{"id":838,"date":"2010-05-17T22:38:32","date_gmt":"2010-05-18T05:38:32","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spacingvancouver.ca\/?p=838"},"modified":"2013-02-26T13:24:42","modified_gmt":"2013-02-26T21:24:42","slug":"a-year-in-five-minutes-vancouver-1969","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/spacing.ca\/vancouver\/2010\/05\/17\/a-year-in-five-minutes-vancouver-1969\/","title":{"rendered":"A Year in Five Minutes: Vancouver 1969"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"attachment_8523\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"bloedelconservatory_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/05\/bloedelconservatory_archives.jpg\" alt=\"Bloedel Conservatory in Queen Elizabeth Park. Item # CVA 780-287.\" width=\"290\" height=\"201\" \/>Bloedel Conservatory in Queen Elizabeth Park. Item # CVA 780-287.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>It was a busy time for film production in Vancouver, a local writer  had a best-selling novel and the Bloedel Conservatory opened in this  year that man first walked on the moon.<\/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 \/>\nPhotos courtesy of <a href=\"http:\/\/www.city.vancouver.bc.ca\/ctyclerk\/archives\/\" target=\"_blank\">Vancouver Archives<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><!--more--><strong>Bloedel Conservatory<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The Bloedel Floral Conservatory opened at Queen Elizabeth Park  December 6, 1969. They expected about 3,500 people to visit on opening  day, but more than 11,000 showed up. It\u2019s still a great place to visit,  especially on a wet, chilly winter day. Dozens of species of colorful  birds fly freely through the foliage, from tiny, flitting Button Quail  and Gold-breasted Waxbills to the big Moluccan Cockatoo, the Blue and  Gold Macaw and Rosie the Parrot, who can imitate the sound of a cell  phone and does a pretty good cough. More than 300 varieties of tropical  plants are on display.<\/p>\n<p>The conservatory was built thanks largely to a $1.25 million donation  through the Bloedel Foundation from lumber magnate Prentice Bloedel and  his wife Virginia, and smaller amounts from the city and provincial  governments. This is Canada\u2019s largest single-structure conservatory. Its  domed design is based on the geodesic principle, which utilizes a  structural space-frame to support the roof, enabling a large interior  volume to be enclosed without the need for internal supporting columns.  The Conservatory dome consists of 2,324 pieces of 12.5 cm (5 in.)  diameter extruded aluminum tubing and 1,490 triodetic plexiglass  \u201cbubbles.\u201d The bubbles were designed by Thorson and Thorson, structural  engineers.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.theprovince.com\/Plans+sprouting+save+Bloedel+Conservatory\/2969841\/story.html\" target=\"_blank\">See here<\/a> for recent news on the effort to save the Bloedel Conservatory.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Arms and the City<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Vancouver was granted its first official coat of arms on March 31,  1969. The city has had a coat of arms since its beginning, but until  they were approved by the College of Heraldry the arms weren\u2019t official.  The first design was supplanted in 1903 by a more attractive and  appropriate version by James Blomfield, already celebrated locally for  his work in stained glass. The new arms were based on the 1903 Blomfield  design. Changes included making the central \u201cV\u201d green, instead of red.  The caduceus of Mercury was replaced by a Kwakiutl totem pole, one of  the most familiar and most dramatic of the art forms of the West Coast  First Nations. The upper part of the shield was colored gold and this  new area is set with two dogwood flowers. Finally, the word air was  added to the motto, acknowledging the increasing role of air transport  in the City\u2019s history.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Lights, action . . .<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>In 1969, film production began here in earnest, with Robert Altman\u2019s <em>That Cold Day in the Park<\/em>.   In director Altman\u2019s first Vancouver feature, a lonely, delusional  spinster (Sandy Dennis) picks up a young drifter (Michael Burns) in  Kitsilano\u2019s Tatlow Park, Point Grey Road at West 3rd Avenue. Another  major production: Robert Rafelson\u2019s <em>Five Easy Pieces<\/em> with Jack Nicholson and Karen Black.<\/p>\n<p>Other movies made locally this year included :<br \/>\n* <em>Great Coups of History<\/em>, written and directed by Ron Darcus.