Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.04.2012, Side 1

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.04.2012, Side 1
Visit us on the web at http://www.lh-inc.ca Meet Iceland’s new ambassador to Canada Two stories, from Toronto and Ottawa / page 3 LÖGBERG HEIMSKRINGLA The Icelandic Community Newspaper • 1 April 2012 • Number 7 / Númer 7 • 1. apríl 2012 Publication Mail Agreement No. 40012014 Serendipity Sometimes a trip brings unexpected joys / page 11 Photo: Johann SigurdSon iV Fara heim / Snorri / music More about the INL of NA conference / pages 8 to 10 INSIDE Photo: Winn thomPSon Benedikt Hallgrimsson has been appointed Deputy Provost of the University of Calgary, effective July 1, 2012. The appointment was announced by Dru Marshall, Provost and Vice-President (Academic). The Deputy Provost position is a critical leadership role necessary to advance the strategies of the academic plan. As the de facto second in-command in the Provost’s Office, Benedikt will help to lead campus-wide strategic initiatives, and encourage and enable partnerships with the government, Campus Alberta and others. Benedikt will be fundamentally involved in supporting the University of Calgary’s goal to become one of Canada’s top five research universities by 2016. Benedikt brings a proven track re- cord in driving change and leading innovation. He has impressive credentials in the delivery of high quality academic programs, experience in managing budgets and strategic resource allocation, and expertise in program and curriculum development in higher education. Benedikt has been with the University of Calgary since March 1, 2000. He has received teaching awards at both the institutional and international levels, and was named one of the University of Calgary’s Great Teachers. He is also an internationally respected researcher in the fields of evolutionary developmental biology, birth defects and biological anthropology. Continued on page 2 Hallgrimsson appointed Deputy Provost Photo courteSy of the faculty of medicine, uniVerSity of calgary “I miss her,” Tom Oleson says simply. speaking of the woman who first dazzled him in 1978. Laurie Smith Oleson died March 2. She was 62. Tom was a member of the Winnipeg Press Club. “The first time I met Laurie, I was at the Press Club, at the bar, talking to four other guys. The door creaked when it opened so everyone looked up, looking for fresh meat, for someone else to pull apart. Instead, in walked a woman who was just magnificent. She was 5’10”. She wore 4” heels, so she was 6’2”, dressed all in black, with a Marilyn Munroe kind of figure. Everyone just felt silent. We looked at her and didn’t know who she was. She said she was looking for Pat, who was the bartender. Someone managed to say that he thought Pat was in the stockroom. Laurie was in for an interview. She became the Press Club manager. “I looked at her. I was 32. I am 5’6”. I knew this woman would never go out with me. But I used to hang around the club and hope. I knew we both took the same route home. I was always hoping she’d offer me a ride, and one night she finally did. All of a sudden we had a relationship. Astonishingly. She was such a good person.” Tom and Laurie worked at Lögberg-Heimskringla from September 1992 to February 2, 1996. “They asked me to be editor, but they wanted me to be there eight hours a day. The offered salary was very low and I had a family and another job. I suggested that they hire Laurie as editor and pay her. She’d be the editor; I’d be the Editor-in- Chief and work for nothing. That worked really well. She was good with people and she doubled as office manager. She went in every day. I did the ‘highbrow philosophical thinking,’ and she did all the work. “She knew Guy Maddin’s mother and I suggested to her that she do an interview with Guy Maddin. There was hardly a more famous Icelander in Manitoba. He said ‘no.’ He said he was tired of doing interviews. They were too boring. They all asked the same questions. I called him and said that I didn’t think this would be the typical interview and he should really talk to her. He phoned me afterward. ‘It was the hardest interview I’ve ever had, and the most interesting,’ he said. Laurie didn’t have the training, but she had the way. The interview ran in L-H. It was really good.” Laurie also worked var- iously as a doughnut cook, an aide at the St. Amant Centre, and in real estate. She was a beer waitress, a bartender and manager of the Winnipeg Press Club. Through it all she was always a wife, a mother, a sister and a friend. Laurie was predeceased by her son Kristofer in 2010. She is survived by her husband, Tom, her daughters Jennifer and Kaitlyn and son Michael. She was also predeceased by her sister Roberta Miller and survived by her siblings Iris, Shelly, David and Brian Smith, numerous nieces and nephews and close friends Robert Saunders and Marie Ottenbreit. Laurie Oleson, former L-H editor, “such a good person” Laurie and Tom Oleson Photo courteSy of Kaitlyn oleSon

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