{"id":814,"date":"2010-07-27T22:25:10","date_gmt":"2010-07-28T05:25:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spacingvancouver.ca\/?p=814"},"modified":"2013-02-26T13:24:31","modified_gmt":"2013-02-26T21:24:31","slug":"814","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/spacing.ca\/vancouver\/2010\/07\/27\/814\/","title":{"rendered":"A Year in Five Minutes: Vancouver 1979"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"attachment_9401\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"burrard_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/07\/burrard_archives.jpg\" alt=\"View of Burrard Street from Pender Street. Item # CVA 780-45.\" width=\"290\" height=\"240\" \/>View of Burrard Street from Pender Street in May, 1979. Item # CVA 780-45.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>In 1979, a former premier and a local hockey star passed away. It was  also the year that the Granville Island Public Market opened and  possibly the start of Hollywood North.<\/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><strong><!--more-->WAC passes<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On February 23, 1979 former premier W.A.C. Bennett died in Kelowna, aged 78. See a good brief biography <a href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/W.A.C._Bennett\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>. On May 10 the Social Credit party was re-elected under Premier Bill Bennett, W.A.C.\u2019s son.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Granville Island Market<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On July 12, 1979 Granville Island Public Market opened, and became an  immediate hit, one of the great Vancouver experiences. Some 10.5  million people visit the island every year now, and a big chunk of them  go to the market for its meat, fish, produce, snack bars and more. It\u2019s  in a building erected by the Island\u2019s very first tenant (1916), B.C.  Equipment Ltd.\u00a0 Part of the offbeat charm of that building is the  travelling cranes that hang from the rafters, kept by the architects.  The Island\u2019s architecture has won design awards for Hotson Bakker, the  coordinating architects, and others who worked on various projects.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Whitecaps win!<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The Vancouver Whitecaps pounded out a dramatic win over the Tampa Bay  Rowdies in New York on September 8, 1979 to win the North American  Soccer League Championship. Trevor Whymark scored both goals (one off  each foot) in Vancouver\u2019s 2-1 victory. \u201cWhymark has been,\u201d Jim Taylor  wrote, \u201cthe catalyst, the trigger, the missing piece in the marvellously  improbable soccer story that has taken Vancouver by the heart and  squeezed it as no other sports event has before.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>100,000 fans greeted the team on its return.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Foncie<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Vancouver street photographer Foncie Pulice took his last picture  September 27, 1979. Foncie and his Electric-Photo camera had been a  familiar sight on city streets for a jaw-dropping 45 years. He\u2019d begun  as a 20-year-old away back in 1934 as an assistant to street  photographer Joe Iaci, and had taken millions of photographs since. (It  is quite possible Foncie Pulice photographed more people than anyone who  ever lived.) \u201cI said I\u2019d retire at 65, and I kept my word,\u201d he said in a  November 21, 1979 interview in the <em>Province<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Foncie\u2019s camera, made of war surplus materials, is preserved at the  Vancouver Museum. It\u2019s part of their 1950s gallery, and is accompanied  by a slew of Foncie\u2019s Fotos.<\/p>\n<p>Foncie Pulice was the last of the street photographers. He died  January 20, 2003 at age 88, but his work lives on . . . everywhere.<\/p>\n<p><strong> <\/strong><\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_9403\"><strong><strong><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"insidecpr_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/07\/insidecpr_archives.jpg\" alt=\"Inside the CPR Station in July, 1979. Item # CVA 780-61.\" width=\"260\" height=\"371\" \/><\/strong><\/strong>Inside the CPR Station in July, 1979. Item # CVA 780-61.