Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Upcoming UC Berkeley FInnish Studies lectures

Please join us for these guest lectures this fall:

Anu Vaalas 2.10.  Art history "Gallen-Kallela in the Finnish Visual Arts scene"

Kailey Willmore 21.10. Aleksis Kivi, Seven Brothers

Mikael Varjo 30.10. Proverbs and references to death in Finnish popular music (in the lyrics of Viikate)

Sirpa Tuomainen 4.11. Finns in the Bay Area


Welcome!

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Bi Annual UFKB&S Grand Lodge Convention was a great success.

The UFKB&S Grand Lodge Convention in Seattle this past September was a great success.

Seattle President Lynn Wirta organized an excellent music program for the closing dinner with a band, kantele players, and a choir with sing-a-long in Finnish. All meetings were held at the Finnish Lutheran Church, where a concluding service was held in Finnish followed by traditional Finnish breakfast foods on the following Sunday.

Our Berkeley Lodge 21 brought six members to the Grand Lodge invention this year, more than have attended out of town conferences in many years, held in Seattle Sept 18-20. Grand Lodge President Alison Kastama presided over various committee reports and included reports from all three states to continue the Finnish traditions in their respective cities. Delegates also discussed such issues as Scholarships, the Vjellyesviesti Sanomat, Bylaws & Procedures, etc.

Newly elected Junior Vice President Gina Hansen (of Berkeley) agreed to organize and create an organization website explain the purpose of the lodge, a description of respective lodges, and a joint calendar so members can plan visits to attend events hosted by other lodges. The name suggested by Trustee Paul Koski (of Aberdeen) was www.finnishkalevalodges.com. Design work is continuing to be completed as calendar items and news tweets are currently being added to the site.



Those parties interested in joining the Berkeley Lodge can go to http://finnishhall.com/ufkbas21_join.html.

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

CONCERT: Kippis plays the ____ in Sacramento THIS THURSDAY!!!

 View the Kippis Band Page
www.kippisband.com


NEW KIPPIS SHOW THIS WEEK!!!

with Cody Bowers, BRI, Infinite Vastness, & Special Guests

THIS THURS, July 31, 2014 

at The Press Club
2030 P St; Sacramento, CA 95816


Doors open at 6:45. Show starts at 7 p.m. 21+. $11/Advance or $13/Door

To order tickets, go to https://tickets.aftonshows.com/Kippis2

Friday, June 20, 2014

Siitonen's Sports Report and July 2014 Sports So Far

The 2014 National Hockey League Championships concluded on June 13 with the Los Angeles Kings winning the Stanley Cup over the New York Rangers, 5 games to 1 in L.A. But it took the Kings a double overtime for the new NHL champs's 3-2 final victory. It's the second time in three years that the Kings have hoisted the venerated Stanley Cup.

In the June issue we were stuck admidships in the World Hockey Championships in Minsk, Belarus, at press time with Finland having lost its first two games. But lo and behold, the Finnish Lions came back to roar into the finals before it was all over. Along the way, they lost to Russia, 4-2, in the early rounds; blanked Germany, 4-0 with Pekka Rinne as goalie; took host Belarus, 2-0; Switzerland, 3-2, on Iiro Pakarinen's OT gold; fell to USA, 3-1; and proceeded into the championship rounds by edging Kazahkstan, 5-4; then dumped mighty Canada in the quarterfinals, 3-2; goose-egged the Czech Republic in the semis, 3-0, with Jori Lehtola and Jaakko Immonen providing goals, with Rinne again superbly guarding the cage. Undefeated Russia had vanquished Sweden in its semis so the Suomi guys ended up facing their large Eastern neighbor again, You may remember Finland had eliminated Russia in their Winter Olympics game at Sochi, where it bronzed, But its luck didn't hold at Minsk. The Ivans took the title over the Jussis, 5-2. Yet silver isn't that shabby an award, either! The Swedes aced the Czechs for the bronze.

