17 - Friday, October 2, 1987 - North Shore News Week of Oct. 4-10, 1987 ARIES (March 21-Aprit 20): Explore the possibilities that now surface within your working environment. There just might be more than you had thought. TAURUS (April 21-May 20): Elements of your per- sonal life now spill over into sour working life. it’s not simple, but it is you at this time. ge | GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Le The core of your fundamen- tal security is, once again, in transition. Know it, and do whatever is called for now. CANCER (Sune 21-Juiy 22): After you have contacted the right people, you can go ahead with changing certain condi- tions within your base of operations. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You apply some recently acquired ‘nowledge to your financial structure. And you find that you can now bring many things into line. 2 &| VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sept. 22): SBA) After what seems like a se- cond chance, you plunge ahead with a dynamic and exciting concept related to your income. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): This is an interesting period, one thar demands your steadiness and involvement. Supply that, and you can move ahead easily. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 22): Others may have pluns that are not in agreement with your own. Therefore, you must splan privately and with balance. SAGITTARIUS (Nov, 23 eS -Dee. 20): Strike while the iron is hot! This means that you can now forge a new dimension with_your working life as a whole. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-3an. PRES 19): Look to the future — near and distant. For this is a time that calls for your vision and your ability to handle details. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): It makes little difference what others think about your actions now. You are determined to steer your own course. Do it! PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): q After you have made the ar- rangements, you can allow vourself some time to regroup. Otherwise, your energy level may be scattered. Skate star trained at NSWC CHRISTIANNE HIRT, who trained for her role in the CBC movie Skate at the North Shore Winter Club, can be seen when the program airs on the station Oct. 4. For three hours a day for three months, Hirt trained at the North Shore rink to get ready for her role as Lori Larouche, an up-and- coming young skater. Soon after wrapping up filming for Skate, the 19-year-old was cast as a guest star in an episode of CBC’s Street Legal, where she plays a surrogate mother. Skate starts off CBC’s main lineup for the evening of Oct. 4, and begins at 8 p.m. PRESENTATION HOUSE CBC orchestra tickets cn sale Morning fame will be offering pre-concert coffee and NORTH VANCOUVER’S Presentation House is the ! a discussion of the day’s music one hour prior to each only North Shore location for tickets to the CBC Vancouver Orchestra’s new A Little Lunch Music series, Concerts are Oct. 5, 19 and 26 around lunch times, and the A Little Lunch Music series is a perfect in- terlude for mothers with children in school, explained radio publicist Joan Athey. West Vancouver’s June Goldsmith of Music in the of the shows. Concerts at the Orpheum in Vancouver will feature a variety of classical music. North Shore soprano In- grid Suderman will be the soloist for the Oct. 19 con- cert, titled The Htatian Legacy. A Little Lunch Music concerts start at 14:30 a.m., except the Oct. 5 concert, which starts af 12:30 p.m... . tells NEWS photo Tom Burley PUPPETEERS {I to r) Patti Bosomworth, Susan Down and Herb Walsh rehearse for.their upcoming performances Oct. 3 and 24 at the Vancouver Waldorf Scho»! in North Vancouver. Show times are at 1 and 2 p.m. NEWS photo Noll Lucente PAUL JANZ (foreground) rehearses with Jocal musicians a new benefit song which the musician composed. The charity single, which is as yet un-named, will benefit the Make a Wish Foundation. Celebrities such as Bryan Adams, Tom Lavin and Colin James have worked on the single. orwegian tale THE ENCHANTED world of marionettes comes to the North Vancouver-based Vancouver Waldorf School when a local mar- ionette group presents The Golden Buck Oct. 3. “This style of puppetry origi- nated in Europe,’’ explained Susan Down, founder and director of the show-preducing The Juniper Tree Marionette Theatre groun. Working with silk marionettes, the company performs fairy tales, folk tales, legends and myths that are “well-balanced and nourishing for children.”’ “The silk brings a unique quali- ty to marionettes because it is so fluid that there can be wonderful movements and subtle gestures,’’ she said. ‘‘Puppets are purposeful- ly simple so children’s imagination will be more fully involved.’’ Befitting his station, the king in this Norwegian fairy tale wears gold and parple., The woodsman, again mirroring his calling in life, wears earth tones. To enhance what Down calls “the richness of the art,’’ the 40- minute show’s music and storytell- ing are always performed live. Two shows will te held at 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. at the Vancouver _ Waldorf School at 2725 St. Christopher’s Rd. in North Van- couver. The Golden Buck is a story for children five years of age and older. Cost is $! for children, $2 for adults. For more information on this show or Down’s marionette workshops for children, call 929- 7051. Another Golden Buck show will be Oct. 24. & ctober is 5 the month to ‘prepare’ your vehicle for A Winter. Leaving it any later could be hazardous to wf! Your car’, your own, or even some elses well being, With that in mind, we've encouraged our advertisers to in- clude their best values until the end of October in our ’Fall & Winter CAR CARE Feature. ; This is a feature you'll want to keep around the house for a couple of weeks. Besides the great advertising values you'll receive, well provide you with tips on what you should do or have done to your vehicle to maintain its reliability, its WATCH FOR IT appearance and, most importantly, its safety. OCTOBER 14. ADVERTISING DEADLINE—OCTOBER 8 THE VOICE OF NORTH AND WEST VANCOUVER