Do Your Part. South Van Burnaby Coquitlam White Roc Simon Fraser Univ. 7 - Vancouver East 60 36 Victory Square 25 10 Port Alberni New Westminster 20 19 Bill Bennett 18 12 Broadway 35 24 Maple Ridge Kingsway 50 41 Mission Niilo Makela 20 15 Kamloops Olgin 10 8 Notch Hill Peter McGuire 25 21 Penticton Point Grey 12.6 Vernon couver 35 19 Nanaimo 45 33 Victoria 20 9 Correspondence Fraser Industrial 137-9 Creston North Shore Richmond 15.6 Trail-Castlegar Delta 7 5 Prince Rupert Fort Langley 10 8 Miscellaneous Surrey 55 31 Total k NEW YEAR’S PARTY Friday, December 31 Peretz School 6184 Ash St. (behind Oakridge) $10.00 per person Dinner at 8:30 p.m. — refreshments Dancing 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. Bargain Jam Band Tickets at People’s Co-op Bookstore 353 W. Pender St. 253-1221 GLOBE TOURS 2679 E. Hastings St. Vancouver, B.C. THE COMPLETE TRAVEL SERVICE We will professionally look after all your travel needs. We specialize in tickets, tours, passports, permits and reservations. Call us today— for prompt personalized service. Campbell River Comox Valley QUOTA Fraser Valley Club 16 — 15 15 There are 366 readers whose subs are currently . expired. If you are one of them, you can help us reach our subscription drive goal of 900 subs by renewing your subscription today. If every one of our readers with expired subscriptions were to renew their subs we would be well over that 900 figure goal. Remember, we count on our readers to renew their subs promptly, and we depend on that revenue to carry us through this period of the year. Do your part — renew your subscription today! For children’s hospital CAVC opens fund drive The Vancouver-based Canadian Aid for Vietnam Civilians an- nounced this week that it is launching a campaign to raise $50,000 to build a 25-bed children’s hospital ward in North Vietnam. Dr. A. M. Inglis, chairman of CAVC, said in a press statement that the decision was made at a meeting of CAVC on Dec. 1. He said that “henceforth funds raised will go chiefly to build a 25-bed children’s. ward in the British Hospital being built in North’ Vietnam. The CAVC project will be known as the Canadian Paediatric Ward.” : The CAVC effort will be part of the plan to build a 200-bed British hospital in one of the most heavily bombed provinces just north of the 17th parallel,.at therural district of Ky Anh, Ha Tinh. A British Hospital for Vietnam “Committee was formed in April 30, 1974 to begin preparations for the building project. Architectural plans for the building and the site were ap- proved by the ministry of health of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and had the approval of local authorities. Because of the shor- tage of construction materials it was decided to send a_pre- fabricated hospital to the site, but local authorities are providing some of foundation building » materials. The British committee includes many prominent citizens and is headed by Lord Caradon, PC, GCMG, KCVO, OBE, as its honorary president. Vice chairman - of the committee is Dr. Joan McMichael of the British Medical Aid Committee. Funds raised by CAVC will be sent directly to Dr. Nguyen Van Tin, the vice-minister of health of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and will be designated for this special project. CAVC has also announced it will make an ap- plication to the Canadian In- ternational Development Agency for a matching grant to make a total Canadian contribution of $100,000. “What better way to help the people of Vietnam than to assist their children by establishing a Canadian children’s ward,” said Dr. Inglis, whose committee has already raised more than a third of a million dollars in Canada to aid the people of Vietnam. CAVC also announced this week that it will send its last shipment of knitted goods and other items to Vietnam in January 1977. It will be the 47th shipment and will include $5,000 worth of Bicillin, especially for treatment of venereal disease among ex-prostitutes of South Vietnam. The shipment of this drug was requested by Vietnamese authorities because of the serious problem in South Vietnam and inadequate