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p><strong>End of an Era<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On October 27, 1979 the last scheduled passenger train departed from  the CPR station at the foot of Granville Street. Trains had been  arriving and leaving from this handsome building since 1912. The cliche  is irresistible: It was the end of an era. For 67 years the handsome  building had been the site of arrivals, reunions and farewells. Today  it\u2019s home to the SkyTrain Waterfront Station and Western Express.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Also in 1979<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On May 22 the <em>Vancouver Sun<\/em> won a long-running case against GATE, publishers of <em>Gay Tide<\/em> newspaper. It began in the mid-1970s when the <em>Sun<\/em> refused to run a two-line classified ad promoting <em>Gay Tide<\/em>. GATE had won a B.C. Human Rights Commission complaint and a subsequent challenge by the<em> Sun<\/em> in B.C. Supreme Court, but the decision was reversed in the B.C. Court  of Appeals. Finally, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in the <em>Sun<\/em>\u2019s favor.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_9402\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"cyclonetaylor_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/07\/cyclonetaylor_archives.jpg\" alt=\"Frederick &quot;Cyclone&quot; Taylor in 1919. Photo by Stuart Thomson. Item # CVA 99-778.\" width=\"200\" height=\"396\" \/>Frederick &#8220;Cyclone&#8221; Taylor in 1919. Photo by Stuart Thomson. Item # CVA 99-778.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>On June 9 \u201cCyclone\u201d Taylor, OBE, hockey player, died in Vancouver,  aged 95. Frederick Wellington Taylor was born June 24, 1883 (or was it  1884, or 1885?) in Tara, Ontario. He played with the Ottawa Senators in  1909 when they won the Stanley Cup, and was the key player with the  Vancouver Millionaires when they won the Cup in 1915. (They beat Ottawa  in three straight games, during which Cyclone scored seven goals.) It  was his speed on the ice that earned him his nickname.<\/p>\n<p>Richmond celebrated 100 years since incorporation as a municipality  June 16 and honored its pioneers who had lived in the community for more  than 60 years.<\/p>\n<p>Surrey Council \u201cinvites one and all\u201d to the city\u2019s 100th Birthday Party Centennial Week at Bear Creek Park August 6.<\/p>\n<p>The <em>Province<\/em> first appeared on a Sunday August 12, 1979.<\/p>\n<p>The Village of Belcarra was incorporated August 22, 1979. It covers  just over five-and-a-half square kilometres, and the population is an  estimated 2,000. It\u2019s policed by the Coquitlam Detachment of the RCMP,  and there is the Sasamat Volunteer Fire Department.<\/p>\n<p>In August 1979 Richmond hosted the three-day 1979 B.C. Summer Games, the first to include disabled athletes.<\/p>\n<p>Kent Prison in Agassiz opened in August. This maximum security  institution houses 313 (original capacity 234) prisoners. Inmates are  kept under a constant level of high surveillance. More than\u00a0 half of the  prison population are housed in the protective custody wing, separated  from the regular population for the duration of their sentences.<\/p>\n<p>In October 1979 Presentation House on the North Shore presented Eric Nicol\u2019s two-act comedy, <em>Free at Last<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>The Steveston Museum opened December 16 in a 1905 building, which had  been a bank, then a doctors office. The Steveston Historical Society  also operates a post-office there.<\/p>\n<p>In <em>The Province<\/em> for December 21 <em>Consumer Alert<\/em> columnist Chuck Poulsen wrote, \u201cIn a month or so, supermarkets should be  serving up a large batch of rabbits for sale. Chinese rabbits. For  Canada Packers, it will be the first test run of the low-cost, imported  rabbits which are expected to sell for about half the price of the B.C.  bunnies. The Chinese rabbits will be coming at a time when a government  survey predicts that we\u2019d eat rabbits faster than they multiply if there  was a reasonable supply and the price wasn\u2019t too much higher than  chicken.