{"id":832,"date":"2010-06-07T22:35:30","date_gmt":"2010-06-08T05:35:30","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spacingvancouver.ca\/?p=832"},"modified":"2013-02-26T13:24:38","modified_gmt":"2013-02-26T21:24:38","slug":"a-year-in-five-minutes-vancouver-1972","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/spacing.ca\/vancouver\/2010\/06\/07\/a-year-in-five-minutes-vancouver-1972\/","title":{"rendered":"A Year in Five Minutes: Vancouver 1972"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"attachment_8828\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"vancouverarchives_wikipedia\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/06\/vancouverarchives_wikipedia.jpg\" alt=\"City of Vancouver Archives, opened in 1972. Photo courtesy of Wikipedia.\" width=\"290\" height=\"217\" \/>City of Vancouver Archives, opened in 1972. Photo courtesy of Wikipedia.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>In 1972, the NPA\u2019s reign was over, the City Archives were officially  opened, Gastown got a facelift and workers were guaranteed a minimum  wage of $2 an hour.<\/p>\n<p><strong>By Chuck Davis, <\/strong><strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.vancouverhistory.ca\/index.htm\" target=\"_blank\">The        History of Vancouver<\/a><br \/>\n<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><!--more--><strong>Team worked<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On December 13, 1972 Art Phillips led his TEAM players to a big win  in city council: Phillips was joined by eight TEAM aldermen, ending 35  years of NPA domination. Gordon Price, who heads the City Program at  SFU, says \u201cthere was no more significant year for Vancouver than 1972.\u201d  May Brown, who will be a council force in the future, won election to  the Vancouver Parks and Recreation Board. You can get some sense of the  changes at <a href=\"http:\/\/www.vancouverhistory.ca\/archives_paradiseMakers.htm\" target=\"_blank\">The History of Metropolitan Vancouver website<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Left Turn<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>It was a year for the left in BC. On August 30, 1972 Dave Barrett and  the NDP won the provincial election. Barrett, a 43-year-old social  worker from Coquitlam, became the province\u2019s 26th premier, would serve  to December 21, 1975 when Bill Bennett, son of the man Barrett defeated,  defeated him in turn. Barrett was born in Vancouver October 2, 1930,  and worked as a social worker. He would be Leader of the Opposition from  1976 to his retirement from politics in 1983.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Archives<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On December 29 the Vancouver City Archives, in a building named for  the late archivist Major J.S. Matthews, were officially opened at Vanier  Park by outgoing Mayor Tom Campbell. It would be impossible to write on  Vancouver history without the City Archives. The Major is responsible  for the core of the collection. The archives, under the direction of  Leslie Mobbs, is a great (and free) place to visit for anyone interested  in local history.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Minimum wage<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A new minimum wage of $2 an hour went into effect in B.C. on December  4, 1972. Labor minister Bill King made the announcement, and said that  further increases to $2.25 and $2.50 would take place in two stages over  the following 18 months. (The minimum wage today is $8 an hour.)<\/p>\n<p><strong>Greenpeace<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The Don\u2019t Make a Wave Committee changed its name to the Greenpeace  Foundation. Greenpeace III (originally the Vega) sailed to French  Polynesia to protest against French atmospheric nuclear tests. The boat,  a 12.5-metre hand-built ketch, belonged to David McTaggart, chairman of  Greenpeace International from 1969 to 1973. The Vega was retired when  McTaggart retired after being severely beaten, with others of his crew,  during the 1972 protest.<\/p>\n<p><strong>New Viaduct<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The old Georgia Viaduct, opened in 1915, was dismantled and a new one  built this year. Bridge engineer Robert Harris wrote about the old  span: \u201cA classic product of low bidding ($494,000) and meagre  supervision, it was never a sound bridge. Streetcar tracks were laid but  never used. Every second lamppost was removed to save weight. Much  blacktop was used to fill mysterious sags and hollows in the deck.  