Support in his riding f —Pat O'Kane photo munist candidate in Burnaby-Seymour is shown iding. A shipyard worker, Waugh has won strong or the building of a Canadian merchant marine. deserves. ® To reach our goal we have to insur expiry and we have to win a maxim e If you are a member of a press club that your club gets into being pushed — by ma e If you are a reader and 5 sending in your own sub as soon as it is up fo asking a friend, neighbor, or workmate to subscribe to the PT. There are only a few weeks to do the job. WHERE DO YOU STAND? Below is-a complete list of sub drive objectives, broken down into regional and individual press club quotas. : e the renewal of every single um of new readers. you can help by making sure the swing — by making sure our king sure it gets the kind of attention it supporter of this paper you can help by p for renewal or by DRIVE QUOTAS CLUB _ GREATER VANCOUVER | Bill Bennett Broadway Centennial Frank Rogers Kingsway Niilo Makela Olgin Peter McGuire Pt. Grey Van. East South Vancouver - Victory Square North Burnaby Edmonds North Shore Timberland City Misc. City Total Creston Fernie Powell River Sointula Trail Correspondence Prov. Misc. Prev. Misc. Total QUOTAS ACHIEVED —s ON DODAGC ANY — ayy nN or -OUud —_ wo © PROV. MISC. Wen OND aN CLUB VAN, ISLAND Alberni 15 Campbell River 23 Cowichan 1] Nanaimo 27 Victoria 23 Van. Island Tot. 99- DEWDNEY Haney 13 Mission 6 Dewdney Total 19 OKANAGAN VALLEY Kamloops 12 Notch Hill 5 Penticton 9 Vernon 32 Okanagan Total 58 DELTA Coquitlam 14 Ft. Langley 6 Fraser Indust. 9 Eraser Valley Club 27 New Westminster 11 Surrey 36 White Rock-Delta 33 Delta Total 136 Grand Total 958 QUOTAS ACHIEVED . Communists have program for youth By MIKE GIDORA A quick look at the candidates for the October 30 election will show a surprisingly high number of candidates under 30 years of age. This is the most obvious manifestation of the lowering of the voting age to 18, and in the case of the Liberals and Conservatives, it is nothing more than hiding an ancient and outmoded platform behind the facade of youth. What have these two parties brought Canada in 105 years of uninterrupted rule? The jobless rate among the young people of our country (those between the ages of 14 and 24) is 24 percent. One of every four young Cana- dians is unemployed, and usually not eligible for either Unemploy- ment Insurance or _ social welfare: HOUSING Cont'd from pg. 2 small fine every few years than it is to clean up and renovate his place to make it liveable. So the law continues to be ignored an broken. : I think that at least four steps could be taken to change the situation for the better. One is that the penalties need to be sharply increased. When they reach $500 or $1000 the owners will begin to take notice and make the changes demanded by our health laws. Secondly inspections need to be more frequent and health law enforcement much stricter. Third, if an owner refuses or fails to take corrective action immediately, the city should take over the premises, make the renovations and clean-ups necessary and charge them to the owner. Finally, the city must build more public low rental housing for these people, most of whom are in the very low income brackets. ; Not only the people immediately concerned but society as a whole will benefit if all people are provided with decent and clean housing. NOVEMBER 3 —ATTENTION VICTORIA READERS. Cel- ebrate the Anniversary of the U.S.S.R. See slides taken of a recent trip taken in the land of Socialism. Friday, November 3rd, at 6:30 PM at Norway House, 1110 Hill- side Ave. A full course turkey dinner will be served. Ad- mission $2.00. Workers Benevolent Assn. Of Canada Progressive Fraternal Society Caters to all your needs in the Life Insurance field BO ast reed | | i | | | LIFE INSURANCE | ENDOWMENTS PENSION PLANS i WEEKLY BENEFITS l | 1 1 | | | I 1 I | | Apply to: B.C. office at I 905 East Pender St. or | National Office at ; 595 Pritchard Ave. i Winnipeg 4, Manitoba | 1 Enrollment in all Canadian post-secondary educational facilities is decreasing yearly. Housing costs have reached such a high level that most young people will never be able to own their own home. And while all this is going on, the