[1] She was the subject of the National Film Board of Canada documentary Worth Every Minute, directed by Catherine Macleod and Lorraine Segato.
That same year, Schulz was part of an all-women team that traveled throughout Ontario in a half-ton truck selling s subscriptions to Workers Vanguard.
That summer, staff at the Palais Royale intervened to prevent a Black man and a white woman from dancing together, humiliating them and ejecting them onto the street.
According to Irish socialist Ernie Tate: "The couple had openly breached Toronto's unofficial form of segregation under which very little social mixing took place between blacks and whites.
Vern Olson, chairman of the committee at the time, recalls Schulz as "one of the heroic band who defended the Cuban revolution as it deepened, while others ran for cover.
"[9] In 1971, the LSA-LSO decided to make the fight to repeal Canada's anti-abortion laws the primary focus of its work in the women's movement.
During the 1973 LSA-LSO pre-convention discussion, Schulz argued for de-emphasizing the abortion campaign, and for a strategy that would stress job-related issues and the fight for child care.
Protestors gathered to defend Dominica activist Rosie Douglas who was facing deportation for organizing against racism in Montreal.
Pat also met like minded parents at Campus Community Co-operative Daycare, which was founded by activists who decided to take over a building at the University of Toronto and set up their own cooperative child care program.
She was also a key organizier in the fight to unionize Miniskools, a for profit chain that unsuccessfully tried to establish child care services in Ontario.
Her thesis, The East York Worker's Association: A Response to the Great Depression, was published by New Hogtown Press the same year.
[17] Schulz's friends including MPP Peter Tabuns, City Councillor Janet Davis and child care activist Ev McKee worked tirelessly to establish the Pat Schulz Child Care Centre which continues to operate in Toronto's east end.