<br \/>\n* <em>The Mad Room<\/em>, directed by Bernard Girard.<br \/>\n* <em>The Plastic Mile<\/em> (aka <em>The Finishing Touch <\/em>and<em> She\u2019s a Woman<\/em>), directed by Morrie Ruvinsky.<br \/>\n* <em>Explosion<\/em>, directed by Jules Bricken.<\/p>\n<p>Toronto-born (1945) writer Michael Walsh, who would become a long-time film critic for <em>The Province<\/em>, came to B.C. He would write <em>The Canadian Movie Quiz Book<\/em> in 1979, and contribute the section on Vancouver-made films for <em>The Greater Vancouver Book<\/em> (1997).<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Peter Principle<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Sometime in the late 1960s Dr. Laurence Peter, a UBC professor, and  Ray Hull, a Vancouver freelance writer, happened to be standing beside  each other in the lobby of the Metro Theatre in Vancouver. Hull casually  mentioned that he thought the production was a failure, and during that  momentous chat Peter suggested to Hull that people invariably rise to  their level of incompetence. That caught Hull\u2019s attention, and one thing  led to another: the \u2018another\u2019 was a book: <em>The Peter Principle: Why Things Always Go Wrong<\/em>.  It came out in 1969 and rocketed to the top of the best seller list.  More than 40 years later we all still know the principle: \u201cIn any  hierarchy, a person tends to rise to the level of his incompetence.\u201d  Thus, every position will eventually be occupied by someone who is not  quite capable of the job. With sales of more than seven million copies  it is likely BC\u2019s best-selling book.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Lily Laverock<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Impresario Lily Laverock died in Duncan, December 2, 1969, aged about  89. She was born in Edinburgh, c. 1880. She came to Vancouver as a  child with her parents. She was the first woman (1908) employed as a  general reporter by a Vancouver newspaper (<em>The World<\/em>). On  October 4, 1909, when the Vancouver branch of the Canadian Women\u2019s Press  Club was formed, she was the chief organizer and the first  secretary-treasurer. She moved to the <em>News-Advertiser<\/em> in 1910  and became editor of the women\u2019s page. \u201cHer pen was ever ready in the  cause of women\u2019s suffrage.\u201d She never married. Quiet, shy, ethereally  attractive, she made her greatest contribution to local fame when she  became an impresario. An avid arts supporter, she promoted her first  Celebrity Concert in 1921. The world-famous performers she brought to  the city in the 1920s and 1930s make for an eye-popping list: Kreisler,  Paderewski, John McCormack, Galli-Curci, Rachmaninoff, Rosa Ponselle,  Tauber, Flagstad, Lily Pons, Heifetz, Melba, Gigli, Casals, Chaliapin,  Maurice Ravel at the piano . . . and on and on.  She packed the Denman  Arena with acts like the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo and Belgian Royal  Symphonic Band. WWII ended her impresario efforts. Today, despite her  immense contribution to the city\u2019s cultural life, she\u2019s almost totally  forgotten.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Also in 1969<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On January 26 local Anglicans consecrated the Reverend T. David  Somerville as Coadjutor Bishop to Archbishop Godfrey Gower. Nearly 5,000  people attended the service in the PNE Agrodome.<\/p>\n<p>Kenneth Hare stepped down in January after seven months as president  of UBC and Walter Gage became president again. Gage had been interim  president in 1967-68. This term will last to 1975.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_8524\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"nineoclockgun_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/05\/nineoclockgun_archives.jpg\" alt=\"Nine O'Clock Gun at Stanley Park. Item # CVA 780-789.\" width=\"310\" height=\"211\" \/>Nine O&#8217;Clock Gun at Stanley Park. Item # CVA 780-789.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>The Nine O\u2019Clock Gun in Stanley Park was \u201ckidnapped\u201d February 1 by  UBC Engineering students, who returned the 1,500-pound cannon for a  \u201cransom\u201d which was given to the Children\u2019s Hospital.<\/p>\n<p>The first scheduled hovercraft service in Canada began February 23  between Vancouver and Nanaimo, operated by Pacific Hovercraft. The  twice-daily 40-mile service was short-lived, ending in June. By 1971 the  company was in receivership.<\/p>\n<p>Montreal-born Peter Speck, 29, who had moved to the north shore with  his parents in 1944, launched a small scale, free publication called the  <em>North Shore Shopper<\/em> in February 1969. By the mid-1970s he will rename it the <em>North Shore News<\/em> and see it grow to a circulation hovering around 65,000.