{"id":840,"date":"2010-05-10T22:39:29","date_gmt":"2010-05-11T05:39:29","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spacingvancouver.ca\/?p=840"},"modified":"2013-02-26T13:24:42","modified_gmt":"2013-02-26T21:24:42","slug":"a-year-in-five-minutes-vancouver-1968","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/spacing.ca\/vancouver\/2010\/05\/10\/a-year-in-five-minutes-vancouver-1968\/","title":{"rendered":"A Year in Five Minutes: Vancouver 1968"},"content":{"rendered":"<h1><\/h1>\n<div id=\"attachment_8459\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"granvillestreet_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/05\/granvillestreet_archives.jpg\" alt=\"The 900 block of Granville Street in 1968. Item # CVA 780-52.\" width=\"290\" height=\"197\" \/>The 900 block of Granville Street in 1968. Item # CVA 780-52.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>In 1968, a B.C. skier struck gold at the Olympics, a few local landmarks were opened and a new force in civic politics was born.<\/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>TEAM work<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On March 12, 1968 the inaugural meeting of The Elector\u2019s Action  Movement (TEAM) was held at Grandview Community Centre; they will go on  to become a real force in Vancouver\u2019s civic politics. Among the  prominent people involved at the time: Arthur Phillips, Walter Hardwick,  May Brown and Marguerite Ford. Walter Hardwick, whose influence was  immense\u2014urbanologist Gordon Price calls him \u201carguably the most  influential alderman in Vancouver\u2019s history\u201d\u2014was the first TEAM member  to be elected, and that happened this year. TEAM would gain a majority  on council in 1972, and Art Phillips would become mayor.  Hardwick  topped the polls.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Cap College<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On March 7, 1968 voters in the school districts of North and West  Vancouver, and Howe Sound, decided overwhelmingly in favor of  establishing a community college. Following the referendum, a new  college council was formed, and at its inaugural meeting, members voted  on a name. From among forty names\u2014including Evergreen, Alpine, Sunset,  Muskrat, and Seagull\u2014suggested by North Shore residents, the clear  winner was Capilano. On September 10, the first day of classes at  Capilano College, some 750 students had enrolled, twice the anticipated  number. Classes were held in temporary quarters at West Vancouver Senior  Secondary School, and later in several church basements, a warehouse,  and even a bowling alley.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Nancy wins Gold!<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On February 15 B.C. skier Nancy Greene won gold in the Winter Olympics. Says the <a href=\"http:\/\/www.canadaswalkoffame.com\/inductee\/nancy-greene\" target=\"_blank\">Canada\u2019s Walk of Fame website<\/a>:  \u201cDespite an ankle injury just a month before the 1968 Olympics, Nancy  Greene took home gold and silver medals in the giant slalom and slalom  respectively. Her victory in the giant slalom by a margin of 2.68  seconds is still considered one of the most decisive wins in Olympic  history. 1968 also saw her keep the World Cup title as she raced to 10  titles on the tour.\u201d There was a big parade in Vancouver March 7 for  Nancy.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Elaine wins Silver!<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Swimmer Elaine Tanner won two silver medals at the 1968 Olympics.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Pacific Coliseum<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The federal, provincial and municipal governments joined forces to  build the Pacific Coliseum. It opened this year. At the opening,  Vancouver Civic Chaplain George Turpin offered the prayer: \u201cPlease God,  bring us the NHL.\u201d And lo, He did! The $6 million, 15,600 seat arena was  a state-of-the-art facility that would become best known as the home of  the Vancouver Canucks. (Their first game would be on October 9, 1970.)<\/p>\n<p><strong> <\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_8460\"><strong><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"bankofbc_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/05\/bankofbc_archives.jpg\" alt=\"The Bank of British Columbia, photographed here in 1974. Item # CVA 778-308.