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The Office of the Ombudsman was established this year by provincial  legislation. The Ombudsman receives inquiries and complaints about the  practices and services provided by public bodies. He or she can  investigate to determine if the public body is being fair to the people  it serves.<\/p>\n<p>Tsutae and Hanako Sato, who together ran the Vancouver Japanese  Language School (from 1906 to 1942), established scholarships in  Japanese studies at UBC.\u00a0 In 1978 Tsutae Sato was awarded the Order of  Canada.<\/p>\n<p>Ballard Power Systems was created in 1979. Dr. Geoffrey Ballard  developed the fuel cell technology that led to the creation of the  company, but would leave it in 1997. In 1999, with Paul Howard, he would  form the company General Hydrogen. <em>Time Magazine<\/em> would name  him a Hero of the Planet in 1999. He said, at a recent conference, \u201cIt  will take a combined effort of academia, government, and industry to  bring about the change from a gasoline economy to a hydrogen economy.  The forces are building and progress is being made. It is of major  importance that a change of this magnitude not be forced on unwilling  participants, but that all of us work together for an economically  viable path to change.\u201d<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_9404\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"mapleleafconstruction_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/07\/mapleleafconstruction_archives.jpg\" alt=\"The Maple Leaf schooner under construction. Item # Bo P176.3.\" width=\"330\" height=\"261\" \/>The Maple Leaf schooner under construction. Item # Bo P176.3.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>The wooden auxiliary schooner Maple Leaf began to provide  educational\/environmental cruises between the Gulf of Georgia and  Alaska. She is the oldest B.C. vessel in the Canada Registry of Ships.  She was built at Vancouver Shipyard in Coal Harbour in 1904 for lumber  baron Alexander McLaren, and was the first vessel to fly the colors of  the Royal Vancouver Yacht Club in an open race. (From 1916 to 1979 she  was used in the halibut fishery under the names Constance B and Parma.)<\/p>\n<p>The provincial government sold the buses it inherited from the BC Electric Company to Pacific Coach Lines.<\/p>\n<p>Hassan Khosrowshahi and his family fled Iran during the Ayatollah  Khomeini unrest and came to Vancouver. He opened a small office  equipment shop on West Broadway. In 1983 he will incorporate Future Shop  Ltd. and build it into a giant Canadian enterprise, employing more than  10,000 people in 90 locations across Canada.<\/p>\n<p>Svend Robinson was elected MP for Burnaby-Douglas, the youngest member of the NDP caucus (born March 4, 1952).<\/p>\n<p>Pauline Jewett was elected as an NDP Member of Parliament for New  Westminster-Coquitlam. She will serve in that capacity until 1988.<\/p>\n<p>George Laverock became the producer for programs featuring the CBC  Vancouver Orchestra, and the orchestra would go on to become the most  recorded in Canada.<\/p>\n<p>Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation got a new name: Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation.<\/p>\n<p>Vancouver city council reinstated Joe Philliponi\u2019s licence to run the  Penthouse. On December 31, 1975, the club had been closed by the vice  squad, and in 1977 Philliponi was charged with living off prostitution  but the conviction was quashed.<\/p>\n<p>These books appeared in 1979. Details on their writers can be found <a href=\"http:\/\/www.abcbookworld.com\/\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>.<br \/>\n*<em> Son of Socred<\/em>, by Stan Persky. Persky\u2019s first book asked in its subtitle: <em>Has Bill Bennett\u2019s Government Gotten BC Moving Again?<\/em><br \/>\n*<em> Exploring the Coast by Boat<\/em>, by Freda Van der Ree, was a  comprehensive guidebook to 51 boating areas in the Strait of Georgia and  Puget Sound. It has had numerous printings since this first appearance.  Van der Ree travelled extensively with her family, both under power and  under sail, in both summer and winter.<br \/>\n*<em> The Delta Centenary, 1879-1979: a Pictorial Review of Delta\u2019s First One Hundred Years<\/em>, Corporation of Delta.<br \/>\n* <em>Above the Sand Heads: First Hand Accounts of Pioneering in the  Area Which, in 1879, Became the Municipality of Delta, British Columbia<\/em>.