Jumping off to success with Northland Skis
Travel Editor Cynthia Elyce Rubin teases out the history of Northland Skis, which originated from Norwegian immigrants with wooden skis.
Norsk 101’s Christie Ericson writes about ice-skating as one of many winter activities Norwegians love and Oslo’s famous rink called Spikersuppa.
Ilan Kelman reports on options and resources to prepare for disasters, saying that even relatively safe Norway can be affected by them.
Randi Millman-Brown updates readers on her findings of her great-uncle Thor Einar Jensen’s 1941 death certificate, which has no cause of death.
Travel Editor Cynthia Elyce Rubin teases out the history of Northland Skis, which originated from Norwegian immigrants with wooden skis.
Crime Corner’s Jerry Holt writes about three Scottish noir authors, Ian Rankin, Val McDermid, and Helen Fields, and their most recent books.
Geir Mæland reviews the documentary film about World War II, Front Fighters, which tells the stories of Norwegians who fought with Germans.
Laila Simon reports on surrogacy as a way for some to realize their dreams of becoming parents, even though the practice is illegal in Norway.
Business and Sports Editor Michael Kleiner writes about Ragnar Ulland, a recent Pacific Northwest Ski Jumping Hall of Fame inductee.
The world’s oldest rune stone was discovered by the Tyri fjord in Trøndelag, Norway, believed to be up to 2,000 years old.
Bergen-based pianist Oda Voltersvik is returning to U.S. audiences on her new concert tour “Nordic Unrest,” featuring pieces by Edvard Grieg , Jean Sibelisu, Geir Tveitt, and Atli Heimir Sveinsson.