In some important record setting, Finland's Fredrik Smulter, 31, set a WR of 400 kilograms on the bench press in the World Weightlifting Championships in Denmark in the Men's 120-kilo class. No one had ever pressed 400 kilos before! Runner-up Jonathan Lee tried but failed and had to settle for 380. Anniina Laitinen set a Finnish women's NR in 55.05 in the outdoor 400-meter run which she won at Ghent, Belgium. Sandra Eriksson, who had already qualified for the 3000m Steeplechase at the European Championships at Zurich, set a new NR in this specialty at the Lahti Elite Games of 9:34.71. Sandra also had the old record which she ran at the Finnish-Swedish Dual Meet in 9:38.38 last year. She also qualified for the 1500-meter run at Zurich by winning at that distance at the Flanders Cup in Belgium with a PB of 4:15.75.

Finland vanquished Canada, 6-2, in the finals of the World Roller Hockey Championships in the Czech Republic. It's called rullakiekko in Finnish and it's played on inline roller skates. Kasperi Lehiköinen, 22, defeated Mateusz Bubowski in the finals of the Lithuanian Badminton Open, 18-21, 21-9, 21-13, inVilna. Badminton is called sulkapallo in Finnish. Kasperi had won the Norwegian Open last November. Sanna Kämäräinen set another personal best in the discus of 58.05-meters, winning at a track meet in Bedford, England. Her indoor best is 60.07 from this past winter's Finnish championships. Juuso Väisänen won the European Cup for the third straight time in FIFA's aerobics.
In the Diamond League's opening meet at Shanghai  Ihab Abdeirahma, 25, set an Egyptian and African record in the javelin with a best throw of 89.21 for a PB and the longest throw seen in the world the past three seasons. He has a Finnish coach, Petteri Piironen. Reigning World siver medallist Tero Pitkämäki could only attain sixth place with 81.36. But Pitkämäki made up for lost ground at the Oslo Diamond League, winning it with 84.18, just a shade farther than Kenyan Julius Yep's 84.17. Czech Republic's Viterzslav Vesely was third with 83.53. Our best wishes go to Tero Pitkämäki and his life partner champion heptathlete Niina Kelo on the recent birth of a son, their first child. Finland used to be a shotput nation with Arsi Harju its last Olympic champion. Its most promising newcomer in several years is Arttu Kangas,19,with an oudoor PB of 19.58. His best indoor shot was 19.56. As defending Kaleva Games national champion, we're looking forward to Arttu throwing 20 meters and more this season. The June issue of the National Masters News reports on the success of two older age group Finns at the Boston Marathon on April 21. Finland's Urpo Naumanen won the masters men's 65-69 age category in 3:02:22 while Keijo Talvasalo of Thornhill, Ontario was tops in the M75-79 division  in 3:41:04.

The Nyström sisters, Emilia and Erika, earned their third medal, a bronze, at the European Beach Volleyball Championships at Baden, Austria. They also have a Euro silver to their credit. They lost in the semis to another sister team, Doris and Stephanie Schwager of Austria: 4-21, 21-15, 15-8. The Nyström's won their 2014 bronze by defeating Madeleine Meppelink and Marleen van Iersel of Holland. (No scoring available.) Since beach volleyball isn't always played on beaches, American sportswriters have begun calling it "sand volleyball." The UC-Berkeley varsity women's regular volleyball team played several games of sand volleyball with other colleges in the late spring this year.  

David Erkkilä, an old San Francisco friend, avid sports fan, and FAR subscriber, sent me some coverage of Finnish-American athletes I knew nothing about: J. J. Koski, San Ramon Valley junior wide receiver, was voted Most Valuable Player of the NIKE Football Training Camp for Northern California at Chabot College in Hayward. He also ran a 200-meter sprint in 22.13 seconds for the third fastest in the area. Also from David: Lonnie Kauppila, former Stanford University shortstop, now playing second base for Clinton, Iowa, in the Class A Midwest League, had his team come from behind with a score of 1-17, to win the game, 20-17. Besides playing second base, Lonnie pitched one inning for the first time since the eighth grade.  

Kiitos, 
David. 

Since Good Sports has little contact with accomplishments by Finnish-American and Finnish-Canadian athletes, we encourage FAR readers to send us such information you might run across. About your children, grandchildren, maybe? Contact: harry.siitonen@yahoo.com.