government in power-Tweedledum- or Tweedledee — is allowing over 60 percent of the Canadian economy to become foreign owned. There is an alternative to this type of rule. The Communist Party has a program for youth, not simply a program hiding behind youth. The Communist Party proposes that Canada take control of her destiny and natura- lize all resources, and establish secondary industries to develop these resources under Canadian control. This alone will provide full meaningful employment for all who want it. The Communist Party calls for increased federal grants to all post-secondary institutions, and the immediate introduction of student stipends to guarantee -universal accessability to higher education. People are our greatest resource, and we need the trained personnel from _these institutions to fill the demands of a Canadian indus- trial market if Canada is to go forward with confidence. Give Canada a new direction to follow. The Communist Party has a solution to the problems of youth, unlike the parties that cause youth’s problems. Tenants Council urges coalition The Vancouver Tenants Council at its annual meeting Sunday decided to actively cam- paign for tenant rights during the coming civic election campaign, and endorsed the stand taken by COPE on tenant’s rizhts, although it endorsed no specific candidate. The delegates to the cc nven- tion urged civic unity of all progressive forces in the cam- paign, calling for an electoral coalition of COPE, NDP, rate- payers, tenants, etc., to defeat the right-wing candidates. The Tenants Council will continue to campaign for a new Landlord and Tenant Relations Act to be instituted by the provincial government. They will continue to campaign for local law enforcement agencies to prosecute violations of the Act as it now stands It was agreed that a new cam- paign must be launched to organize apartment block resi- dents to bargain collectively on rent increases and other condi- tions. Secretary of the Tenants Council, Bruce Yorke, said the NDP government should freeze rents until such time as a new Landlord and Tenant Act is intro- duced. He said the new Act should provide for the justifi- cation of any rent increases or evictions; do away with the security deposit, and give tenants the right to vote on money by-laws. Alderman Harry Rankin, who addressed the convention, urged every tenant to find out where the civic candidates stand on the matter of tenant’s rights. A NIGHT IN HUNGARY with Cora and Jack Phillips POSTPONED TO SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4th - 8:30 PM Hear About Political and Economic Consolidation in Hungary Since 1956 See Color Slides of Hungary Today Place: 2086 Qualicum Drive (South on Victoria Drive to one block past 61st, turn east on Scarboro to Qualicum) ADMISSION $1.00 STUDENTS & , CHILDREN 50¢ REFRESHMENTS . Spons. by: Timber and Vancouver South Clubs Classified advertising COMING EVENTS NOVEMBER ith — KEEP THIS DATE OPEN,. SAT- URDAY, NOVEMBER ith for the FRASER VALLEY ANNIVERSARY BANQUET. Dinner at 6:30 PM. Speaker Entertainment and Dance. Admission $3.00 ea. Pension- ers and Students $1.50 at Sap- perton Pensioners’ Hall, 318 Keary St., New Westminster. BUSINESS PERSONALS REGENT TAILORS LTD. For reasonable priced Made to Measure and Ready to Wear. 324 W. Hastings St—681-8456 or 4441 E. Hastings St. — 298- 2030. NOTICES DESPERATELY | NEEDED! Permanent place to do Silk- screening for Y.C.L. (Gar- age or basement suitable). Call Joyce 435-2620 after 5. p.m. : STOUT HEARTS STAND TALL. Suggested and used by many as a gift for Christ- mas, birthdays, special oc- casions. Order now: Ivor J. Mills, 126 W. 59th Ave., Van- couver 15 or People’s Co-Op Book Store, Vancouver. HALLS FOR RENT WEBSTER’S CORNER HALL —Available for banquets,. meetings, weddings, etc. For rates, Ozzy 872-5064 or 685- 5836. UKRAINIAN CANADIAN CULTURAL CENTRE - 805 East Pender St., Vancouver 4, Available for banquets, wed- dings, meetings. Phone 254- 3436. RUSSIAN PEOPLE’S HOME 600 Campbell Ave. Now under renovation. Watch ‘PT for details regarding re-open- ing re: Rentals for meetings, banquets, weddings, ete. 254-3430. PACIFIC TRIBUNE—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972—PAGE 11;