\" width=\"280\" height=\"249\" \/><\/strong>The Bank of British Columbia, photographed here in 1974. Item # CVA 778-308.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Bank of BC<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>July 18, 1968 was opening day for the Bank of British Columbia. A mob  of customers descended on the brand-new bank, then at 999 West Pender  at the corner of Burrard. In a big newspaper advertisement the new bank  wanted everyone to know that all its female employees wore \u201csmartly  tailored sea-blue uniforms\u201d featuring mini-skirts. \u201cBut don\u2019t let them  fool you into thinking they\u2019re without brains,\u201d the ad continued.  \u201cThey\u2019ve all been hand-picked for their secretarial, executive, teller  or other banking duties. They\u2019re smart in the head, too.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Opening capital of the bank: $12.8 million in shareholders\u2019 equity.  To have a B.C.-based bank was a dream of Premier W.A.C. Bennett and,  fittingly, it was Mr. Bennett who officiated at the opening.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Openings<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On October 26, 1968 the Centennial Museum and H. R. MacMillan  Planetarium were officially opened. The \u201ccentennial\u201d in this case was  the 100th anniversary of Canadian Confederation: the project got  underway in 1967. Mayor Tom Campbell was there; so was H.R. MacMillan  himself. In 1981 the museum was renamed the Vancouver Museum; today,  renamed yet again, it\u2019s the Museum of Vancouver. The planetarium,  costing $1.5 million, was H.R. MacMillan\u2019s gift to the city. Today it\u2019s  the \u201cPacific Space Centre, home of the H.R. MacMillan Planetarium.\u201d The  Space Centre would be launched in 1994. And, yes, that famous roof  really was inspired by the shape of coastal-native hats.<\/p>\n<p>Speaking of Mayor Campbell, on December 12 he would be reelected, pummeling TEAM\u2019s Alan Emmott 63,035 to 41,956.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Heavy elegance<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><em>Vancouver Sun<\/em> columnist Allan Fotheringham was prescient in  his comment on the opening December 12, 1968 of the 29-storey MacMillan  Bloedel Building at Georgia and Thurlow in downtown Vancouver. \u201cNo major  new building in town,\u201d Fotheringham wrote, \u201cwill dare to build out to  the property line now that Massey-Erickson have shown the advantages of  stepping back to leave some welcome space for the poor pedestrians.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Architects Arthur Erickson and Geoff Massey accomplished something  else with the $14.5 million new building: its deeply recessed windows  and the gentle tapering of its two abutting towers give it a handsome,  heavy elegance. Eleven of the 29 floors were occupied by MacBlo; the  others were to be rented out. Today, with its original owner moved out,  the building is known as, simply, 1075 Georgia Street West.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Also in 1968<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On January 12 UBC\u2019s Music Building, part of the Norman Mackenzie  Centre for Fine Arts, opened at a cost of $2.5 million. The School of  Music was first headed by Dr. G. Welton Marquis. Prior to 1968, the  music department had been located in army huts along the West Mall.<\/p>\n<p>The Student Union Building (\u2018SUB\u2019) went up at UBC. It\u2019s unique on  campus: it is student-funded and run by the Alma Mater Society. The AMS  is a non-profit student organization whose main objective is to develop,  promote and coordinate the activities and particular interests of the  UBC student body. The AMS has a  membership of more than 40,000 students  and is one of the largest student employers in Canada, with 400  part-time student staff and 50 full-time staff on the payroll. AMS runs  all food services in SUB except Subway Cafeteria.<\/p>\n<p>UBC\u2019s Metallurgical Engineering Building went up.<\/p>\n<p>The Charles Crane Memorial Library, a unit of the Disability Resource  Centre, was formed at UBC as a reading room with the donation of a  personal collection of about 6,000 Braille books, belonging to the late  Charles Allen Crane\u2014one of the more remarkable people in local history.  