Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.03.2009, Blaðsíða 5

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.03.2009, Blaðsíða 5
Visit us on the web at http://www.lh-inc.ca Lögberg-Heimskringla • 1. mars 2009 • 5 Headline news in deepest Saskatchewan With the terrible fires in Australia in the news not long ago, resi- dents of Foam Lake, Saskatch- ewan were probably nodding their heads in sad empathy, re- membering the recent summer when their entire town nearly went up in flame. Bob Johnson certainly re- members. He’s the Icelandic- blooded editor and publisher of the Foam Lake Review, as well as of the Wynyard Advance Gazette, and is the publisher of the Ituna News as well. He also happens to be the mayor of Foam Lake, so he well recalls the night in late June of 2006 when a water bottling shop burst into flame, and the flames spread to neighbouring busi- nesses and nearly leveled the whole street. And he recalls the day the grain elevator caught fire and almost got to the Co- Op’s propane tower before wa- ter bombers and volunteer fire crews got the blaze under con- trol. Still, “It burned for four days,” Johnson says. The two calamities were just thirty-two days apart: ash from the previous fire was still visible when the second one ignited. “I’m not too sure what we did to deserve this,” a shak- en Johnson said at the time. He still shakes his head at the memory – which is only two and a half years old, after all. But the bright side to it all – which seems brighter still after the tragic and horrible stories that came out of Australia – was that, amid all the flame and destruction in Foam Lake that summer, no one was hurt. Johnson’s memories of the disaster are keen also because he’s a journalist, and comes from a long line of newspaper- men. His grandfather, Ernest Johnson, moved to Foam Lake in the early 30s, and took over the Foam Lake Review in 1936. His son Carl succeeded him in the position, and Bob in his turn became the publisher in the 1970s. He comes by his ink-tainted blood honestly. “I used to come down and help my father and grandfather [at the newspaper office],” he recalls fondly. “I loved it.” These days, even if there happens not to be a rag- ing inferno anywhere in town, he never lacks for content. “There’s always a lot going on,” he says of the Foam Lake region. “And I have a very good staff.” Johnson has been mayor of Foam Lake since 2003, and was on the town council for at least a dozen years before that. He devotes roughly two days of each work week to may- oral activities and the rest to the newspapers. He’s got three daughters, but all of them have their own careers, and none are looking to run a newspaper; the Johnson dynasty may therefore lose its grip on the Foam Lake and Wynyard news empires at some point in the future. But it won’t happen anytime soon, the hale and hearty Johnson says. One thing he has relaxed his grip on is the paper’s editorial voice – opinion and commen- tary is for the most part entrust- ed to Foam Lake resident and L-H contributor Joan Eyolfson Cadham. “When I write an edi- torial I usually get in trouble,” Johnson laughs. Newspapers, as one can so readily see merely by looking at one these days, are in trouble as a format, generally getting smaller, less frequent and less compelling; but in a place like Foam Lake the demand for lo- cal news from a local voice will never slacken. Like most small papers, both the Foam Lake Re- view and the Wynyard Advance Gazette diversified income sources long ago, offering print and design services, which will be helpful if advertising clients become more difficult to find. But as long as there is news, and as long as there are people to read it, the small presses of Foam Lake and Wynyard will continue to hum. PHoto: tayler joHnson, foam lake review The elevator fire was a most spectacular conflagration. PHoto: caelum vatnsdal Bob Johnson in his Foam Lake newspaper office. Iceland’s Presidential couple argue in interview In a long interview with the Condé Nast Portfolio, pub-lished in its online edition on Monday, Iceland’s presi- dential couple, Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson and Dorrit Mous- saieff, argue about what the first lady is allowed to say. Moussaieff said she had of- ten warned that the banks would collapse, that she had a long ex- perience in business affairs and that she had realized the extent of the risk they were taking. Her husband then said it was not in her place to make such state- ments, Morgunbladid reports. The interview is based on a conversation that Portfolio journalist Joshua Hammer had with the first couple dur- ing dinner at their residence, Bessastadir, in December. Al- though the president insisted that the first lady’s comments were off the record, Mous- saieff later called Hammer and dismissed her husband’s pro- viso, giving the journalist per- mission to use all of her quotes for the interview. Moussaieff also disagreed with her husband that thou- sands of Icelanders would lose their homes, claiming it impos- sible since there are more hous- es than people in Iceland. The first lady commented that she had wanted to join the protests on Austurvöllur par- liamentary square but that her husband wouldn’t allow it. Moussaieff said she had followed the dispute between Icelandic and British authori- ties closely and that she was planning to hold an informal meeting with the representa- tives of Icelandic authorities in London to discuss how to deal with the claim of British au- thorities that Icelanders honor their obligations towards Brit- ish account holders. Presidential secretary Örnólfur Thorsson said he had not heard of any such meeting. Reprinted with permission from IcelandReview.com. An IntermedIAte CAre FACIlIt y Thorvaldson Care CenTer 495 Stradbrook Avenue Winnipeg manitoba r3l 0K2 Phone: 204-452-4044 Fax: 204-452-4054 e-mail: thorcare@shaw.ca 24-Hour supervision Government Approved FAcility Sharon Ophof, Director of Nursing Herman O. Thorvaldson, President Our modern two storey care facility is government approved and specifically designed to offer a homey atmosphere in a safe contemporary setting. We are located in Osborne Village convenient to all ammenties and services. The Registered Nurse and certified staff cater to the residents’ personal care, comfort and supervision. Medications are administered, bath assist, meals, housekeeping and laundry are included. Our goal over the years has been to provide a moderately sized, non-institutional environment with services to meet the needs of those in the later stages of life. We seek to maintain a quiet, comfortable atmosphere where our residents can feel cared for and safe in a home-like surrounding. We strive to maintain the health, vitality and quality of life of each of our residents. Thorvaldson Care Center Celebrating 50 years of Caring for Seniors 1959 -2009

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