People passing below were injured by falling concrete, and concrete  spans were propped with timber. The bridge was replaced by the parallel  Georgia and Dunsmuir viaducts in 1972, each carrying three lanes of  one-way traffic.\u201d The alignments of the two new viaducts suited the  city\u2019s downtown one-way street policy, with Georgia eastbound, Dunsmuir  westbound. The two structures cost $11.2 million.<\/p>\n<p><strong>DeCosmos Village<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>DeCosmos Village, the city\u2019s first co-op housing development, opened  at East 49th Avenue at Boundary Road within the Champlain Heights  neighborhood. The designer was architect Francis Donaldson. The  development was named for an early BC premier. Champlain Heights was the  last undeveloped acreage within the city limits to be built up. Writes  architectural historian Harold Kalman: \u201cThe showcase residential  community was planned in the early 1970s, with curved roads and  cul-de-sacs serving a mix of housing types and income levels. The City  retained ownership of the land, leasing it to developers. This  stucco-and-wood housing co-op, inspired by the idea of European  townhouses around a public square, provides a comfortable, human scale.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>TRIUMF!<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The TRIUMF cyclotron, operated in conjunction with U Vic and the  University of Alberta, was built at UBC. This facility, the largest of  its kind in the world, continues to attract top-notch researchers  despite occasional funding cutbacks. The name TRIUMF was coined to  represent Tri-University Meson Facility, and is still used, although six  universities are now involved, and another seven are listed as  associates.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Also in 1972<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>From an article by Aaron Chapman, published in the <em>Courier<\/em> December 16, 2004: \u201cOn an early and rainy Tuesday morning, March 14,  1972, an older man in an old bathrobe, pajama bottoms and sandals walked  into the side lobby of the Bayshore Inn in Vancouver. Surrounded by a  half-dozen bodyguards and staff, the tall, oddly dressed gent casually  strolled around the nearly unoccupied lobby, commenting, \u2018This is pretty  nice.\u2019 He moved into the elevator with the men and up to the penthouse  suite where he would remain unseen, never leaving his single room for  the duration of his six-month stay. Howard Hughes had arrived in  Vancouver.\u201d A few minutes after his arrival he stood at his penthouse  window to watch a seaplane land. The last time Hughes had viewed the  harbor was in 1945, when he piloted Vancouver actress-turned-Hollywood  star Yvonne de Carlo on a flight over Vancouver. This time, local  photographers began a stakeout, but without success because Hughes was  soon ensconced in a blacked-out bedroom. He was here for six months.<\/p>\n<p>The first purpose-built Martial Arts Centre, or dojo house, outside Japan opened March 18 in Steveston.<\/p>\n<p>On April 1, 1972 the Pacific Great Eastern Railway became the British  Columbia Railway. In 2004 BC Rail would be sold to the Canadian  National Railway.<\/p>\n<p>On April 20 bulldozers demolished squatters\u2019 huts at \u201cFour Seasons\u201d  site near the entrance to Stanley Park. The site would become a park in  1977.<\/p>\n<p>Muhammad Ali was defending the North American Boxing Federation  heavyweight championship when he won a 12-round decision May 1 over  George Chuvalo at the Pacific Coliseum.<\/p>\n<p>The Rolling Stones held a concert June 2 at the Pacific Coliseum, a riot broke out and 21 police officers were injured.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_8829\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"girlinwetsuit_wikipedia\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/06\/girlinwetsuit_wikipedia.jpg\" alt=\"The Girl in Wet Suit sculpture off Stanley Park. Photo courtesy of Wikipedia.\" width=\"290\" height=\"284\" \/>The Girl in Wet Suit sculpture off Stanley Park. Photo courtesy of Wikipedia.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>Elek Imredy\u2019s <em>Girl in Wet Suit<\/em> sculpture was unveiled June 9  on a rock off Stanley Park. (She\u2019s often misidentified as a mermaid.  