Monday, October 11, 2010

Summer Newsletter 2010

EDVARD GRIEG NOTES
SONS OF NORWAY LODGE NO. 6-074
www.edvardgrieglodge.com

Meeting Place:
Lutheran Church in the Foothills
1700 Foothill Blvd.
La Cañada, California

SUMMER 2010

Ord Fra Presidenten

Dear Friends: Kjære Venner:
ANNOUNCEMENT:
WE ARE MOVING TO LUTHERAN CHURCH OF THE FOOTHILLS, 1700 FOOTHILL BLVD. LA CANADA.
OUR FIRST CULTURAL EVENING HERE WILL BE Saturday, September 25, 2010, 5:30 pm social hour, 6:30 pm pot luck dinner, short meeting, and Cultural Program.

PLEASE NOTE THIS CHANGE ON YOUR CALENDARS.
Parking is available on the east side of the church, the sidewalk to the social hall is well lighted, and the meeting hall is spacious and on one level.

Special guests are Karen and David Bosworth, Norseman Lodge #71, Thousand Oaks, CA.
Their well known talents include any and all arts and crafts projects earned in the Sons of Norway Cultural Skills Program. Trust me, it will be a wonderful and enlightening program.

The purpose is to inform our membership that any of us can choose from the variety of cultural skills programs that SofN offers; be completed on one’s own effort and time; and feel really good getting the beautiful medals.

It’s impressive, my friends. PS I received my first medal from completing Level 1 of Norwegian Literature after taking a class from our own Pat Savoie.

Har det bra, Jo Ness


Jo Ness and Cara Clove were the lodge’s delegates to the District 6 Convention in Modesto in June.  A report on the convention starts on page 2.

The new District 6 Officers are:
President: Lyle Berge
Vice President: Mary Beth Ingvoldstad
Secretary: Wendy Winkelman
Treasurer: Roger Espeland
Public Relations Officer: Erik Pappa
Our Zone 5 Director: Ordale Johnson

Some facts:  Sons of Norway founders in 1895 numbered 18; the Order now has 67,000 members in USA, Canada and Norway. District 6 has 54 lodges, however, a few were unable to send delegates. The District covers Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, and Utah, and Hawaii, however there are no lodges there.


Gratulerer Med Dagen

Belated greetings to those with July birthdays.
JULY
1  Carrie Engevik
1  Jean Wildern
2  Penny Eidem
3  Sally Hamilton
3  Evelyn Riveness
6  Eileen Wirtz
6  Barbara Yeager
8  Reidun Hedenstad
12  Brit Trydal
13  Greta Moses
15  Deanna Anderson
17  Solrun Cammarata
18  Judith Hammer
19  Virginia Paulson
20  Bethel Trammell
27  Cara Clove
27  Robin Niles
28  Richard Gilman
30  Carl Voien
31  Vera Osnes
AUGUST
1  Raymond Bentson
3  Henrik Lovdokken
10  Mimi Chen
10  Berit Jansta
18  Daniel Christensen
18  Gloria Larson
18  Jan Lovold
21  Kristen Guritz
22  Joan De Graffenried
23  Elizabeth Danielson
26  Patricia Lowe
28  Roger Moses
30  Margrethe Rankin



God Bedring (Get Well Soon)


DeNora Clinton, Bill Davis, Vernie Fletcher, Edna Franett, Astrid Omdal, Jean Parks, Virginia Paulson, Herb Wirtz

TIL MINNE
Muriel Bandy, a member of Edvard Grieg Lodge, passed away on August 11.  Our condolences to Muriel’s family and many friends.

Patricia Lowe, a member of Edvard Grieg Lodge, passed away on August 14. Our condolences to Pat’s family and many friends.


LODGE ACTIVITIES
BOARD MEETING
Tuesday, September 7 at 7:30 p.m. at Lutheran Church in the Foothills, 1700 Foothill Blvd. La Cañada, CA  91011.

POTLUCK AND CULTURAL EVENING
Saturday, September 25, Social hour – 5:30 p.m. Dinner – 6:30 p.m.  at Lutheran Church in the Foothills.  The presentation will be on the Cultural Skills Program by members of Norseman Lodge #91 in Thousand Oaks.

BOARD MEETING
Tuesday, October 5 at 7:30 p.m. at Lutheran Church in the Foothills.