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Jussi-Winning "Kerron Sinulle Kaiken" ("Open Up to Me") debuts at LGBTQ Frameline Film Fest in SF Weds, 6/25 at 9:15 pm at Castro Theatre -- Advanced Tix Recommended - Director Simo Halinen in Attendance



Open Up to Me
Kerron Sinulle Kaiken

DIRECTOR: Simo Halinen

Expected to attend: Director Simo Halinen

Since her transition from man to woman, Maarit lives a life apart from other people—distant from her estranged wife and daughter and marooned in a dead-end cleaning job far beneath what her education merits. When by chance she meets a handsome, married soccer coach named Sami, her carefully constructed solitude begins to crumble.

Open Up to Me Trailer from Corinth Films on Vimeo,  also available at http://vimeo.com/84790702

While Maarit is sure of herself and her new life, Sami may not be able to handle what society might think of her as a transgender woman. Complicating matters are Sami’s wife, Julia; Teo, a teenage soccer player he coaches; and Maarit’s daughter, Pinja—all of whom have their own agendas. Maarit finds herself at the center of a web of relationships in which everyone is heartbreakingly and fallibly human. At the same time, the ghost of her old life threatens to endanger the precarious balance of her new one.
Part psychodrama and part coming-of-age tale, Open Up to Me is spare and unfussy. It features superb acting from Leea Klemola, who won a Jussi (Finland’s highest film award) for her work in the lead role. As Maarit, she equally embodies vulnerability and determination as a woman who is anxious for her life to finally begin.

— Mordecai Stayton

Monday, April 14, 2014

Sports So Far... [May 2014] - The Siitonen Report

We start with a nostalgic but proud look at the career of Tanja Poutiainen,  33, of Rovaniemi, one of Finland's finest alpine skiers, who has announced her retirement from executing the slalom and giant slalom specialties in which  she excelled for many years on the world scene. Her last Winter Olympics outing was this year at Sochi where she finished 12th in the slalom and 14th in the giant slalom. It was time to quit. Tanja's best Olympic effort was at Torino in 2006 where she won a silver. Poutiainen (below) also had four World Championship medals besides two overall season's wins in the World Cup giant slalom and one in the slalom. She was probably Finland's finest all-time women's alpine skier and the only Finn to qualify this year for Sochi in her specialities.