Crane, known as Charlie among friends, was often referred to as  \u201cCanada\u2019s Helen Keller\u201d. Almost completely deaf and blind from birth  (Helen Keller had normal sight and hearing until she was 19 months old),  Charlie was a bright student at the Halifax and Jericho Hill schools  for the deaf and a special student at UBC from 1934 to 1937.<\/p>\n<p>UBC\u2019s Ladner Clock Tower was built near the university\u2019s Main  Library. It stands 123 feet high. Named after Dr. Leon J. Ladner, QC  (who donated $150,000 of its $160,000 construction cost), it houses a  330-bell carillon meant to be played during special occasions, such as  the May Congregation. For the past several years, the bell has not  sounded because of corrosion problems. It was \u201cbuilt in honor and memory  of the pioneers of B.C. and in particular Thomas Ellis and William  Henry Ladner.\u201d The tower is a good orienteering point for new students  and lost visitors since it can be seen from most central points on  campus.<\/p>\n<p>UBC\u2019s Biological Sciences Building (Botany, Zoology, Oceanography and  Microbiology), built in 1950 with a south wing added in 1959, had a  west wing added.<\/p>\n<p>The Health Sciences Centre opened on the UBC campus.<\/p>\n<p>On January 18 CP Air took delivery of its first Douglas DC8-60. Its route will be Vancouver-Tokyo-Hong Kong.<\/p>\n<p>Joachim Foikis, armed with a grant from the Canada Council, became  Vancouver\u2019s Town Fool on\u2014appropriately\u2014April Fool\u2019s Day. He sported a  jester\u2019s cap and bells and strolled around warning of impending nuclear  destruction.<\/p>\n<p>Pierre Elliot Trudeau was elected Prime Minister of Canada April 20.<\/p>\n<p>Premier W.A.C. Bennett and Vancouver City Archivist Major J.S.  Matthews dedicated New Brighton Park on April 26. One eye-witness  reported that Major Matthews, who was a very forceful fellow with a  stentorian voice, frightened some of the smaller children in the  audience to tears.<\/p>\n<p>In May Simon Fraser University was censured by the Canadian  Association of University Teachers (CAUT). The charge: interference by  the Board of Governors in academic affairs. The censure would be lifted  in November.<\/p>\n<p>Kenneth Hare became president of UBC in June, 1968, succeeding Walter Gage.<\/p>\n<p>On July 2 John Robert Nicholson was sworn in as B.C.\u2019s lieutenant governor, succeeding George Pearkes.<\/p>\n<p>In August of 1968 a large influx of Czechs and Slovaks occurred,  after the Soviet army invaded what was then Czechoslovakia and put an  end to what has become known as the Prague Spring. About 1,200  professionals, students, writers, artists and service industry workers,  among others, arrived in British Columbia. Today there are about 10,500  Czechs and Slovaks in the Lower Mainland\u2014the majority being Czech.  (Czechoslovakia peacefully split into two republics in January 1993.)<\/p>\n<p>Jimi Hendrix and the Jimi Hendrix Experience played at the Pacific  Coliseum September 7, 1968. He acknowledged his grandmother, who lived  in Vancouver and was in the audience.<\/p>\n<p>Vancouver\u2019s $32 million International Airport terminal, designed by  Zoltan Kiss on behalf of Thompson, Berwick, and Pratt, opened for use  September 10. It would be officially opened October 25.<\/p>\n<p>Japan Air Lines inaugurated its Tokyo to Vancouver flights September 11.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_8461\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"gastown_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/05\/gastown_archives.jpg\" alt=\"Gastown, circa 1968. Item # CVA 780-689.\" width=\"330\" height=\"225\" \/>Gastown, circa 1968. Item # CVA 780-689.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>On September 22, 1968 Mrs. Evelyn MacKechnie of Vancouver\u2019s Community  Arts Council\u2014which had been showing heritage film and slide shows on  the area for years\u2014led a group of about 200 people on a walking tour\u2014in  the rain\u2014of Vancouver\u2019s derelict Gastown area. Gastown had been in  decline for years, and the CAC thought public awareness of the  historical importance of the area could arrest that decline. They were  right. Media coverage was good, and the walk (which became the first of  many) caught the attention of retailers and developers. The CAC  organized more tours, and the prospect of Gastown\u2019s demolition began to  fade.<\/p>\n<p>Gastown would get a big boost in 1970 when The Old Spaghetti Factory  opened on Water Street. Its funky ambience drew big crowds to the area.