\u00a0 Narrated by T. Ellis Ladner; prepared for publication by Edna G. Ladner.<br \/>\n* <em>Richmond, Child of the Fraser<\/em> by\u00a0 Leslie J. Ross under the direction of the Historical Committee of the Richmond \u201879 Centennial Society<br \/>\n* <em>Saints: The story of St. George\u2019s School for Boys<\/em> by Douglas E. Harker.<br \/>\n* <em>Empire of Time<\/em>, the first in Crawford Kilian\u2019s<em> Chronoplane Wars<\/em> science fiction trilogy. It was described by one reviewer as \u201ca nifty  page turner about a physically and mentally augmented James Bond type.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Michael Walsh, long-time film critic for <em>The Province<\/em>, gave us <em>The Canadian Movie Quiz Book<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Raincoast Books was established. This company would, in the future, gain the rights to Canadian publication of the <em>Harry Potter<\/em> books. That would turn out rather well for them. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.raincoast.com\/\" target=\"_blank\">See here<\/a> for their website.<\/p>\n<p>Several periodicals began in 1979:<br \/>\n* <em>International History Review<\/em>, a quarterly from Simon Fraser University, examining relations between all states throughout history<br \/>\n* <em>Musick<\/em>, a quarterly produced by the Vancouver Society for Early Music. It covers medieval, Renaissance, baroque and classical music<br \/>\n* <em>Uptrend: Canadian Penny Market Newsletter<\/em> was published every three weeks by Yorkton Continental Securities Inc.<br \/>\n* <em>Wildlife Rescue<\/em>, a quarterly for members of the Wildlife  Rescue Association of British Columbia. It reviews the organization\u2019s  activities in wildlife rehabilitation and education.<\/p>\n<p>The movie <em>A Man, A Woman And A Bank<\/em>, directed by Noel Black,  is described by Michael Walsh as \u201ca caper comedy with a Gastown  setting. Its focus is on two high-tech robbers (Donald Sutherland, Paul  Mazursky) and the non-technical distractions provided by a local beauty  (Brooke Adams).\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The movie <em>Prophecy<\/em>, directed by John Frankenheimer,  appeared. Wrote Michael Walsh: \u201cThough caused by industrial pollution,  the horrific mutations that an environmental scientist (Robert Foxworth)  encounters in the Maine woods also fulfill local Native American  legends.\u201d\u00a0 The <a href=\"http:\/\/www.imdb.com\/\" target=\"_blank\">Internet Movie Database<\/a> says about this movie: \u201cFilmed in British Columbia in 1978, <em>Prophecy<\/em> marked the beginning of \u2018Hollywood North,\u2019 the major start to the  development of a massive film production business in Vancouver and other  parts of the province of British Columbia, in Canada. Since then  hundreds of \u2018American\u2019 movies have been filmed in the Canadian  province.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><em>Bird of Spring<\/em>, a bronze sculpture by Etungat, an Inuit  artist, was placed at Robson Square (on the stairway near the Art  Gallery). The sculpture is a recreation of a tiny 14-cm original by  Etungat.<\/p>\n<p>The 460-seat Arts Club Theatre: Mainstage opened in 1979 at 1585  Johnston Street on Granville Island. The Arts Club became one of the  earliest landmarks on Granville Island and a personal triumph for  Managing Director Bill Millerd who had always dreamed of having a  theatre on the waterfront. Now the theatre is home base for a company  with three theatres and an adjoining lounge. The company regularly tours  its shows throughout the province.<\/p>\n<p>The 240-seat Waterfront Theatre opened in 1979 at 1410 Cartwright on  Granville Island. This was originally the home of Carousel Theatre, the  New Play Centre (now Playwrights Theatre) and the now defunct Westcoast  Actors. The Waterfront is now primarily a rental venue and home to <a href=\"http:\/\/www.carouseltheatre.ca\/\" target=\"_blank\">Carousel<\/a>, which produces three shows for family audiences each year.<\/p>\n<p>The David Y.H. Lui Theatre, opened by Lui in 1975, closed. During its  brief, but notable, life theatre goers enjoyed major appearances by  Dame Joan Sutherland, the National Ballet of Canada, The Royal Winnipeg  Ballet and others. The building later became a nightclub, Richard\u2019s on  Richards.