Check her feet. She\u2019s got a couple.) There\u2019s an interesting article on  the sculpture, and its Hungarian-born creator, <a href=\"http:\/\/vancouver.ca\/PublicArt_Net\/ArtworkDetails.aspx?ArtworkID=97&amp;Neighbourhood=&amp;Ownership=&amp;Program=\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Western Canada\u2019s first multilingual radio station, CJVB, started by  Jan van Bruchem, signed on June 18, 1972 at AM 1470. Today, under new  owners and known as Fairchild Radio, most of its programming is in  Cantonese and Mandarin.<\/p>\n<p>Sydney, Nova Scotia-born (May 23, 1947) Gary Bannerman, a <em>Province<\/em> columnist, was lured away by radio CKNW to become one of \u201cThe  Investigators.\u201d He and Shirley Stocker and a large cast of others would  conduct hundreds of ratings-boosting investigations.<\/p>\n<p>At 9:58 in pitch-black darkness on Tuesday night, August 22, 1972 a  nurse named Fran Cannon, 30, stepped into the waters of Georgia Strait  at Neck Point, just north of Nanaimo.  Waiting for her just offshore was  the Charlotte Strait, a tug owned by Rivtow Straits, and a smaller boat  aboard which was Fran\u2019s husband, Dennis. Fran was determined to be the  first woman to swim across Georgia Strait. At 1:05 on Wednesday  afternoon, August 23 Fran stepped ashore at Davis Bay, almost exactly 15  hours after she\u2019d started. Why\u2019d she do it? \u201cDennis and I had a friend,  Mike Powley, who was the first man to swim the Strait. That was in  August of 1967. I just wanted to be the first woman to do it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cA network of underground pedestrian ways,\u201d wrote Art McKenzie in <em>The Province<\/em> on September 8, \u201cis being developed in the downtown core of Vancouver  that may ultimately allow shoppers to move between the various sectors  on foot or by moving sidewalk or escalator free of the discomfort of  weather and the hazard of surface traffic.\u201d The two major developments  cited were Royal Centre and Pacific Centre. One of the projects being  discussed was a tunnel from the Hotel Vancouver east to Pacific Centre,  but a Canadian National Railway official (the CNR ran the hotel then)  said that had not been considered seriously. \u201cBut,\u201d the paper reported,  \u201cthere will definitely be a tunnel from the present courthouse to the  Pacific Centre.\u201d Hasn\u2019t happened yet.<\/p>\n<p>John \u201cGassy Jack\u201d Deighton\u2019s body, which had lain in an unmarked  grave in New Westminster\u2019s Fraserview Cemetery  for 97 years (he died in  1875), was finally located. A  headstone was erected September 30,  thanks to the Gassy Jack Memorial Fund. Daniel Wood, a local freelance  writer, had gone looking for Jack\u2019s final resting place and after a long  search\u2014ending as Daniel spotted a tiny bare spot in the cemetery grass  which he pried open with his fingers\u2014found it.<\/p>\n<p>In September of 1972 full nudity was decriminalized in BC, and immediately nightclubs began to feature totally naked dancers.<\/p>\n<p>We began using permanent licence plates on our cars in B.C. November 10, using stick-on tabs to indicate the year.<\/p>\n<p>Abbotsford was incorporated November 17, 1972.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_8830\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"gastownreconstruction_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/06\/gastownreconstruction_archives.jpg\" alt=\"Construction at Maple Tree Square in Gastown in 1972. Item # CVA 780-591. Photo courtesy of Vancouver Archives.\" width=\"330\" height=\"224\" \/>Construction at Maple Tree Square in Gastown in 1972. Item # CVA 780-591. Photo courtesy of Vancouver Archives.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>Three governments granted money for the beautification of Gastown.  Utility wires were buried, trees were planted, and old-fashioned street  lights\u2014modeled somewhat after the originals\u2014were installed. Subtle,  unobtrusive touches were added: the chain-linked bollards between the  sidewalks and the roadways, for example, are there to discourage  jay-walking. That they happen to look good is a bonus. The streets were  paved with brick. The city\u2019s planner for Gastown, Jon Ellis, said it was  the first time a North American city had torn up good streets to  rebuild them in the old style.