<\/p>\n<p>Stanley E. Higgs, Anglican minister, was named the executive head of  Vancouver\u2019s Central City Mission in September. (From 1960 to 1968 he had  been chaplain of Haney Correctional Institute.) Higgs would retire from  the Mission in April 1974 after 47 years of service to the church and  the community.<\/p>\n<p>George Norris\u2019 famous Crab fountain sculpture was installed in front  of the Planetarium and Centennial Museum in Vanier Park on October 14.  The striking stainless-steel sculpture recalled a local native legend  that the crab guards the entrance to the harbor. It remains one of the  most photographed objects in the city. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.pbase.com\/martinbunting\/image\/30076550\" target=\"_blank\">See a great picture here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>The first kidney transplant in BC was performed at Vancouver General Hospital on October 24, 1968.<\/p>\n<p>Also on October 24 Grant McConachie Way, the road leading to  Vancouver International Airport, opened to traffic. The road was named  for the famed bush pilot and CP Air founder.<\/p>\n<p>Also October 24: UBC has seen its share of strife over the years.  Today its Faculty Club was the site of student unrest: American Jerry  Rubin and a number of UBC students invaded the Faculty Club and took it  over for 22 hours, after which they left voluntarily. Simon Fraser  University had its own problems: on November 25 students protesting  against admissions policy ended a three-day occupation of the  administration building that resulted in the arrest by a squad of 100  unarmed RCMP officers of 114 people\u2014almost one officer per protester.  SFU\u2019s brand-new president Dr. Kenneth Strand, who had called the RCMP  in, had used a bull-horn to warn the  students to vacate the premises.  The<em> Province<\/em> printed the protesters\u2019 names, ages (most were  from 18 to 22) and addresses, and noted that Strand said the university  had adopted a \u201cget tough\u201d policy in the wake of the occupation.<\/p>\n<p>In a Page One story October 29, 1968 the <em>Province<\/em> reported  on a prediction that \u201cVancouver\u2019s rush-hour traffic will clog not only  existing bridges over Burrard Inlet by 1985, but the new $100 million  First Narrows crossing and parts of a proposed $135 million downtown  freeway system as well.\u201d We didn\u2019t get the crossing or the downtown  freeway system, and it\u2019s a couple of decades later than 1985, but we\u2019re  certainly clogged.<\/p>\n<p>The East Wing of City Hall, a four-storey annex constructed to make  room for the growing civic bureaucracy, was officially opened October 29  by H.R.H. Prince Philip. Legend has it it was raining heavily while  Philip officiated, and he said something like \u201cI\u2019m very pleased to  officially open this building, whatever it is, on behalf of Her  Majesty\u2014now let\u2019s get the hell inside out of the rain!\u201d Architects of  the building: Townley, Matheson, and Partners. Townley, Matheson  designed the original city hall.<\/p>\n<p>If you work in downtown Vancouver, or attend a performance at the  Queen Elizabeth Theatre, or take in a Lions game at B.C. Place, or  settle down to read at the Vancouver Public Library, chances are good  you\u2019re being warmed by the folks at Central Heat Distribution, which  began operating November 1, 1968. They heat more than 180 buildings in  the downtown through a network, many kilometres long, of subterranean  pipes, bringing steam (converted from natural gas) from their building  on Beatty Street to big clients like the Shaw Tower all the way down to  the tiny bursts of steam that sound the pipes on the Gastown Steam  Clock.<\/p>\n<p>BC\u2019s population topped two million this year. It had reached one million in 1951.<\/p>\n<p>A referendum in the two North Vancouvers on the question of  amalgamation was overwhelmingly approved by voters in the municipality  (90 per cent), but given just a razor-thin Yes vote in the city, (50.5  per cent) which had split away in 1907. The rules said there had to be  60 per cent approval in both places, so they remained separate. Heavily  influencing the city\u2019s vote was Mayor Carrie Cates, who was against  amalgamation.<\/p>\n<p>Hockey\u2019s Lynn Patrick was inducted into the B.C. Sports Hall of Fame.<\/p>\n<p>Whistler Mountain Ski School began, and heli-skiing began there.