Report on District 6 Convention
June 23-26, 2010
Hosted by Garborg Lodge #56, Modesto

What a great convention we had in ‘beautiful downtown Modesto” – actually in the heart of agriculture. This town has a small, but wonderful feeling with lots of restaurants, clubs, activities, arts, etc, and a sophisticated hotel where we stayed in the middle of this longtime farming town, a Doubletree Hotel. There were around 170 voting delegates, but over 200 at dinners/banquets and other evening activities. Jo Ness and Cara Clove were our delegates.

It was a well organized and thorough event. Garborg Lodge #56 did an outstanding job Although it is expected that little gifties, kjotchies, candies, and table favors appear at our seats every morning Garborg’s convention committee had wonderful things appear at every break, meal and other excuse to regale us with their local articles. They asked for and received much support for the convention from their community.

The business of the convention was in the hands of the President  Janie Kelly and she did herself proud. Everything proceeded smoothly with a modicum of negativity. As is the pattern I’ve experienced in years of conventions, there were lots of jokes and laughter. Yes, there is a business agenda, but there is also a freedom of expression sometimes bordering on the absurd but always pertaining to ourselves….. in other words, although we love our Norwegian heritage and membership in Sons of Norway and have serious agendas, we still don’t take ourselves so seriously…there’s always a joke and a laugh.

Our Lodge has been honored several ways. Of greatest note, we received a Plaque for Family Lodge of the Year 2008. Two years ago at the Convention we were awarded the first ever Family Lodge of the Year 2006. We are so proud of our volunteers who help us obtain this recognition regarding service to family activities. Lodge of the Year Awards were presented to us as Bronze and Silver Awardees. This is recognition for lodges pursuing the goals and objectives of Sons of Norway through their own projects to improve their own lodge organization.

The service to Sons of Norway by our beloved LaVonne Kerfoot was recognized on the convention floor, much to our happiness. She and Amon Johnson will be on the Memorial Service list and be recognized at the next convention.

We have two famous artists in our midst. In the Arts and Crafts Competition, Diane Langill won 1st, 2nd, and 3rd ribbons for her three rosemaling entries. All three were purchased by delegates, among whom was Cara Clove. Jo wanted to buy one, but a member from another lodge was so eager for it that she gave in; however, she has ordered another one from Diane. Judith Gabriel Vinje, our talented weaver/crafter, also swept the field for Weaving winning 1st, 2nd and 3rd places.

Ahoy, Reindeer
The antlered animals weren’t made for this – to stumble onto a boat in the middle of an autumn night and bump and sway on the water for six hours until they attain solid ground again and resume their overland migration a winter refuge.  In Norway, both reindeer and their seminomadic herders, members of the indigenous Sami, are struggling to find their balance as development intrudes on traditional grazing lands, changing the way humans and animals mover

For centuries the Sami have seasonally driven reindeer between grassy feeding grounds on the coast and lichen-rich tundra in the interior.  Unlike the tiny wild population to the south, the 250,000 northern reindeer are semidomesticated, raised principally for the sale of their meat. The income helps support about 3,000 herders, nowadays a small fraction of Norway’s Sami population of 50,000.

But no longer can herds drift as easily as clouds. A glut of holiday cabins, oil and gas complexes, military ranges, windmill farms, and power lines has fragmented migration corridors. To adapt, the Sami are shifting grazing areas and using boats as well as trucks to maneuver herds. With the loss of pastureland, some worry that the culture’s long dependence on reindeer will slowly vanish, destined for tales told by elders.
National Geographic – November 2009


British girl’s balloon reaches family in Norway
A fundraising balloon, released at a village fete in the UK, has been found by a family in Norway, more than 600 miles from home. The blue balloon was sent on its long journey from North Somerset by 10- year-old Beccy Filer in a bid to raise money to buy equipment for her school. Just a day later, an unidentified floating object was spotted at Farsund on Norway’s south coast by the Oyri family, who have a holiday cabin in the area. Seeing that it was about to fall into the sea, the family grabbed their boat and went out to investigate.

“It was a beautiful morning with no breeze. As the children were getting dressed we could see it gently falling down from the sky,” said Vibeke Oyri in a report by the BBC. “We could see something attached underneath and our kids were very curious so we decided to take the boat out about 200m from the shore to investigate. It was a stroke of luck we got to it quickly otherwise the note would have been unreadable,” she added. On the tag were Beccy’s address and a message reading: “When you get this, please send it back.” A week later a letter was received in Somerset, much to the Filer’s surprise. “We’d entered the balloon race a while back and hadn’t thought anymore about it, said Beccy’s mother Tanya Filer.”When the letter arrived I asked her if she’d been writing to a pen friend.”