Biathlete Kaisa Mäkäräinen, 31, picked up a head of steam after so-so placings at Sochi, by winning the season's World Cup competition.
In mid-March, she won three World Cup competitions on home turf at Kontiolahti, in the simultaneous start, sprint and 10K pursuit. This gave Mäkäräinen (left) the season's World Cup lead, as they headed for the final round at Holmenkollen, Oslo, Norway. Her first event there produced four missed shots which relegated Kaisa to 23rd place, thus allowing runner-up Norwegian Tora Bergen to gain the Cup lead on March 20.  On March 22, Mäkäräinen  snared fourth place with two missed shots. But she concluded the World Cup series with seventh place in the simultaneous start, with Bergen falling to 14th place to lose her slim lead. So it was Kaisa's title! Her previous World Cup championship was in the 1010-2011 season. 
But that wasn't all for Kaisa. She became a double titleist in the Finnish national championships, winning the sprint and simultaneous start at Hämeenlinna. Her long season  ended in perfection with two more titles at an international exhibition meet at Tyumen in West Siberia.. She didn't miss one gun shot in either her 13.5K simultaneous start or her 10K pursuit victories. (I must confess to some advanced old age memory lapse, for I had previously mentioned Kaisa as an Olympic champion. Not true! I had confused her with  Satu Mäkelä-Nummela, who was the trap-shooting Olympic champion in the Beijing SUMMER Games in Beijing in 2008.)
While we're still at Siberia's Tyumen, let's scroll back to March 11, where at that site a Finnish women's ski orienteering team won a European Championship gold, defeating Russia by one second. The Finnish team consisted of  Mira Kaskinen, Sonja Mörsky and Mervi Pesu. Kaskinen gained a silver in the individual middle distance and Mörsky the bronze, with Tove Alexandersson of Sweden the goldster. In the men's relay the Finns won the bronze, with Janne Häkkinen, Staffan Tupis and Ville-Petteri Saarela.
Last issue we reported on the default accomplishment of Finnish wrestler Petra Olli in Sweden. Since  the previous FAR, she has won a European Championship bronze in the 58Kg class at Vantaa by defeating Germany's Luisa Niemeschev, 5-2. In the semis, Olli had lost to Russia's Valeria Koblova, 1-8. It was the first significant adult medal for Olli, 19, of Lappajärvi. As a junior she had three European golds and two World bronzes. Petra's grandfather Paavo Olli had three Finnish national championships to his credit in short distance track runs. For the men at the Vantaa Euros, Rami Hietaniemi scored the silver in the men's 85Kg class, with the title going to Zhan Beleniuk of Ukraine, 2-1. Earlier in the day Rami had blanked Germany's Jan Fischer in the semis, 6-0. Rami's previous best was a World bronze as a junior in 2011. 
Finland endured a tough loss to Bosnia-Herzegovina in Davis Cup tennis play at Helsinki's Tali, 3-2. ATP's top 50 player Jarkko Nieminen
was defeated by the visitors' star player Mirza Basic in five tough sets that took three hours, 3-6, 7-6 (7-3), 3-6, 6-3, 8-6. B-H's Damir Dzumhur took Juha Paukku in their opening day singles.  So Finland was behind 0-2 until doubles play. In these, Finland closed the gap with Nieminen and Henri Kontinen taking Basic and Tomislav Orkic in straight sets, 6-3, 7-6 (2), 6-2. In reverse singles, Nieminen tied it all up by disposing of Dzamhur, 7-5, 7-6 (2), 6-1.   Paukku put up a whale of a struggle as he stretched Basic to five sets, before going down, 3-6, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5, 6-4. So Bosnia-Herzegovina goes on to its next Davis Cup round, while Finland is done for this season.
In track, Jussi Kanervo (below), 21, who's competing for the University of South Carolina on an athletic scholarship, had wins at Columbia in the 110m hurdles (13.77) and in the 400m hurdles (54.52).  Sanna Kämäränen, 28, won the women's discus at the University of Texas-El Paso Miners' spring meet with a Finnish outdoor season's best throw of 56.90 meters. She threw over four meters further than runner-up Gleneve Grange of Jamaica (52.35). 

The marathon running season is in full swing around rhe world. How have Finns fared so far? Tadedich Bekele of Ethiopia was the women's winner of the Berlin Half-Marathon in 1:10:05. In fifth place was Finnish MD Kukka-Maria Mustonen in 1:19:43. Mustonen's personal best full marathon was at Paris in 2:47:45 in 2011.   Another Ethiopian Atela Lenora Gedesha aced the Rome Marathon in 2:34:43, with Finland's Elina Junnila fifth in 2:56:24. Junnila was later second in the Miami Marathon in 3:00:32, won by Mariska Kaamer of Holland in 2:49:47. Annemari Hyvärinen, 35, ran a personal best for fourth slot in the Zurich Marathon in 2:39:54, Finnish season's best so far this year. She was runner-up in the Finnish national marathon championships in 2004. In 2010 Annemari became only the second Finnish woman to have climbed to the top of Mount Everest.  She currently resides in the United States.  
On the race-walking scene, Finland's

Aku Partanen finished sixth in the prestigious IAAF Race-walking Challenge 50K race in 3:54:54 at Dudence, Slovakia. Winner was Poland's Rafal Augustin in 3:45:12.   
    

             

Sunday, March 9, 2014

FREE Finnish Film Nite at UC Berkeley "Mies vailla menneisyyttä" / "The Man Without the Past" at 6:30 pm

FINNISH FILM NIGHT AT UCB!!! (FREE)

Aki Kaurismäki's

Mies vailla menneisyyttä
The Man Without the Past
(2002)

 

Tues, March 11
6:30 PM

in Dwinelle Hall #B-4


     “A nameless man comes to town and gets beaten to death in the first possible moment. So begins this epic drama, this film – or should we say a dream? – of lonely hearts with empty pockets under the big sky of our Lord… or should we say birds?” -Aki Kaurismäki- ...See More


     Aki Kaurismäki: Mies vailla menneisyyttä/The Man Without the Past (2002) Tuesday, 3/1 6: 30 PM in Dwinelle B-4 "A nameless man comes to town and gets beaten to death in the first possible moment. So begins this epic drama, this film – or should we say a dream? – of lonely hearts with empty pockets under the big sky of our Lord... or should we say birds? 