<\/p>\n<p>A new YWCA building on Burrard opened in March, 1979.<\/p>\n<p>On April 27 Joachim Foikis, the \u201cTown Fool,\u201d spent the last of his  Canada Council grant on a party in Gastown for Skid Road residents.<\/p>\n<p>Nancy Greene married Al Raine. In the summer of 1968, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.nancygreene.com\/bio_short.htm\" target=\"_blank\">Nancy\u2019s web site<\/a> explains, she had served on Prime Minister Trudeau\u2019s \u201cTask force on  Sport,\u201d and assisted the Canadian Ski Team with fundraising and  promotion. \u201cThis work put her in contact with Al Raine, the new Program  Director of Canada\u2019s National Ski Team. They were married in April 1969  and their twin sons Charley and Willy were born in Montreal in January  1970.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Construction began in April on a new $8-million campus to serve about  5,000 students at King Edward Centre of Vancouver Community (City)  College.<\/p>\n<p>Also in April, a 4.8-km (3-mile) causeway to the man-made island of  Roberts Bank, in Delta, opened to provide access to a deep-sea port  being developed to ship Alberta and BC coal to Japan.<\/p>\n<p>In 1968 the National Harbours Board Police had been changed from  separate port police forces to be unified into one force. Vancouver was  the last port during this re-organization to be brought into the  centralized system. In June, 1969 the security guard force that had been  in place here was replaced by sworn Police Officers.<\/p>\n<p>On July 29 Arthur Clarke became the first black man to become a Vancouver police officer.<\/p>\n<p>The Vancouver Mounties came to an end August 31. Only 1,101 fans saw  their last game. After 11 seasons and two second place finishes, the  Mounties would find a new home in 1970 in Salt Lake City.<\/p>\n<p>Early stirrings of what would become Greenpeace International began  in Vancouver in August, 1969. The US announced this month that they  planned a one-megaton nuclear bomb test in October on Amchitka Island,  in Alaska\u2019s Aleutian Islands. Bob Hunter, a columnist with <em>The Vancouver Sun<\/em>,  wrote that such a test might trigger an earthquake and tsunami. A  protest against the test, organized by Gwen and Derrick Mallard (who had  formed SPEC, the Scientific Pollution and Environmental Control  Society, in 1968), was held at the US consulate general in Vancouver.  \u201cAttending this protest,\u201d wrote Greenpeace historian Rex Weyler, \u201cwere  Bob and Zoe Hunter, Irving Stowe, Bob Cummings, Lille d\u2019Easum, Paul  Watson, Ben Metcalfe, Rod Marining, Paul and Linda Spong, and others who  would eventually form the core of Greenpeace.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Douglas College\u2019s first principal was appointed in August. His name  was George C. Wootton, dean of divisions at Seneca College of Applied  Arts and Technology in North York, Ontario. Wootton was a graduate of  North Vancouver High School and the University of British Columbia.  While earning his doctoral degree in engineering, Wootton served as  president of UBC\u2019s graduate student association. After graduating, he  worked for five years at the Canadian Atomic Energy Commission. He would  serve as principal of Douglas to September 1979.<\/p>\n<p>The Lougheed Mall opened in Burnaby September 24. We also have September 25.<\/p>\n<p>On October 29 Lester Pearson, prime minister of Canada from 1963 to 1968, was named an honorary member of the Vancouver Club.<\/p>\n<p>Gizeh Temple (the Shriners) had moved from Victoria to Vancouver in  1942. On November 23, after much ceremony, Gizeh Temple Shrine moved  into its new headquarters at the present location.<\/p>\n<p>Vancouver was awarded an NHL franchise December 1 and history began  for the Vancouver Canucks. Their first game would be October 9, 1970.<\/p>\n<p>An old ladder and pumper truck that joined the Essondale fire  department in 1929 was retired December 4 after 40 years of service. It  was driven into retirement at the Provincial Museum in Victoria by A. P.  Lowry, a former chief, accompanied by the chief of the time, Stanley  Lowrey. Along the old truck\u2019s route on both sides of the water local  fire departments provided escorts. The letters M.H.F.D. on the side of  the truck stood for Mental Health Fire Department.<\/p>\n<p>It was announced December 19 that Hugh Llewellyn Keenleyside,  diplomat and executive, had  become a Companion of the Order of Canada,  \u201cfor service at the United Nations and in public administration.