“When she opened it she said ‘mummy my balloon’s got to Norway’. I said ‘don’t be so ridiculous.’ Then she showed me the letter. Everyone thought the winning balloon had been found in Peterborough but we think this is the winner now,” she added.
Norwaynews.com


Norway to Launch First Satellite in August

The Norwegian AISSat-1 (Automatic Identification System) satellite has been scheduled to launch in August on an Indian rocket, the Norwegian Space Center announced July 5. AISat-1, Norway’s first satellite, aims to provide maritime tracking services with coverage over the High North Seas. The service will be used by ships around the world as a short-range coastal traffic system. Under regional laws, seagoing ships weighing over 300 tons must be fitted with the technology to allow authorities to track movements and to avoid collisions with other boats.

The satellite’s receiver will be a based on a platform built by the University of Toronto. The spacecraft will operate in a polar orbit at an altitude of 600 kilometers and will be managed by the Norwegian Space Centre. The total cost of the project is estimated at $4.6 million.

Norwegian anti-pirate Map-System

In light of the many hijackings of ships in the Gulf of Aden and off the coast of Somalia, a Norwegian security company has now developed a new method to help avoid pirate attacks.

Jeppesen Marine, in cooperation with Bergen Risk Solutions (BRS), has created an interactive map that includes updated information about hijacking attempts, weather patterns and sea routes. By cross checking this information the system assesses the risk of attack.

For instance, as product manager Bjørn Åge Hjøllo tells Bergens Tidende, pirates are less likely to carry out attacks if waves are higher than a meter and a half. Therefore, by navigating towards areas with higher waves and fewer reported attacks, ships can avoid hijacking attempts.

The up-to-date information featured in the system indicates that more of the attacks now occur outside the Gulf of Aden and more frequently in the Indian Ocean.  An analyst with BRS, who monitors the map system, indicates that this change may have come as a result of the increased presence of international navy forces in the area.

The international shipping industry has already taken note of the new map system. Last year the two companies received the "2010 Safety at Sea International Award for Security," and will be featured in the well-known magazine Safety at Sea later this fall. Several companies from around the world have already purchased licenses for the system, or are in the process of testing its utility.
Bergens Tidende / Aftenposten  The Norway Post

Norwaynews.com


TENNIS RIVALS MOLLA BJURSTEDT AND MAY SUTTON

GREATEST WOMEN TENNIS PLAYERS TO MEET. That headline in the Los Angeles Times for September 29, 1915, declared what so many were anticipating with great excitement – a match between a little known player from Norway who had just won the United States Singles Championship and a California woman, herself a former champion, who began playing tennis in the backyard of her family home at the southwest corner of North Hill and East Mountain streets in Pasadena.

Molla Bjurstedt was born in Norway where she won a number of championships and captured the bronze medal in tennis for her country at the 1912 Olympic Games in Stockholm.  In 1915 she came to this country, ostensibly to seek work as a masseuse.  However, within weeks after her arrival she entered and won the women’s singles championship as an unknown newcomer. That win proved to be the first of eight U.S. singles victories, along with two in women’s doubles, and three in mixed doubles.  Altogether she participated in 24 “Grand Slam” finals prior to her retirement in 1929 at the age of forty-five.  From the 1920’s on she was known as Molla Mallory, reflecting her recent marriage to Frank Mallory of New York City.

Although born in England, May Sutton moved with her family to the United States when she was just six years old.  She and her three sisters learned to play tennis on a court built by their father, and the four girls soon dominated the tennis scene in California.  May moved onto the national stage in 1904 when, at age eighteen, she won the United States women’s championship, defeating the two time champion, Elizabeth Moore.  In that same year she was a victor in the women’s doubles and a finalist in mixed doubles.  As with her subsequent rival from Norway, she began her outstanding career with spectacular and surprising victories.

The following year May Sutton went on to win the women’s singles at Wimbledon, being the first American to do so.  She placed second at Wimbledon in 1906, and won again in 1907. Following her marriage in 1912 to Tom Bundy, himself a three-time winner in the U.S. men’s doubles, she went into semi-retirement to raise a family, although remaining very much in the public eye as one of the most outstanding women’s tennis players of her time.