<\/p>\n<p>Davey (David Lambie) Black, golfer, in his late 80s, was inducted  into the Canadian Golf Hall of Fame. He was the golf pro at Shaughnessy  Golf Club from 1920 to 1945. See his obituary entry for March 26, 1974  at <a href=\"http:\/\/www.vancouverhistory.ca\/chronology1974.htm\" target=\"_blank\">The History of Metropolitan Vancouver<\/a> for a fuller description of his long and distinguished career.<\/p>\n<p>Neighborhood pubs were approved by the provincial government in 1972,  breaking the hotel industry\u2019s monopoly on the sale of draft beer.<\/p>\n<p>The musical <em>Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris<\/em> opened at the Arts Club Theatre, in a co-production with David Y.H. Lui  that changed the face of entertainment in Vancouver. Over its initial  run it drew 40,000 people to the Art\u2019s Club Seymour Street theatre\u2014even  selling out 11 a.m. Sunday matinees!  The show starred Leon Bibb, Ruth  Nichol, Anne Mortifee, Pat Rose and Brent Carver.<\/p>\n<p>Joan Sutherland performed in the title role of <em>Lucrezia Borgia<\/em> for Vancouver Opera. It was her debut performance in this role.<\/p>\n<p>The Vancouver Opera Guild began its Opera In The Schools program,  designed as an introduction to opera for children in grades 1 to 7. The  program brought more than 1.5 million people to the world of opera.<\/p>\n<p>Griffiths Gibson Productions, which had started June 26, 1967 (with  Brian Griffiths and Brian Gibson) expanded to become Griffiths Gibson  &amp; Ramsay Productions Limited, with the arrival in the firm of Miles  Ramsay. They went on to become one of Canada\u2019s leading commercial jingle  studios.<\/p>\n<p>Swiss-born Rene Dahinden, with the help of journalist Don Hunter, wrote <em>Sasquatch<\/em>, a summary of his 20 years\u2019 research into the Sasquatch.<\/p>\n<p>Penticton-born novelist E.G. Perrault published his second novel, <em>The Twelfth Mile<\/em>, described as \u201ca suspenseful tale about a West Coast towboat operator.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Bill Millerd became the Arts Club Theatre\u2019s artistic and managing director. He still is!<\/p>\n<p>The insanely surreal CBC radio program <em>Dr. Bundolo\u2019s Pandemonium Medicine Show<\/em> began. Taped before university students, who revelled in its irreverent  and raunchy humor, it would last to 1980, then move to CBC-TV for two  seasons. The show was produced by Don Kowalchuk, and written by Jeffrey  Groberman and Dan Thatchuk (the latter now known as Colin Yardley).  Stars included such folk as Bill Reiter, Steve Woodman, Norm Grohman,  Marla Gropper and Bill Buck.<\/p>\n<p>Impresario Sam Feldman launched S.L. Feldman &amp; Associates, and  before long the one-time doorman commanded the majority of club and  concert business west of the Manitoba\/Ontario border.<\/p>\n<p><em>Bridge Marker<\/em>, a sculpture by George Norris, was installed  at the west end of the Georgia Viaduct. It consisted of liquid-filled  glass spheres designed to reflect traffic patterns.<\/p>\n<p>Byron Black\u2019s film <em>Master Of Images<\/em> was released. Says  Michael Walsh: \u201cPuckish conceptual artist Black offered his personal  take on the state of cinema with this non-linear tale of a young woman  (Lulu Ulul) who flees the city for some karmic readjustment and  experiences a kaleidoscopic 1960s-style happening.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Richard Walton\u2019s film <em>In Pursuit Of . . .<\/em> was released.  Walsh describes it: \u201cPrivate girls-schoolmates (Cecilia Smith, Celine La  Freniere) learn about life and love in this upbeat, mildly moralistic  romantic comedy.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Universal Studios released <em>The Groundstar Conspiracy<\/em>,  directed by Lamont Johnson. Simon Fraser University provided a  futuristic background for this science fiction thriller. Walsh writes:  \u201cA CIA spymaster (George Peppard) uses an amnesiac scientist (Michael  Sarrazin) to trap the foreign agents responsible for blowing up a U.S.  space research centre (Simon Fraser University).\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The movie <em>Another Smith For Paradise<\/em>, directed by Tom  Shandel, was released. Writes Walsh: \u201cIn this fictional examination of  ethnic ambition, a dynamic Ukrainian-Canadian stock promoter (Henry  Ramer) plans a grand gesture to impress Vancouver\u2019s WASP Establishment.  Besides Ramer, the cast list includes many well-known local performers:  Frances Hyland, Otto Lowy, Sam Payne and Pia Shandel.