<\/p>\n<p>Arts Umbrella began. To quote its <a href=\"http:\/\/www.artsumbrella.com\/\" target=\"_blank\">web site<\/a>:  \u201cSince our inception in 1979 with only 45 students, Arts Umbrella has  grown to now reach more than 30,000 young people annually. Our Granville  Island facility hosts more than 260 classes each week, ranging from  general courses to pre-professional training in theatre, dance,  painting, sculpture, architecture, film, new media, photography, and  more.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>A study showed that Surrey had become \u201cVancouver\u2019s bedroom,\u201d as more  than 50 per cent of its residents worked elsewhere. In 1879 almost  everyone who lived in Surrey worked there.<\/p>\n<p>Vancouver\u2019s new courthouse and Robson Square complex, designed by  Arthur Erickson, was\u00a0 completed. The complex changed the face of  downtown.<\/p>\n<p>North Vancouver High School closed, having served the community for  69 years. On the closure of the school the new gym, named after  Principal Mickey McDougall, became part of the North Vancouver  Recreation Centre.<\/p>\n<p>In White Rock Tom Kirstein, a chartered accountant, and a friend,  Chip Barrett, wondered aloud: why not have a sandcastle competition?  That led to White Rock\u2019s famous Great Canadian Open Sandcastle  Competition. With prizes amounting to $10,000, and scores of teams  competing, the annual event drew international attention, attracting  crowds estimated at 150,000 to the waterfront. Unfortunately, by 1987,  community dismay at the crush of people, unruly elements, and rising  police costs would force the cancellation of the competition.<\/p>\n<p>Greenpeace began to go international. Greenpeace organizations in  Australia, Canada, France, Holland, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and  the United States formed Stichting Greenpeace. Today, Greenpeace  International is\u00a0 headquartered in Amsterdam.<\/p>\n<p>The International Plaza Towers were built, at 71.6 metres and 26 storeys the tallest buildings in North Vancouver District.<\/p>\n<p>Nathan T. Nemetz became Chief Justice of British Columbia. He will hold the post until 1988.<\/p>\n<p>George Pedersen became president of Simon Fraser University. He will  hold the post until 1983. During his tenure part-time studies for mature  students and the school of engineering science, which concentrates on  new technology, began. He also launched cooperation with BCIT to  establish downtown classes in rented office space.<\/p>\n<p>The Continuing Education Division of Vancouver Community College  introduced a Court Interpreting program, the first of its kind in  Canada.<\/p>\n<p>A totem pole carved by Don Yeomans, a Haida native and a graduate of  Langara\u2019s fine arts program, was erected near the college\u2019s main  entrance.<\/p>\n<p>Terry Fox began to participate in a in a wheelchair-basketball team,  after being recruited by Rick Hansen. Part of Terry\u2019s self-designed  exercise routine was pushing his chair up Gaglardi Way, a long, steep  climb up Burnaby Mountain toward Simon Fraser University at the top.<\/p>\n<p>Police seized a little brown book at the apartment of a well-known  Vancouver prostitute. In it were 800 names of men, a who\u2019s who of high  society, including a high-ranking member of the B.C. judiciary. Wendy  King pleaded guilty to keeping a bawdy house and was fined $1,500. But  the notebook was sealed by a B.C. Supreme Court Judge, the names never  revealed.<\/p>\n<p>Bobby Ackles, assistant general manager of the BC Lions, was promoted to general manager. He will hold that title until 1986.<\/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>View of Burrard Street from Pender Street in May, 1979. Item # CVA 780-45.&nbsp; In 1979, a former premier and a local hockey star passed away. It was also the year that the Granville Island Public Market opened and possibly the start of Hollywood North. By Chuck Davis, The History of Vancouver Photos courtesy of<a href=\"https:\/\/spacing.ca\/vancouver\/2010\/07\/27\/814\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"sr-only\">&#8220;A Year in Five Minutes: Vancouver 