<\/p>\n<p>Coast Plaza at Stanley Park Hotel opened.<\/p>\n<p>Punjab-born Dr. Har Gobind Khorana won the Nobel Prize for Medicine,  for the synthesis of a gene in a test tube and original work in DNA  research that opened up several new areas of research. In interviews he  acknowledged the important influence of his work in 1952 at B.C.  Research on the UBC campus.<\/p>\n<p>Park &amp; Tilford Gardens, eight separate theme gardens on the North  Shore, were created by a privately-owned distillery. In the Rose Garden  there are nearly 300 plants in 24 varieties. There is free admission  and parking, and the gardens are open seven days a week.<\/p>\n<p>Marilyn Horne, who liked Vancouver, returned to star in the Vancouver Opera Association staging of Rossini\u2019s <em>Barber of Seville<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Soccer\u2019s Vancouver Royals played this one year in the NASL.<\/p>\n<p>The<em> Silver Ann<\/em> was the last vessel built at Britannia shipyard.<\/p>\n<p><em>Relief<\/em>, a cast bronze work by Eliza Mayhew, was installed in  the Bank of Canada building at 900 West Hastings. \u201cArchitect W.W.  Rennie commissioned this $30,000 work,\u201d writes Elizabeth Godley, \u201cafter  seeing photographs of the artist\u2019s work in <em>Canadian Art<\/em>.\u201d <em>The Fathomless Richness of the Seabed<\/em>,  a ceramic mural by Jordi Bonet was installed in the lobby of the  Guinness Tower at 1055 West Hastings. Architect Charles Pine  commissioned the work. \u201cInspired by sea life,\u201d writes Elizabeth Godley,  \u201cit beautifully complements the facade of the Marine Building, just  around the corner.\u201d <em>Relief<\/em>, a sculpture in precast concrete by  Leonhard Epp, was installed at the Gulf &amp; Fraser Fishermen\u2019s Credit  Union, 803 East Hastings. The building\u2019s architect was Robert Harrison. <em>Tuning Fork<\/em>,  a distinctive corten steel sculpture by Gerhard Class, was installed on  the plaza of UBC\u2019s Music Building. Alfred Blundell donated this work,  which cost $5,000. An abstract fountain of bronze alloy at Capilano Road  and Ridgeway in the District of North Vancouver was installed. The  artist, George Norris, was commissioned by the District.<\/p>\n<p>Choreographer Anna Wyman, who had come to Vancouver from Austria in 1967, began to present student performances.<\/p>\n<p>The arrival of Imperial Records, Western Canada\u2019s first modern vinyl  mastering and pressing plant, helped spur a generation of new labels.  Many were custom imprints created by musicians to release their own  music.<\/p>\n<p>A building that began life in 1906 as the Grandview Methodist Church,  at 1895 Venables, became home this year to Inner City Services which  included the Vancouver Free University and storefront legal offices for  such tenants as future premier Mike Harcourt. Today, it\u2019s the Vancouver  East Cultural Centre.<\/p>\n<p>1968 was a fruitful year for local publication. All of these began that year:<br \/>\n* <em>British Columbia Historical News<\/em> A quarterly, published by the British Columbia Historical Federation. It is now titled <em>British Columbia History<\/em>, editor John Atkin.<br \/>\n* <em>Capilano Courier<\/em> A weekly published by Capilano College,  Courier Publishing Society. A  student publication with student news,  opinion and letters.<br \/>\n* <em>In Pharmation<\/em> A monthly publication for membership of the British Columbia Pharmacists\u2019 Society.<br \/>\n* <em>Logging &amp; Sawmilling Journal<\/em> A monthly trade publication.<br \/>\n* <em>Nursing BC<\/em> Published five times a year by the Registered Nurses Association of British Columbia.<br \/>\n* <em>Pacific Yachting<\/em> A monthly publication for the yachting fraternity.<br \/>\n* <em>Soleil de Colombie<\/em> A weekly publication, in French, with news about francophones in B.C.<br \/>\n* <em>UBC Library News <\/em>A free quarterly published by the University of British Columbia Main Library<br \/>\n* <em>World Market Perspective<\/em> A monthly business investment magazine.<\/p>\n<p>Ethlyn Trapp, radiologist, was awarded the Order of Canada. For her extraordinarily  distinguished career, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.vancouverhistory.ca\/whoswho_T.htm\" target=\"_blank\">see here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Nat Bailey and wife Eva sold 13 White Spot Restaurants and other related interests to General Foods for $6.5 million.