\u201d He had  just stepped down as co-chair of B.C. Hydro, and was now Chancellor,  Notre Dame.<\/p>\n<p>December 28, 1969 was the last day for Ivan Ackery as manager of the  Orpheum Theatre. Ivan, two months past his 70th birthday, had been  forced into retirement by the theatre\u2019s new owners who had a policy of  retirement at 65. He had managed the Orpheum for 34 years. \u201cFor me,\u201d he  reflected eleven years later, \u201cit came as a sorry and sudden end to the  career I\u2019d devoted my life to and expected to carry on in until old age  and ill health rendered me incapable . . . There\u2019s no justice and little  sense in putting a healthy, experienced individual to pasture just  because he\u2019s had a birthday . . . Still, the company had been  wonderfully good to me, and I was always proud to be associated with it  and with the fine men I worked with over the years, who gave me so much  encouragement . . .\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Construction began on Pacific Centre, the most ambitious construction project undertaken in Vancouver up to that time.<\/p>\n<p>G.P.V. (Philip) and Helen B. Akrigg, British Columbia historians, produced a marvellously useful book, <em>1001 British Columbia Place Names<\/em>,  a fascinating trove of information about how our cities, lakes,  mountains and more got their names. It was published by Discovery Press,  owned and operated by the Akriggs. They would publish a second,  expanded version in 1997. See <a href=\"http:\/\/www.abcbookworld.com\/view_author.php?id=62\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a> and <a href=\"http:\/\/www.abcbookworld.com\/view_author.php?id=63\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a> for more information about the authors.<\/p>\n<p>Two major tugboat firms, Straits and River Towing, combined to form  RivTow Straits Ltd. Its successor, RivTow Marine, was bought in 2000 by  the Dutch firm Smit International.<\/p>\n<p>The two bronze lions in front of the office building at 1155 West  Pender have an interesting history. They were commissioned from sculptor  E. Schulte Beecham in 1914, but not installed until 1920. Then in 1962  they were sent to New York to be stored. They were brought back and  re-installed this year.<\/p>\n<p><em>Fountain of the Pioneers<\/em>, in silicone bronze, was installed  at 500 Burrard Street. \u201cThe sculpture,\u201d writes Elizabeth Godley,  \u201cthirteen feet high, was designed by Seattle sculptor George Tsutakawa.  In a 1969 <em>Province<\/em> interview, the artist said that a fountain  involves three elements: heaven, earth and water. \u2018What really makes a  fountain is water, the most elusive and mysterious element of all\u2019.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>A future opera star, a Spanish tenor named Placido Domingo, sang in <em>Manon<\/em>, a Vancouver Opera production. He had appeared here in 1968 in <em>Tosca<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Judith Forst, born in Fraser Mills, Coquitlam, was awarded a  five-year contract with the Metropolitan Opera Association of New York.  She would become a world-renowned mezzo-soprano.<\/p>\n<p>Theatre Under the Stars (TUTS), which had suspended operations in 1963, was revived as a semi-professional company.<\/p>\n<p>A \u201cpop culture phenomenon\u201d appeared at the Vancouver Playhouse with George Ryga\u2019s <em>Grass and Wild Strawberries<\/em>,  a musical about the hippie culture featuring live music by The  Collectors (who later became nationally famous as Chilliwack).  Apparently many unsatisfied Playhouse subscribers left the theatre at  intermission, their places then being taken by local hippies flocking to  the empty seats to watch the second act.<\/p>\n<p>Vancouver Cablevision (later Rogers Cable) initiated the Lower  Mainland\u2019s first community cable channel. Radio man Vic Waters, along  with partners Dave Liddell and Gerry Rose, operated the service on a  shoestring budget\u2014and the attitude was rather casual. Martin Truax, who  joined in 1970, recalls Waters getting calls from viewers who said they  missed a show: \u201cVic would say, \u2018No problem. I\u2019ll just run it again for  you right now!\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n<p>1969 was a fruitful year in periodical publication. These first appeared: <em>B C Naturalist<\/em> It\u2019s issued six times a year by the Federation of British Columbia  Naturalists. The magazine\u2019s motto today: \u201cTo know Nature and to keep it  worth knowing.