     " -Aki Kaurismäki-"The impish Aki Kaurismaki, whose previous film was the black-and-white, silent" Juha, "fills this proletarian fable with music and color. The hero, a jowly, sad-faced welder (Markku Peltola), wakes up after a vicious mugging to find himself suffering from complete amnesia. But his state of dislocation turns out also to be a state of grace, as he finds friendship in a shipping-container shanty-town and love with a Salvation Army worker (Kati Outinen). The movie, with its easy, graceful humor and its plainspoken sense of decency, recalls the great populist films of the 1930 's and early 40 's: there are traces of Charlie Chaplin, Preston Sturges and Frank Capra in Mr. Kaurismaki's democractic aesthetic, and like them he has made a simple, poignant comedy whose intended audience is nothing less than the human race. "— A. O. Scott, New York Times

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Upcoming Paper Presentation (FREE) by possible UC Berkeley's Finnish Studies Finalist. by University of Helsinki's Lieven Ameel on "Literary Perspective on Urban Development: The Fnnish Urban Novel & The Rhetoric of Helsinki's Waterfront Rgeneration"

The University of California at Berkeley is currently entertaining candidates for a Professor of Finnish Studies. Come support Finnish Studies and hear one of the candidate finalists!

 
 
The Department of Scandinavian is pleased to present:
 
 
Lieven Ameel, University of Helsinki

Literary Perspectives on Urban Development:

  The Finnish Urban Novel 
& The Rhetoric of Helsinki's Waterfront Regeneration
 

Thursday, 
Feb. 20, 2014
at 5:00 PM
 219 Dwinelle Hall
Reception to follow in Dwinelle 6321
 
 
This lecture examines the potential of literary narratives for evaluating practices in urban planning and development. It will look at two specific cases of waterfront development in the context of the Finnish capital’s long shoreline: the plans for a Guggenheim museum in the Helsinki South Harbor, and the development of the former container harbor Jätkäsaari. An examination of the rich urban imaginaries in Finnish turn-of-the-twentieth-century literature will be juxtaposed with the generic rhetoric that was used, in particular, in the controversial plans for a Helsinki Guggenheim. I conclude by arguing that the shortcomings of these ambitious development projects could have been remedied by rigorous cultural and narrative mapping of the locations in question.
 
 
W i t h   q u e s t i o n s ,   p l e a s e   c o n t a c t   i s s a @ b e r k e l e y . e d u   o r   5 1 0 - 6 4 2 - 4 4 8 4 .
Read more about Ameel's musings in Helsinki On My Mind (2007)