<\/p>\n<p>Author E.G. Perrault produced a thinly disguised biographical novel  about the early days of rogue B.C. timber baron Gordon Gibson Sr., <em>The Kingdom Carver<\/em>. See his <a href=\"http:\/\/www.abcbookworld.com\/view_author.php?id=224\" target=\"_blank\">interesting entry here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Calgary-born restaurateur Hy Aisenstat, who with his wife Barbara had  started with Hy\u2019s Steak House in Calgary in 1955, was now at the head  of 12 companies, with restaurants across Canada, and in Chicago,  Honolulu, Palm Springs and Beverly Hills. He called his restaurants  \u201csaloons.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Frank Baker, restaurateur, promoter, trumpet player, etc., etc.,  opened the 1,200-seat The Attic in West Vancouver. Guests were  entertained by Lance Harrison and His Dixieland Band. A real  showman,  Frank played the trumpet (learned at the Four Square Gospel Church) and  always wore a trademark white suit. Outside The Attic, he showcased the  Aston Martin driven in the James Bond movie <em>Goldfinger<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Walter H. Gage, UBC mathematics professor, was given the Master Teacher award.<\/p>\n<p>Harry Jerome, world-class sprinter, 27, competed in the Olympic Games  in Mexico City, his final attempt for an Olympic medal, in the final of  the 100 meters. He raced home-two tenths of a second slower than the  winner, who set a new world record time of 9.9 seconds. Jerome finished  seventh.<\/p>\n<p>Stratford, Ontario-born Frank Stalley became the director of radio  for CBC in Vancouver. He will hold that post until 1972, then be posted  to London, England.<\/p>\n<p>The Great Northern Cannery, built in 1891 in West Vancouver, is sold  by its owners, the Millerd family (who had bought it in 1923). The  complex is now the site of Environment Canada\u2019s Pacific Research  Laboratories.<\/p>\n<p>Gordon Shrum, 72, stepped down as Chancellor at SFU.<\/p>\n<p>The M.V. Scenic, which since 1932 had been the only floating post  office in the British Empire, known as the Burrard Inlet T.P.O.  (Travelling Post Office), came to the end of its long and faithful  service.<\/p>\n<p>The Oak movie theatre, which opened August 4, 1937 with great fanfare  at Kingsway and Marlborough, and hailed as a masterpiece of \u201cart  moderne,\u201d closed its doors in 1968.<\/p>\n<p>The radio station that had started back in the 1920s as CFQC, then  became CKMO, then C-FUN, changed owners and got its fourth name, CKVN,  emphasizing news.<\/p>\n<p>John R. Fisk became Chief Constable of the Vancouver Police Department, succeeding R.M. Booth. Fisk would serve to 1974.<\/p>\n<p>The Richmond Arts Centre and Brighouse Centre Library opened.<\/p>\n<p>The federal and provincial governments agreed to begin a $40 million  program for bank and dike protection on the Lower Fraser, and other  Lower Mainland rivers subject to flooding. The city of Richmond reached  an agreement with the provincial government to share the cost of  building and maintaining the dikes, taking the care of the dikes away  from individual land owners.<\/p>\n<p>Harold Steves was elected to Richmond council. He will be actively  involved in preserving Steveston\u2019s heritage. (He is the great-grandson  of Manoah Steves, after whom Steveston was named.)<\/p>\n<p>The Coast Plaza at Stanley Park Hotel was built at 1733 Comox.<\/p>\n<p>David Zirnhelt, 21, was elected as president of the Alma Mater  Society at the University of British Columbia. In the future (June,  1996) he will become the provincial minister of forests.<\/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>The 900 block of Granville Street in 1968. Item # CVA 780-52. In 1968, a B.C. skier struck gold at the Olympics, a few local landmarks were opened and a new force in civic politics was born. By Chuck Davis, The History of Vancouver Photos courtesy of Vancouver