women ° travel é tv. © real estate February 8, 1981 By CHRIS LLOYD If- there’ S one thing positive that can come out of the: CUPE strike it’s the whole issue of household garbage. And perhaps soon we'll be practising the kind. of gar- bage responsibility most of us are already aware of but which we tend to ignore when the normal collection services are operating and we can dump all our junk in cans and conveniently leave the rest to the municipality. With the ‘exception of apartment dwellers, who don’t have gardens in which to put their wastes to use, just about anything but plastics can still be got rid of. The North Shore is for- tunate enough to have well- Kaiser Porcelain Owel (limited edition) $9599 organized recycling programs and New Life Recycling. announces that it is still operating during the - strike. ; “Weekly collection of newspapers in North Vancouver District by the recyclers will. be kept up on regular . garbage “days and residents should leave out bundled newspapers as usual, Regular arrangements will also be maintained in West Vancouver for the multi- material collection and cardboard collection from the commercial . sectors of the North Shore will. be. as” usual. Residents can take a variety of materials along to the recycling centres on the North Shore, at. 1629 Columbia Street, off the foot of Mountain Highway in CONTINUED ON PAGE C3 mini cactus garden (also limited in. quantity) GARBAGE WORKERS are on strike. but the North Shore recycling centres are still busy as can be seen here as Robin from New Life Recycling loads another box of crushed cans in West Vancouver. Throughout the strike, the 109-260 W. Esplanade recycling depots at 1629 ) Columbia in North Van, and at 21st Street and Gordon and opposite the Gleneagles golf just west of the Seabus course in West Van will bo accepting newspapers, cardboard, glass and crushed cans. (Ellsworth Dickson photo) North Vancouver