1979&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/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":[1351,3108,1271,1564,1702,3143,3103,3168,3170,1014,3134,3124,3147,3158,3127,1643,2012,3125,581,2738,3113,3107,965,3120,3081,792,3153,3150,2156,2965,3167,3119,401,3088,851,3163,3132,1350,3101,3072,1579,3129,3094,3117,3106,3097,3162,3105,3112,3171,3114,3177,1416,3085,3116,3181,3182,3122,309,3098,3126,1810,3091,3084,767,1596,3160,3121,3083,2826,3183,23,3142,3164,3123,3161,3184,3166,2882,2480,3100,3110,2728,3172,3059,3174,3102,858,3173,3175,3165,3111,3093,1326,3087,3155,3145,1911,3148,1105,595,3089,3176,2858,3133,3138,1037,776,3131,2995,3149,3096,3104,3115,944,1068,2805,3139,1219,3180,973,2556,3082,3179,2484,3092,625,3157,3152,3144,3135,931,3159,3140,3154,3024,3141,3156,3169,3000,3185,2653,350,3137,3095,3109,3178,2469,3186,2869,1894,3130,3086,3118,1817,801,1210,214,2739,3136,2753,2880,3146,1899,3099,3090,3151,1347,271,3128],"class_list":["post-814","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-history","tag-alaska","tag-alexander-mclaren","tag-amsterdam","tag-art-gallery","tag-arthur-erickson","tag-arts-club","tag-arts-umbrella","tag-assistant-general-manager","tag-assistant-to-street-photographer-joe-iaci","tag-australia","tag-b-c-court-of-appeals","tag-b-c-equipment-ltd","tag-b-c-human-rights-commission","tag-b-c-supreme-court","tag-ballard-power-systems","tag-bank","tag-bc-electric-company","tag-bc-lions","tag-belcarra","tag-bill-bennett","tag-bill-millerd","tag-bobby-ackles","tag-british-columbia","tag-brooke-adams","tag-burnaby-mountain","tag-canada","tag-cbc-vancouver-orchestra","tag-centennial-society","tag-chair","tag-chartered-accountant","tag-chief-justice","tag-chip-barrett","tag-chuck-davis","tag-chuck-poulsen","tag-coal-harbour","tag-consumer-alert-columnist","tag-continuing-education-division","tag-cpr-station","tag-cyclone","tag-date","tag-delta","tag-deltas-first-one-hundred-years-corporation","tag-don-yeomans","tag-donald-sutherland","tag-douglas-e-harker","tag-edna-g-ladner","tag-environmental-scientist","tag-eric-nicol","tag-etungat","tag-film-critic","tag-foncie-pulice","tag-france","tag-fraser","tag-freda-van-der-ree","tag-frederick-wellington-taylor","tag-free-at-last","tag-fuel-cell-technology","tag-future-shop-ltd","tag-gastown","tag-gay-tide","tag-general-hydrogen","tag-general-manager","tag-george-laverock","tag-george-pedersen","tag-georgia","tag-granville-island","tag-granville-island-facility","tag-greenpeace-international","tag-hanako-sato","tag-hassan-khosrowshahi","tag-high-tech-robbers","tag-historical","tag-historical-committee-of-the-richmond","tag-hockey-player","tag-housing-corporation","tag-international-plaza-towers","tag-internet-movie-database","tag-inuit-artist","tag-iran","tag-jim-taylor","tag-joan-sutherland","tag-joe-iaci","tag-joe-philliponi","tag-judge","tag-kent-prison","tag-key-player","tag-leslie-j-ross","tag-location","tag-long-time-film-critic","tag-maine","tag-managing-director","tag-michael-walsh","tag-mickey-mcdougall","tag-mp","tag-nathan-t-nemetz","tag-national-ballet-of-canada","tag-ndp","tag-netherlands","tag-new-play-centre","tag-new-york","tag-new-zealand","tag-noel-black","tag-north-vancouver-district","tag-north-vancouver-high-school","tag-north-vancouver-recreation-centre","tag-office-of-the-ombudsman","tag-ontario","tag-ottawa","tag-ottawa-senators","tag-pacific-coach","tag-parliament-for-new-westminster-coquitlam","tag-paul-howard","tag-paul-mazursky","tag-pauline-jewett","tag-pence","tag-player","tag-premier","tag-presentation-house-on-the-north-shore","tag-president","tag-prophecy","tag-provincial-government","tag-puget","tag-puget-sound","tag-renaissance","tag-rick-hansen","tag-robert-foxworth","tag-robson-square","tag-robson-square-complex","tag-royal-vancouver-yacht-club","tag-royal-winnipeg-ballet","tag-sasamat-volunteer-fire-department","tag-simon-fraser-university","tag-skytrain-waterfront-station","tag-social-credit-party","tag-st-georges-school-for-boys","tag-stan-persky","tag-steveston-historical-society","tag-steveston-museum","tag-street-photographer","tag-stuart-thomson","tag-summer-games","tag-supreme-court","tag-surrey","tag-surrey-council","tag-svend-robinson","tag-t-ellis-ladner","tag-tara","tag-terry-fox","tag-the-north-american-soccer-league-championship","tag-the-stanley-cup","tag-the-vancouver-sun","tag-time-magazine","tag-trevor-whymark","tag-tsutae-sato","tag-united-kingdom","tag-united-states","tag-usd","tag-vancouver-2","tag-vancouver-community-college","tag-vancouver-high-school","tag-vancouver-japanese-language-school","tag-vancouver-museum","tag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