supplies of the drug. The CAVC is now preparing a special bulletin which will go out early in January carrying specific details of the campaign to build the children’s ward. _KAY AND ALAN INGLIS, who will head the campaign for $50,000 to build the Canadian Paediatric Ward in Vietnam. Ottawa gets peace plea Reporting “‘a remarkable positive response from the public in all parts of Canada,” to the Stockholm Appeal to End the Arms Race, a delegation of the Canadian Peace Congress, visiting Ottawa on Dec. 2, extended an invitation to government and opposition parties to support the Appeal. One of the main aims of the Appeal is the calling of a UN World Disarmament Conference for stopping the arms race and for detente. In a brief prepared for presen- tation to the various party leaders, the Congress, the Canadian section of the World Peace Council, - e9mmends the government of Canada . . . for positive actions on the international level,” but notes that “the budget for military equipment has increased enor- mously.”” The strengthening of relations . with Cuba, the call for the abolition of South African apartheid now, the support for a territorial base for the Palestinian people, and the support for the calling of a United Nations World Disarmament _ Conference ‘‘were a credit to the federal government,”’ the brief said. It argues that ‘neither the purchase of Leopard Tanks from West Germany nor the Lockheed planes which, we understand, are mainly for NATO, can be justified on the grounds of Canadian defence. In fact, says the brief, there is no defence except detente and disarmament on the basis of equality and security. “The terrifying increase in more and more sophisticated weapons, nuclear, chemical, biological and genetic, will inevitably, by ac- cident or design, lead to a world holocaust,” warns the brief, which © contains the following statement adopted by the Canadian Labor Congress at its May 1976 con- vention: “The building of world peace with equity remains a central task to which we must contribute. Unfortunately, the arms race continues almost unabated, with new and more destructive weapons being deployed. The spending involved in this futile and dangerous race is a major factor affecting the world economy, and the Congress (CLC) fully un- derstands that the only road to peace and a healthy world economy is rapid and planned disarmament.’” In its brief, the Peace Congress points out the large number of Canadian organizations and prominent persons who have en- dorsed the Stockholm Appeal, along with some 200,000 Canadians who have signed it. “In December,” it notes, ‘“‘a preliminary report will be made to ‘the United Nations by the World Peace Council.’ CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING | COMING EVENTS WANTED DECEMBER 11— Vancouver East presents ‘Moscow Nights” (an entire evening with a Soviet flavor), Sat., Dec. 11, 600 Campbell Ave., lower hall. Slides, food, music, gift ideas. Refreshments and dancing — Dinner at 6:30 p.m. Adm. $3.50 proceeds C.P.F. DECEMBER 12 — Another Mini- Bazaar, Sunday, Dec. 12, 2-5 p.m., 3365 Victoria Dr. Gifts, books, toys and home cooking. Kingsway Club, CPC. CARETAKER NEEDED at — Webster’s Corners Hall starting April ist, phone 255-1415 or 874- 1546. _ BUSINESS PERSONALS RON SOSTAD, Writer-Researcher. Ph. 922-6980. : : MOVING? CLEANUP — Wanted articles for resale. All proceeds to P.T. Phone 526-5226. “THE GOODIE BIN.” HALLS FOR RENT DECEMBER 18 — Saturday, Dec. 18 at 8 p.m., 976 Railway Ave., Richmond. Film — Living Folk Art, Christmas cheer. Everyone welcome. UKRAINIAN CANADIAN CULTURAL CENTRE — 805 East Pender St., Vancouver 4. Available for banquets, wed- dings, meetings. Ph. 254-3436. DECEMBER 31 — New Year’s Eve Banquet and Dance at the Russian People’s Home, 600 Campbell Ave., Vancouver. Banquet 7-9, Dance 9-1 a.m. Admission $10.00 ea. Spons. by Federation of Russian Canadians. WEBSTER’S CORNERS HALL — Available for banquets, meetings, etc. For rates: Ozzie, 325-4171 or 685-5836. RUSSIAN PEOPLE’S HOME — - Now available for rentals. For reservations phone 254-3430. as PACIFIC TRIBUNE—DECEMBER 10, 1976—Page 11