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The literary landscape of the province was mightily enhanced this year when Howard White began the periodical <em>Raincoast Chronicles<\/em>,  telling the stories of B.C. pioneers. They became a successful series  of books, and by 1974 his company, Harbour Publishing, would be up and  selling.<\/p>\n<p>The Public Archives of Canada published <em>The Great Vancouver Fire of 1886<\/em> by J.S. Matthews, city archivist.<\/p>\n<p>Mitchell Press published <em>The Ladners of Ladner: By Covered Wagon to the Welfare State<\/em>, by  Leon J. Ladner. Great title.<\/p>\n<p>Construction of Pacific Centre started.<\/p>\n<p>The boat-building Wallace family sold Burrard Drydock to Cornat Industries of Vancouver.<\/p>\n<p>City Stage began running lunch-hour theatre out of a donut shop in the West End.<\/p>\n<p>Karen Magnussen won a silver medal in figure skating at the Winter Olympics in Japan.<\/p>\n<p>Vancouver\u2019s Bruce Robertson was outstanding at the 1972 Olympic Games  in Munich, swimming the second fastest time ever. He won a silver medal  in the 100m butterfly, second only to Mark Spitz. Combined with his  bronze medal in the 4\u00d7100 medley relay, Bruce brought home two of the  five medals Canada won at the 1972 Games.<\/p>\n<p>David Miller of Vancouver won Olympic gold in yachting on September 8.<\/p>\n<p>Lars Hansen, a 6-foot-10 centre from Coquitlam\u2019s Centennial  Secondary, led his high school\u2019s basketball team to the B.C. title. He  would go on to play four seasons at the University of Washington in  Seattle.<\/p>\n<p>The UBC men\u2019s basketball team won its fourth national championship.<\/p>\n<p>The North Vancouver Museum and Archives collected the holdings of the  lower mainland\u2019s first museum, which had been at the Moodyville Mill.  The museum features outstanding early photos and changing exhibits of  lively social and industrial life, including the shipyards that fitted  out 70 per cent of the Victory ships for the Second World War.<\/p>\n<p>Kazuyoshi Akiyama was appointed music director of the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra.<\/p>\n<p>J.V. Clyne, chairman and CEO of MacMillan Bloedel, and a former judge  on the B.C. Supreme Court, was made a Companion of the Order of Canada.<\/p>\n<p>Burnaby\u2019s old Municipal Hall, opened in 1912, was torn down. It had  been shared by the RCMP from 1935 to 1956, then by the library.<\/p>\n<p>A roe herring fishery began on the Lower Fraser for the Japanese market. At $3,350 a tonne it was a lucrative business.<\/p>\n<p>Harold Steves, a great-grandson of Richmond pioneer Manoah  Steves\u2014after whom Steveston is named\u2014was elected as an NDP MLA. He had  been a member of Richmond Council since 1968, and actively involved in  preserving Steveston\u2019s heritage.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_8831\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"700westgeorgia_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/06\/700westgeorgia_archives.jpg\" alt=\"The TD Tower at 700 West Georgia Street. Item # CVA 780-13. Photo courtesy of Vancouver Archives.\" width=\"340\" height=\"227\" \/>The TD Tower at 700 West Georgia Street. Item # CVA 780-13. Photo courtesy of Vancouver Archives.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>There was a huge fuss when the \u201cBlack Tower\u201d went up. The TD Bank  Tower at 700 West Georgia was not an instant hit with the public. Its  glossy black 30 storeys and 127-metre height were greeted with cries of  derision and dismay. Then there are those who say it\u2019s quite elegant.<\/p>\n<p>The provincial government delegated responsibility for air quality  management to the Greater Vancouver Regional District, creating a  regional focus for clean air initiatives. Since then the GVRD has been  responsible for air quality monitoring and the regulation of air  pollution sources.<\/p>\n<p>A building housing UBC\u2019s Civil-Mechanical Laboratories opened.<\/p>\n<p>UBC won a North American competition with an electrically-powered  car, the \u2018Wally Wagon,\u2019 named for President Walter Gage (who was a  favorite among engineering students).<\/p>\n<p>The Buchanan Tower opened at UBC. It\u2019s a 12-storey office\/seminar  room extension to the Buchanan Building. Completed at a cost of just  under $2.6 million, it\u2019s the tallest building on campus: 150 feet (45.7  m) high. It holds 267 faculty offices and nine seminar rooms.