Olav Ulland, Gustav Raaum, Alf Engen, and Kjell Stordalen perform a four-person simultaneous ski jump at Sun Valley, Idaho, in December 1948. Credit: Courtesy of National Nordic Museum
Pacific NW was once a ski jumping hotbed, as told in new book and museum exhibit By
Few among us have tried our luck at competitive ski jumping, and there is no shame in that considering these skiers can reach speeds around 60 mph before they take flight. But there s something riveting about the daring sport even for casual onlookers. The Pacific Northwest was once a hotbed for Nordic jumping as detailed in a new book and a parallel museum exhibit.
Courtesy of John W. Lundin / Seattle Times, 1916
Few among us have tried our luck at competitive ski jumping, and there is no shame in that considering these skiers can reach speeds around 60 mph before they take flight. But there s something riveting about the daring sport even for casual onlookers. The Pacific Northwest was once a hotbed for Nordic jumping as detailed in a new book and a parallel museum exhibit.
Author John Lundin of Seattle was researching an earlier book about the history of skiing on Snoqualmie Pass, when he discovered that ski jumping was actually a bigger deal than alpine skiing in the Pacific Northwest before World War II.
Pacific NW was once a ski jumping hotbed, as told in new book and museum exhibit klcc.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from klcc.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Hear more of Doug s interview with John Lundin about the role of Spokane and Leavenworth in the growth of ski jumping in Washington.
John Lundin is the author of a new book, “Ski Jumping in Washington State: A Nordic Tradition.”
“There’s a saying that where three Norwegians get together, they build a ski jump and hold a competition. That pretty much followed through here. They brought their Old World passion for the sport. It was a way for them to continue their ethnic ties to the old country and introduce a new sport to the United States, he said.
The neo-Nazi organisation
Pohjoinen perinne (or Nordic Tradition in English), a registered association of the Nordic Resistance Movement (Finnish acronym PVL), has been declared bankrupt by Pirkanmaa District Court on Monday.
A request for bankruptcy was filed by lawyer
Kaarle Gummerus, who was appointed as the association s liquidator in mid-December.
Finland’s Supreme Court upheld on appeal a decision to ban the neo-Nazi Nordic Resistance Movement in September.
According to the Supreme Court, the association operated in violation of the law and accepted principles of morality. In its ruling, the court supported the 2018 view of the Turku Appeals Court that the association should be shut down for the general good of society, because of its violent acts and militia-like structure.