Thus the idea of a match between May Sutton, the champion of a decade earlier, and Molla Bjurstedt, the current reigning champion, generated tremendous interest throughout the tennis world. They met first in San Francisco in mid-November 1915, with Molla Bjurstedt emerging the victor, winning two out of three sets in what was described as the “most desperate struggle ever seen in this country in women’s tennis.” Their second meeting was on Thanksgiving Day in Long Beach, where Sutton, now referred to as May Bundy, won decisively in two sets.

Thus, with each having won a hard-fought victory, the stage was set for a deciding match between the tennis rivals two weeks later on the courts in Long Beach.  Playing “the greatest tennis ever seen in these parts,” Bundy handily defeated Bjurstedt by scores of 6-3, 1-6, and 6-2.  During her two-month stay in California both Molla Bjurstedt and May Sutton Bundy played in a number of tournaments and exhibitions, facing each other in doubles matches, and on at least one occasion playing together as doubles partners.

Upon leaving California in late December of 1915, Molla Bjurstedt expressed a desire to return to live in Southern California, and there was even a rumor afloat that a prominent Los Angeles physician had offered her a position as a masseuse in his office.  Although Bjurstedt did return in February 1917, it was not with the thought of remaining permanently.  Rather, she was looking forward to playing once more against Mary Sutton Bundy and avenging her earlier defeat

The match between Bjurstedt and Bundy was scheduled as an exhibition during a series of matches between a team from the east and one from the west.  Needless to say, it was the Bjurstedt-Bundy match-up that created the greatest attention.  Hotel and country club courts, where tournaments were usually held could not begin to accommodate the anticipated crowd.  Thus, a special court was laid down on Bovard Field on the University of California campus, where seating would be available for as many as a thousand spectators.

In intersectional play the host team handily defeated the team from the east, and May Sutton Bundy prevailed in defeating Molla Bjurstedt in what proved to be a very close match with scores of 7-5 and 9-7.  It was Mrs. Bundy’s third victory in four matches between the two rivals, and to all intents and purposes signaled her retirement from competitive tennis at least on the national scene.

Bjurstedt on the other hand continued her dominant play, and having won the women’s national title in 1915 went to repeat for next three years, and won again in 1920, 1921,1922, and finally in 1926.

May Sutton Bundy decided in 1921 to make a comeback and return to national competition on the east coast.  In her first major appearance in three years she reached the finals of the New York State championships in July of that year.  Her first meeting with Molla Bjurstedt in the east was in the semi- finals of the national championship at Forest Hills, where Bjurstedt prevailed.  The Norwegian star also defeated her California rival three times during the 1922 season.

Lest too much be made of that rivalry between Mrs. Bundy and Mrs. Mallory, as they were known in later years, it should be said that both were elected to the International Tennis Hall of Fame for their accomplishments in both singles and doubles play in international as well as national competition. Mrs. Bundy’s great career began with her victory in the U.S. singles championship in 1904 and at Wimbledon in 1905 and 1907, and came to a close 42 years later as a quarter-finalist at Wimbledon and in that same year playing with her daughter as one of the top ranked pairs in the national champion- ships in women’s doubles.  It was said that May Sutton Bundy continued playing tennis from her home in Santa Monica until her death in 1975 at 89 years of age.

Norwegian born Molla Bjurstedt Mallory made such an impact on tennis in the United States that officials of the United States Lawn Tennis Association sought to have her included as a member of the national team competing in the Olympic Games in Paris in 1924.  However, the fact of her residence in this country since 1915, and her marriage to an American citizen, thus making her an American citizen, was insufficient to persuade the International Olympic committee.  Her last major victory was in U.S. women’s championships came in 1926, and although she continued to compete both nationally and internationally for another three years, she left the tennis world in 1929, and later lived in Sweden where she died in 1959.

Richard C. Gilman
Pasadena, California

Dr. Gilman may be reached at rcgilman@earthlink.net


EDVARD GRIEG LODGE WEB SITE www.edvardgrieglodge.com Dan Christensen, webmaster

6TH DISTRICT WEB SITE www.sofn6.com CAMP NORGE
www.campnorge.com

Sons of Norway Mission Statement The mission of Sons of Norway is to promote and preserve the heritage and culture of Norway, to celebrate our relationship with other Nordic countries, and to provide quality
insurance and financial products to its members.

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