Sunday, January 22, 2012

Finnish/Scandinavian Gift Shops in the USA

With the closing of the Gift Chalet store in Auburn, I've created a list of Finnish/Scandinavian Gift Shops in the USA to order from should the need arise for Finnish and Scandinavian items. Note Gift Chalet will continue as a mail order business.

Please make the effort to support local Finnish Businesses!
- Joyce Hannula
joyceHannula@aol.com

UFKBAS Lodge 21 Officers Installment Dinner RESCHEDULED!!!

UFKBAS Lodge 21 Officers Installation Dinner ($10)
  • RESCHEDULED for Sunday, January 29, 2 p.m.

at Finnish Brotherhood Hall 1970 Chestnut St. Berkeley, CA

Same time; same place!

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Harry Siitonen's "Sports So Far" [January]

FINN WOMEN IN SALIBANDY FINAL. Finland was runner-up in the World Floor-ball ("Salibandy" in Finnish) Championships, losing to Sweden in the final in December, 4-2,. Defeating the Czech Republic in the semis, 6-0, Finnish women attained their first final since 2007. Sweden is now a five-time World Champion, which Finland won in 1998 and 2001. Salibandy is an indoor game.

So far, only three Finns have been named to this coming summer's Olympic team set for London. These include 50-Km racewalkers Jarkko Kinnunen and Antti Kempas, both for the second time. Leena Puotiniemi has been picked to run in the women's marathon.

Kiira Korpi again became Finnish women's national figure skating champion on Dec. 20 in Tampere with 170.98 points. Juulia Turkkila was 2nd in 145.30 and Beata Papp 3rd with 129.20. Ari-Pekka Nurmenkari became the men's champ for the 8th time. with 162.52. Teenagers Mattias Versius and Bela Papp, both 17, made the podium with 161.43 and 152.69.

The Finnish Young Lions' (Nuoret Leijonat) hockey team made the bronze medal round of the junior men's (-20) World Hockey Championships at Calgary in January but was shut out for a medal by Canada, 4-0. The championdship went to Sweden in an extremely tight match with Russia which it won in overtime, 1-0.

In other winter sports, the best result so farfor Finns was in a World Cup snowboarding contest in Kuusamo in December, with Finland's Markus Malin the winner with 94 points. Steve Krigbolder of Holland was second with 88 while the host country's Aleksis Kumpulainen was 3rd with 83.3. Women's champ was Lucile LeFevre of France with 81.3. Eila Sultiala was the top Finn with a 3rd place 67.3. World and Olympic medallist Tanja Poutiainen's World Cup season's best result so far has been a second place in the slalom at Courcheville, France in December, -1.87 seconds behind winner Marlies Schild of Austria. .

Finland didn't do as nearly as well as in other recent seasons in the famous Tour De Ski cross-country series on Europe's slopes which just ended on Jan. 8th. Finnish men were nowhere among ranked athletes, and the women wern't up to the old standards of Virpi Kuitunen who won Tour de Ski twice. This time overall winner was Poland's Justyna Kowalczyk who took thechampionship for a record third time. Finland's best individual results were several fourth place showiings by Krista Lahteenmäki, Aino-Kaisa Saarinen,and Riikka Sarasoja-Lilja.

European junior 100m hurdles champion Nooralotta Neziri scored a 60-meter indoor sprint win in a Loppiainen (Epiphany) meet at Kupittaa on Jan, 7 in her second best time ever in 7.52 seconds (PB 7.47). The same day in Portugal, where numerouis Finnish track athletes are in winter training camp, Finnish hall-marathon record-holder Jussi Utriasinen won a 6.8km street run at Faro, Portugal in 18 minutes 46 seconds. In the women's race Johanna Lehtinen, Finnish women's steeplechase record-holder, was 2nd in 21:28, behind Russia's Martina Kovaljova with 21:15.

Sunday, January 1, 2012

Jarkko Mänttäri's Article "The End of the World is Coming But How?" (Verkkolehti, 2011.12.28) English Translation

The End of the World Is Coming But How?



The world will end, of that there is no doubt. But how and when? There are several alternatives.

By Jarkko Mänttäri

Spending his retirement years in Hämeenkyrö (Finland), biologist Jussi Viitala (above right) does not let us off easy. In his book Älykäs Eläin (Intelligent Being) published last year, he avows that we humans are the world ecosystem’s worst violators, basically because we are five billion too many.

Viitala’s latest publication Miten maailma loppuu (How the World Will End) bypasses the speculation whether the world will end or not. In Viitala’s mind it is absolutely certain that the world’s end will come, but when and how is subject to various viewpoints. These Viitala presents in his book in a quite comprehensible manner.

The most likely threat to humanity he sees as the population explosion, since we are already entirely too many. “Now we have surpassed all limits and we see no end to population growth.” Viitala believes the problems created by population growth will get worse for decades to come.

Previously employed by the University of Jyväskylä’s Biology and Environmental Studies Department, Viitala contends that the root of that population growth lies in the behavior of people themselves. If it cannot be curbed, all efforts to prevent climate change, the exhaustion of natural resources, pollution, and the disappearance of other species to extinction, are only puttering around to ease the conscience.

There Is Still Hope

The reason for us being on such a course is no accident, according to Viitala.

“It was originally a political choice, that we went on this neo-liberal line, which is proving to be one of the earth’s greatest tragedies. . Surely, little by little, the loss of hope creeps into our minds.”

Viitala does not want his book to create a hopelessness or panic in people, but to get them to think about these matters. But with all these (potential) disasters, is there any basis to retain hope?

“As long as there is life there is hope. One possibility could be a global consumers’ movement which through boycotts could bring any multinational firm to its knees.”

Viitala does not place too much hope in politicians.

“Governments and politicians appear to be married to big capital, so there is no hope for influence through these means. Thus, it has to start on the grassroots level. But the problem with this is, is it already too late?”


(This article appeared on the Verkkolehti, the web edition of the Finnish newspaper Kansan Uutiset on Dec. 28, 2011. A longer version also appeared in Viikkolehti, the weekend print edition of Kansan Uutiset. The English language translation of the above article is by Harry Siitonen, Berkeley, CA).