\u201d <em>B C Studies<\/em> A quarterly published by the  University of British Columbia. It focuses on all aspects of human  history in British Columbia (and is a terrific source for <em>A Year in Five Minutes<\/em>). <em>B.S.D.A. News<\/em>, produced six times a year by the Building Supply Dealers Association of British Columbia, New Westminster. <em>Hollandse Krant<\/em>, a monthly publication in Dutch with news of Dutch speakers in B.C. and The Netherlands. <em>Journal of Business Administration<\/em>, published semi-annually by the Faculty of Commerce and Business Administration, UBC. <em>The Midden<\/em>, published five times a year by the Archaeological Society of British Columbia. <em>Where Vancouver<\/em>,  a monthly publication with news for tourists and visitors with articles  about where to dine and shop. Found in hotels and tourist information  offices.<\/p>\n<p>Drew Burns took over the Commodore Ballroom, which had opened in December 1929 as the Commodore Cabaret.<\/p>\n<p>Swangard Stadium, named for journalist Erwin Swangard, opened in  Central Park in Burnaby. He had raised nearly $1 million for its  construction. The stadium is the centre for professional soccer in B.C.<\/p>\n<p>Dorothy Lidstone of North Vancouver won the world archery  championship at Valley Forge, Pa. She beat a field of 40 women from 27  countries with a record 2,361 points, 110 points more than the previous  world record.<\/p>\n<p>Golf Hall of Famer Carol Mann won her fourth straight tour title when  she captured the Canadian Open title at the new Shaughnessy, the LPGA\u2019s  first official event in Western Canada.<\/p>\n<p>The Stanley Park Seawall had had 1,200 lineal feet added in 1968. The  work was financed with an annual $70,000 allotment. This year that  money paid for just 350 feet.<\/p>\n<p>Vancouver International Airport announced it could now handle \u201cjumbo jets,\u201d Boeing 747s.<\/p>\n<p>The Dinsmore Bridge opened over the Middle Arm of the Fraser River.  This two-lane, $845,000 low-level structure connected the densely  populated part of Richmond to Sea Island and the airport. It  supplemented, and is south of, the preceding Middle Arm bridge, and has  no movable span.<\/p>\n<p>The CNR replaced the old Burrard Inlet and Tunnel Company bridge  across the Second Narrows of Burrard Inlet with a larger, heavier bridge  built onto the reinforced and modified pillars of the old one. The new  bridge had a vertical lift span which is usually partially raised,  allowing free movement of most marine traffic. The CNR line passes over  the CPR at the south end and continues south through a tunnel to join  the CNR main line near Brentwood shopping centre.<\/p>\n<p>The Sisters of Providence, who had been administering St. Paul\u2019s  Hospital, appointed a lay administrator and the medical staff to run the  hospital.<\/p>\n<p>The Rotary Foundation was established. It sponsors a variety of  fundraising methods to enable Rotarians to continue with their admirable  record of community service.<\/p>\n<p>The Sapperton Fish and Game Club began, with great success, to  restore salmon stock in the Brunette River, flowing out of Burnaby Lake.  The river had been badly polluted.<\/p>\n<p>W.J. VanDusen, forestry industry executive, retired from the board of  MacMillan Bloedel, aged about 80. He had been with the firm and its  predecessors for 50 years.<\/p>\n<p>The value of annual trading on the Vancouver Stock Exchange exceeded $1 billion for the first time.<\/p>\n<p>Muni Evers, a pharmacist, was elected mayor of New Westminster. He would go on to serve seven terms up to and including 1982.<\/p>\n<p>Service Corporation International (Canada) Inc. acquired Forest Lawn Memorial Park and Ocean View Burial Park in Burnaby.<\/p>\n<p>Harold Merilees, most well-known as head of the Vancouver Tourist  Association (precursor to Tourism Vancouver) and founder of the Sea  Festival, was elected as the Social Credit MLA for Vancouver-Burrard.<\/p>\n<p>Freelance art director Frank Palmer and Simmons Advertising\u2019s Rich  Simmons formed a new company called Trend Advertising. It will  eventually become Palmer Jarvis Communications.<\/p>\n<p>The Pacific Ballet Theatre was established by Maria Lewis, after a  career as a dancer in Montreal and Toronto. The company grew slowly to  semi-professional regional status, with a repertoire of small works in  classical style. Lewis would be succeeded in 1980 by Kamloops-born  Renald Rabu. In 1985 the company would be renamed Ballet British  Columbia.<\/p>\n<p>Terry Jacks and The Poppy Family had a smash hit (it reached #2 in the US) with <em>Which Way You Goin\u2019 Billy<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>The Vancouver Early Music Society was formed by Jon Washburn, Ray  Nurse, David Skulsky, Hans-Karl Piltz and Cuyler Page. Its purpose was  and is  \u201cto foster interest in medieval, renaissance, and baroque  music.