6 wees a eee ee ae ebb ee ew te 1 ~ Sunday, June 4, 1989 — North Shore News a INSIGHTS ” 8=€6©60S-d Ultimate challenge = #§$for the human body | . CONCERNED WITH FITNESS (and who isn’t these i. : days)? Want to know how much the body can physically The IMAX/OMNIMAX film Ananisshvili — each chosen by “To The Limit” had its Canadian _ producer-director Greg premiere last week at the CN- MacGillivray as a supreme exam- IMAX theatre at Canada Place. ple of human performance pushed The stars are North American “*to the limit”’ in the quest for climbing champion Tony Yaniro, perfection. top world skier Maria Walliser of The film is a physical thriller of Switzerland and the Bolshoi the first order. The impact of the TO THE LIMIT ...in climbing, skiing, ballet. ’ Ballet’s prima ballerina Nina | mR cope with, if really tested? The answers are in a remarkable .f new movie that’s just arrived here. six-channel sound gives an in- escapable sensation of actually DOING what you’re watching. You're one with Tony, clawing your way inch by inch up the course at Aspen. You perform Nina’s seemingly efforiless leaps and pirouettes as you dance **Giseile’* with her. But there’s sion to the show. Interspersed with the stunning action episodes are sequences in which the camera moves deep in- you the effects that the action is arteries and muscles. This latest technological breakthrough has 70mm IMAX camera with a new endoscopic lens similar to those used by doctors for diagnostic probes — and with the needed body through fibre optic lenses and tubes. The squeamish, however, necd have no worries. The powerful pumping of the heart, lungs ex- panding and contracting, blood cells hurrying along their in- numerable arterial rivers to do their appointed jobs — the Recycling priority EST VANCOUVER has yet to demonstrate its publicized commitment to the recycling issue. The closure of the glass and tin recycling depot at 21st and Gordon is a case in point. Residents’ legitimate objections to the noise created at the depot finally got a reaction from council — but the wrong one. Undoubtedly the closure of the depot would have been unnecessary if action had been taken when the complaints were first voiced one year ago. In the space of that year, council could have in- vestigated any number of options that would have moilified residents and satisfied recyclers. An alternate site could have been located. Council could have closed the depet during non-business hours te lessen the noise impact on neighbors. A quieter system that wouldn’t require people to throw their bottles over the tall sides of the containers might have been developed. Instead, council appears to have sat on the issue un- til it was once again forcibly brought to its attention at a recent meeting. Confronted with its embarrassing lack of action, council took tke exsy way out and pacified the neighbors by closing the depot. It’s a pity that the growing number of people who realize the importance of recycling have had this obstacle put in their way. Let’s hope the councils of all three North Shore municipalities are determined to make the implementation of the promised curbside . Fecycling system a priority. Pata” a Fin ae giant four-storey-high screen and hair-raising, sheer granite walls of California’s Yosemite Valley. On Maria’s legs and skis vou hurtle at 70 m.p.h. down the steep, tortuous another equally spectacular dimen- side the human body itself to show having on lungs, heart, blood ceils, been achieved by teaming the huge lighting literally ‘‘piped’’ into the a BP Be eee 8 Wie” : V3 HUGH ADDISON ...25-year sur- vivor. fascinating pictures that emerge have a beauty all their own. And a message for everyone: Our human body is an incredibly complex, tough and resilient machine with an almost infinite capacity to meet physical challenge. Take care of it! “To The Limit’’ plays seven times daily, | p.m. to 9 p.m. Adults $5.50, under-12s $3.50 at matinces — $8 and $5.50 at the two double-feature evening shows with ‘‘Silent Sky’ added. A unique movie experience not to be missed. wee SEEKING A DATE with a dream bachelor, ladies? All you need tomorrow evening, June 5, at the Hyatt Regency is a $40-$60 ticket from Ticket Master, your slinkiest gown and a cheque book to close the deal with the auctioneer. The occasion is ‘Bachelor Fantasy,’’ with up to 40 of Vancouver's most desirable stags going on the block to raise funds for the Multiple Sclerosis Society. JUNG 30 THe CANADA Olinamercoe bi19R Bill OUF 0 Female bidders will be regaled with gourmet nibbles, bubbly and music. The $60 ticket includes a private champagne reception to preview the tuxedo-wrapped mer- chandise. Coordinator Barbara Hammond of North Van (984- 6255) promises it will be ‘‘the single most exciting and glamorous event of the year.”’ ete WRAP-UP: Salute of the week to career ‘‘quarter-centenarian’”’ Hugh Addison, genial vice-presi- dent and general manager of Park Royal. On June 1 Hugh — a West Van resident since childhood — celebrated his 25th year with Canada’s first shopping centre, having survived along the way the two massive expansions of the cen- tre in 1969 and 1978, not to men- ‘tion seme 300 monthly encounters with the highly individualistic Park ° Royal Merchants Association ... Congrats to Rev. Joha Caddeford, Assistant Pastor at Hillside Baptist Church since 1987, on his ordina- tion there today ... And SIst anni- versary greetings Tuesday, June 6, to North Van’s Jukn and Evelyne Donovan. gee WRIGHT OR WRONG: One thing a girl learns shorily after marriage is that candy comes in 20¢ bars as well as $5 boxes. PROUD WINNER...Cap College music therapy student.Jan Brown receives $500 [ODE (Lions Gate Chapter) award from education secre- tary Gladys Palmer (left) and chapter regent Franne Gregg (right). Publisher Associate Editor which Peter Speck Managing Editor... .Barrett Fisher tenes Noel Wright Advertising Director .Linda Stewart North Shore News, founded in 1969 as an independent suburban newspaper and qualilied under Schedule 431, Paragraph IN of the Excise Tax Act, is published each Wednesday, Friday and Sunday by North Shore Free Press Lid, and distributed ta every door on the North Shore. Second Class Mail Registration Number 3885. Subscriptions North and West Vancouver, $25 per year. tailing rates available on request. Submissions are welcome but we cannot accept responsibility tor unsolicited material including manuscripts and pictures icoao. | should be accompanied by a Stamped, addre: 1139 Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver, B.C. 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