<\/p>\n<p>UBC\u2019s Geological Sciences Building opened. The building is  architecturally unique on campus: it\u2019s made entirely of standard-sized  pieces fitted together, and has been compared to a \u2018Meccano\u2019  set. All  of the interior walls are movable (except the dinosaur wall) enabling  additions or changes to the building to be made quickly and relatively  easily. The Pacific Museum of the Earth, opened June 19, 2003, is here,  with one popular exhibit being the 80-million-year-old skeleton of a  Lambeosaurus dinosaur. The dinosaur\u2019s name is George.<\/p>\n<p>The Woodward Instructional Resources Centre was completed at UBC,  paid for with money given to UBC by the P.A. Woodward Foundation. The  Centre was named for Charles Woodward, who founded the first pharmacy in  B.C., as well as Woodward\u2019s Department Stores. The complex includes a  Biomedical Library, five lecture halls with a seating capacity of  117-500, 14  seminar rooms, Health Sciences Deans\u2019 Offices, the  Department of Biomedical Communications and two lecture theatres each  with a seating capacity of 700 people.<\/p>\n<p>A 13.7 hectare site in the Lynnmour area of North Vancouver between  Lynn Creek and the Seymour River was chosen as the site for Capilano  College. A bear was found hibernating in the region when work began on  clearing the site for the college\u2019s first permanent facility.<\/p>\n<p>Robin Mayor was appointed principal of the Vancouver School of Art.  In 1978 (thanks largely to Mayor\u2019s efforts) it will become independent  of Vancouver Community College, and be renamed the Emily Carr College of  Art.<\/p>\n<p><em>BC Business<\/em>, a monthly business magazine, was launched by  Joe Martin of Agency Press. It passed through the hands of several  owners, until in 1990 it was taken over by Canada Wide Magazines. Canada  Wide has sponsored 1976 in <a href=\"http:\/\/www.vancouverhistory.ca\/\" target=\"_blank\">The History of Metropolitan Vancouver<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Many other new publications appeared locally in 1972. They included:<br \/>\n* <em>Beale\u2019s Industry Letter<\/em>, a resource industry newsletter  published 26 times a year. (Today the publisher, Colin Beale, 72, works  as a nude model for art classes.)<br \/>\n* <em>British Columbia Medical Association News<\/em>, a bi-monthly publication for members of the British Columbia Medical Association.<br \/>\n* <em>Capilano Review<\/em>, a journal of poetry, art work and short fiction published three times a year at Capilano College.<br \/>\n* <em>Discovery<\/em>, a quarterly publication of the Vancouver Natural History Society.<br \/>\n* <em>Kinesis: News About Women That\u2019s Not in the Dailies<\/em>,  published 10 times a year by Vancouver Status of Women. It covered news  from a feminist angle, analyzed government policies, feminist theories  and debates within the women\u2019s movement.<br \/>\n* <em>Professional Recreation Society of B.C. Newsletter<\/em>, a bi-monthly.<br \/>\n* <em>Sentinela<\/em>, a semi-monthly printed in Portuguese, with news of the Portuguese-speaking community.<\/p>\n<p>The Lady Alexandra, built in 1924 and used for decades to carry  vacationers and daytrippers to resorts and vacation spots at Bowen  Island and along the southern B.C. coast, had become (in 1959) a  floating restaurant in Coal Harbour. This year she was towed to Redonda  Beach, California, to become a gambling hall. A storm later damaged her  badly and she would be scrapped in 1980.<\/p>\n<p>The J.H. Carlisle, Vancouver\u2019s first fireboat, built in 1928 at  Burrard Dry Dock, was converted to a workboat, and now toils at Port  Edward on the Skeena River.<\/p>\n<p>***<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Chuck Davis<\/strong> is a Vancouver writer who has         written, co-written, or edited 15 books. Most of them are on local         history, and he describes his next book, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.vancouverhistory.ca\/thebook.html\" target=\"_blank\">The        History of Metropolitan Vancouver<\/a>, as the capstone of his   career.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>City of Vancouver Archives, opened in 1972. Photo courtesy of Wikipedia. In 1972, the NPA\u2019s reign was over, the City Archives were officially opened, Gastown got a facelift and workers were guaranteed a minimum wage of $2 an hour. By Chuck Davis, The History of 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