Archives<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":8116,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"ngg_post_thumbnail":0,"_ef_editorial_meta_paragraph_assignment":"","_ef_editorial_meta_date_first-draft-date":"","_ef_editorial_meta_checkbox_needs-photo":"","_ef_editorial_meta_number_word-count":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[11233],"tags":[4592,4579,4587,4638,4610,3927,816,4574,4084,4590,795,4649,1079,974,1643,4615,2140,4538,4600,4608,4526,3228,4643,4564,4550,1587,965,4637,4533,4631,839,4604,774,792,4437,3468,4622,4545,3346,4588,1095,4541,4624,2493,4559,4580,4274,4591,1230,4611,3817,3513,401,12,4650,4536,3299,3455,4630,4598,4551,4617,4644,814,4568,4635,4582,2626,4613,3261,4593,4557,4561,1965,1422,4648,4619,4597,4586,4575,309,3306,4596,3839,4583,767,4651,4601,1299,2485,4544,4616,4510,4549,4628,4532,778,4542,4599,4005,2815,981,4618,4578,23,4527,4609,4603,4540,4547,4016,4614,4570,4392,361,3856,4577,4386,4602,4652,4573,4026,4581,2796,858,1272,4605,4569,1947,1943,3485,4088,4585,4572,4571,1539,4562,4552,4566,785,4646,1262,881,2075,357,4395,953,4636,537,3713,1037,4103,4620,4528,4607,4595,924,2805,1219,1370,4565,973,4556,4647,1600,4634,3290,2247,4627,4074,4584,4626,1762,918,931,4555,4632,4629,4606,2801,4645,4594,4531,547,4529,4535,4539,4553,4558,4640,4612,4642,4543,860,1234,2243,4563,1514,4641,4567,257,4024,4554,1391,3505,4546,4530,4537,1817,568,3502,1210,214,1329,1498,4560,3200,4534,2856,2445,2880,4633,1436,984,1899,4625,4639,3099,4653,3661,4589,880,4548,4621,1877,4623,4576,1347,271],"class_list":["post-840","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-history","tag-alan-emmott","tag-alfred-blundell","tag-allan-fotheringham","tag-alma-mater-society","tag-alpine","tag-anna-wyman","tag-architect","tag-architects-arthur-erickson","tag-archivist","tag-arthur-phillips","tag-artist","tag-austria","tag-author","tag-b-c","tag-bank","tag-bank-of-bc-july","tag-bank-of-canada","tag-bank-of-canada-building","tag-barbara","tag-beverly-hill","tag-beverly-hills","tag-board-of-governors","tag-brand-new-bank","tag-brand-new-president","tag-brighouse-centre-library","tag-brighton-park","tag-british-columbia","tag-british-columbia-historical-federation","tag-british-columbia-main-library","tag-british-columbia-pharmacists-society","tag-burrard-inlet","tag-c-bennett","tag-calgary","tag-canada","tag-canada-council","tag-canadian-association-of-university-teachers","tag-canadian-confederation","tag-cap-college","tag-capilano-college","tag-carrie-cates","tag-cbc","tag-centennial-museum","tag-central-city-mission","tag-chancellor","tag-chaplain","tag-charles-allen-crane","tag-charles-crane-memorial-library","tag-charles-pine","tag-chicago","tag-chicago-hill","tag-chief-constable","tag-choreographer","tag-chuck-davis","tag-city-hall","tag-ckmo","tag-coast-plaza","tag-columnist","tag-community-arts-council","tag-courier-publishing-society","tag-david-zirnhelt","tag-director-of-radio","tag-disability-resource-centre","tag-distinctive-corten-steel-sculpture","tag-editor","tag-elaine-tanner","tag-electors-action-movement","tag-eliza-mayhew","tag-elizabeth-godley","tag-environment-canadas-pacific-research-laboratories","tag-eva","tag-evelyn-mackechnie","tag-executive","tag-executive-head","tag-faculty-club","tag-food-services","tag-fork","tag-four-square-gospel-church","tag-frank-baker","tag-frank-stalley","tag-g-welton-marquis","tag-gastown","tag-general-foods","tag-geoff-massey","tag-george-norris","tag-george-pearkes","tag-georgia","tag-goldfinger","tag-gordon-gibson-sr","tag-gordon-price","tag-gordon-shrum","tag-grandview-community-centre","tag-grandview-methodist-church","tag-great-northern-cannery","tag-guinness-tower","tag-gulf-fraser-fishermens-credit-union","tag-h-r-macmillan-planetarium","tag-halifax","tag-haney-correctional-institute","tag-har-gobind-khorana","tag-harold-steves","tag-harry-jerome","tag-head","tag-health-sciences-centre","tag-helen-keller","tag-historical","tag-honolulu","tag-honolulu-hill","tag-hy-aisenstat","tag-in-may-simon-fraser-university","tag-international-airport-terminal","tag-j-s-matthews","tag-japan-air-lines","tag-jerry-rubin","tag-joachim-foikis","tag-john-atkin","tag-john-r-fisk","tag-jordi-bonet","tag-kenneth-hare","tag-kenneth-strand","tag-kiss","tag-lance-harrison","tag-leon-j-ladner","tag-leonhard-epp","tag-lieutenant-governor","tag-location","tag-london","tag-lower-mainland-rivers","tag-lynn-patrick","tag-macmillan","tag-macmillan-bloedel-building","tag-main-library","tag-major","tag-manoah-steves","tag-marguerite-ford","tag-marilyn-horne","tag-marine-building","tag-master-teacher","tag-mathematics-professor","tag-may-brown","tag-mayor","tag-media-coverage","tag-mexico-city","tag-mike-harcourt","tag-minister","tag-museum-of-vancouver","tag-nancy-greene","tag-natural-gas","tag-norman-mackenzie-centre-for-fine-arts","tag-north-vancouver","tag-officer","tag-ontario","tag-pacif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