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>After 11 years the Vancouver International Festival, debt-ridden, came to an end.<\/p>\n<p>There were significant changes to the Criminal Code of Canada. Public  gaming by the provinces as well as the federal government was now  permitted. Pari-mutuel wagering on horse races, small lottery schemes  for charitable purposes, and limited gaming at agricultural fairs  continued to be allowed.<\/p>\n<p>Another Criminal Code change: homosexuality was decriminalized in Canada.<\/p>\n<p>The Anglo-British Columbia Packing (ABC), a major player in the coastal canning industry from 1891, was sold.<\/p>\n<p>John M. Buchanan, who had been elected UBC chancellor in 1966, retired.<\/p>\n<p>The Ross Street Gurdwara (Sikh temple) was built. Writes  architectural historian Dr. Harold Kalman, \u201cThis deceptively simple  landmark is the central house of worship for Vancouver\u2019s large Sikh  community. A simple white block is capped by a series of stepped,  diagonally interlocked square sections, and crowned by an open steel  onion-shaped dome. The design was influenced by the formal geometry of  Indian religious symbols. The Khalsa Diwan Society occupies the lower  floor.\u201d This architectural gem originally stood unpainted and in  isolation, but by 1995 was  brightly painted and crowded by look-alike  additions to the east.<\/p>\n<p>A multi-storey extension to the Vancouver Vocational Institute\u2019s downtown building was built.<\/p>\n<p>The book <em>Portraits of the Premiers<\/em> by Sydney W. Jackman appeared. It briefly describes each premier from John McCreight to W.A.C. Bennett.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_8525\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"greatnortherncannery_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/05\/greatnortherncannery_archives.jpg\" alt=\"The Great Northern Cannery, circa 1920. Photo by C. Bradbury. Item # SGN 1547.\" width=\"320\" height=\"223\" \/>The Great Northern Cannery, circa 1920. Photo by C. Bradbury. Item # SGN 1547.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>The Great Northern Cannery, which had been active since 1891 near  Sandy Cove in West Vancouver, closed. The site was purchased by the  federal government for the Pacific Coast fisheries research station.<\/p>\n<p>Vancouver\u2019s Elaine \u201cMighty Mouse\u201d Tanner retired from competitive  swimming at age 18, having set five world records and won three Olympic  medals. She is the best woman swimmer in Canadian history.<\/p>\n<p>A garden shop owner named Bill Vander Zalm became mayor of Surrey.<\/p>\n<p>Delta\u2019s second Municipal Hall, built in 1913, became the Delta Museum and Archives.<\/p>\n<p>The <em>Province<\/em> in its May 15, 1970 edition (Page 34) reported  that there were 4,896 babies born to unwed mothers in BC in 1969. That  was a rate of 13.6 per thousand births. In 1967 the number of babies  born to unwed mothers in BC was 3,897.<\/p>\n<p>Jimmy Christmas, mayor of Coquitlam, first elected in 1945, died in office after almost 25 years as mayor.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Elsewhere<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The phenomenon that would become the Internet was activated. \u201cThe  vital  first step in getting a computer to talk to another computer was  taken  September 2, 1969, when Leonard Kleinrock and his team succeeded  in  hooking up their computer to a refrigerator-sized switch, or router,   known as an Interphase Message Processor. \u2018So at that time you had a   computer talking to a switch for the very first time, and without that   you could not have computer talking to computer,\u2019 Kleinrock  said.    Although the UCLA conference honors Sept. 2 as the birthday of the   Internet, some people think the date should be Oct. 20, the first time   one computer actually talked to another.\u201d <a href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Leonard_Kleinrock\" target=\"_blank\">See this site<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>On July 20, 1969 US astronaut Neil Armstrong walked on the moon. The <em>Vancouver Sun<\/em> and the <em>Province<\/em> both issued special supplements the next day commemorating man\u2019s first moonwalk.<\/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>Bloedel Conservatory in Queen Elizabeth Park. Item # CVA 780-287. It was a busy time for film production in Vancouver, a local writer had a best-selling novel and the Bloedel Conservatory opened in this year that man first walked on the moon. By Chuck Davis, The History of Vancouver Photos courtesy of Vancouver 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