Monday, February 17, 2014

Siitonen's Sports So Far : March 2014

Sports So Far... March 2014


It's too bad that Sports So Far's March editorial deadline falls in the early stages of the Winter Olympics that began on Feb. 8 in Sochi, Russia. But our first Finnish medalist emerged the next day. She was Enni Rukajärvi, 21, of Kuusamo who earned a silver in the women's slopestyle snowboarding, a brand new Olympic event.
Gold medalist was USA's Jamie Anderson, who has been a consistent winner in practically all of the slopestyle competition during this current season. Rukajärvi has been a leading competitor as well, and a year ago won several of these snowboarding events. The President of Finland Saul Niinistö and his First Lady Jenni Haukio were in the stands to witness Enni's feats, and the next day sponsored a coffee and cake reception for her, as Rukajärvi was still dazed by her accomplishment.
Norway's fabulous Marit Björgen won the 15k combined cross-sountry skiing championship (7.5k traditional, 7.5k freestyle) on Feb. 8 as expected, in 1:38:33.6  Finland's Aino-Kaisa Saarinen came in fifth, only 2.1 seconds behind bronze medalist Heidi Weng of Norway. Sweden's Charlotte Kalla claimed the silver.   
We'll report other Finnish accomplishments at Sochi in the April issue.
So for now we'll go to other pre-Sochi winter sports results. Juulia Turkkila, 18, was 12th in the European women's figure skating championships at Budap-est in January with a score of 140.52. Winner was Olympic star Julia Lipniskaya, 15, of Russia  Winners of the Finnish cross-country sprint championships at Vantaa on Jan.17 were for the Men: 1. Martti Jylhä. 2.Iivo Niskanen. 3. Juho Mikkonen.  Women: 1. Anne Kyllönen. 2. Riikka Sarasoja-Lilja. 3. Kerttu Niskanen. Next day Sami Jauhojärvi took the men's 15Kclassic XC title, followed by Tero Simula and Matti Heikkinen. In the women's 10K it was: Kyllönen, Aino-Kaisa Saarinen and Niskanen.
Petja Piirainen was the World Cup Big Air snowboarding champion at Stoneham, Canada, but was only 12th in the Olympics at Sochi.  Janne Korpi was third in the snowboarding half-pipe at Laax, Switzerland, with Iouri Palatechnov of the host country the winner.  
Julia Kykkänen bronzed in the women's ski jump at Hinzenbach for her first international medal on Feb. 2. Japan's Sara Takanashi was the winner. Julia will be Finland's jump specialist at Sochi,, another Olympic first for women in this sport.  Ilkka Herola was second in the Nordic combined ski jump and 10K XC event at Val di Fiemme, with Austria's Phillipp Orter the winner in 29:47.1. Ilkka was only four seconds behind. Iivo Niskanen also won a junior men's 15K at Val di Fiemme for youngsters under 23.  Riitta-Liisa Roponen won the XC Marathon Cup at Obertilliach, Austria on Jan. 19, covering the 42 kilometers (26.2miles) in 2:03:30.28, seven seconds ahead of Russia's Julia Tihonova.
In the world of European golf, Mikko Ilonen was tied for the lead at Doha, Qatar at the end of regular play with 6 under par, but Sergio Garcia of Spain took the playoff to win 305,00 euros. Ilonen's take was 203,000. On Feb. 2, Ilonen finished fifth on the strength of his score of 64 in the final day's round. He had 275 strokes to winner Scotland's Stephen Gallacher who had 272. This has been and excellent season for Ilonen and we just learned that he's now ranked 55th in world golf, his highest career standing ever.
On the women's wrestling scene, Petra Olli lost in the semi-finals to the world's best wrestler in the 58 kilo class, Kaori Icho of Japan at Krasnojarak, Russia and came up with a bronze. Icho has won three Olympic golds and seven world championsips. Olli had four matches that day, three of which she won. Pauliina Hietaniemi was voted their 2013 Athlete of the Year by the Finnish Labor Sports Federation (TUL). Hietaniemi had won a world championship gold in the 50k weight class in Taekwon-do in Spain last October. She's from Tampere.
Tero Pitkämäki was voted the 2013 Finnish Athlete of the Year by the Finnish Athletics Federation (SUL) on the basis of his World Championship javelin silver medal in Moscow, and for the longest throw of the year in the world of 89.03m. Runner-up was Mårten Boström for his sprint distance orienteering  world championship, and third was Matti Mattsson for his bronze in men's world swimming championships.             

-- Submitted by Harry Siitonen

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Olympic Games BEGIN!!!

Let The Games begin!!!
Enni Rukajärvi kuvassa

Rukajärvi takes Silver in SlopeStyle!

Finnish snowboarder Enni Rukajärvi won a silver medal at the Winter Olympic Games in Sochi on Sunday. After a nearly flawless second run, she came second behind the US's Jamie Anderson at this game's New Event.

Rukajärvi, 23, has previously won the SlopeStyle World Championship. the TTR tour and the X-Games.
 
One of the big contests to watch is to see who's going to win THIS YEAR's Hockey Championship. Finland took 3rd in both the women's and men's matches, in 2010. The Finnish women beat out Sweden in overtime at the last performance to take bronze and the US experienced a major upset by the Home Turf Canucks, who ended up with gold! Let the contest BEGIN!!!

Ahonen comes out of retirement to compete in the Men’s Normal Hill event in Sochi TONIGHT! Though Ahonen has plenty of hardware from many other World Championship events, he is hoping to earn his first Olympic medal in Sochi this year!

View Yle’s coverage of the event online streaming from Yle Areena