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Tauno Tattari

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Tauno Tattari
Land Finland
Nascentie 25 april 1907 in Alatornio
Morte 20 april 1936 in Helsinki
Ocupation Jurnaliste sportiv

Tauno Tattari (25 april 1907 in Alatornio - 20 april 1936 in Helsinki) esset un occidentaliste finn, secretario redactor del Occidental-Kerho[1] e membre del comité del Association proletari interlinguistic[1].

Il laborat quam jurnaliste sportiv e film screenwriter. Il morit pro pneumonie in 1936[2] benque in Cosmoglotta B 009 (feb 1937) Ric Berger scrit que it havet esset pro tuberculose[3].

Tauno Tattari grew up in Kiviranta, Alatornio, at Junes Manor, his mother's birthplace. Already as a young boy, as a passionate sports fan, he was founding the local village sports club Kiviranta Rajua, which is a village-specific predecessor for today's local sports club Alatornio Pirko. Sports supplier

After dropping out of school, Tauno Tattari became a sports journalist for Pohjolan Sanomat, the main newspaper in the region. At that time, he later introduced the nickname “Mailer”, which later became known nationally in sports.

He moved to Helsinki in the mid-1920s to work as a sports journalist in New Finland under the same nickname. He also wrote for Suomen Urheiluleht. In the summer of 1927, he became a permanent editor of Suomen Urheilulehti. Tattari worked as a sports journalist at the 1928 Amsterdam Summer Olympics, writing a section on cycling in the Olympic book edited by Martti Jukola. The family has a small anecdote from this period, according to which Tauno Tattari electrified his uncle Otto Juneks from Kiviranta, Alatornio, on his trip to Amsterdam: The sports reporter had apparently run out of money on the way.

In the autumn of 1929, Tattari was supporting Kiri magazine, which was founded as a competitor of Martti Jukola, which runs the Finnish Sports Magazine, and whose founders and editorial board included Lauri “Tahko” Pihkala and Sulo “Simeoni” Kolka. At that time, SVUL was moving towards special federations, when athletes formed their own federation, SUL. In this dispute, Tattari was supporting the development of a special alliance and came into conflict with Martti Jukola. In 1931, Tattari was founding the Association of Sports Journalists, originally known as a club.

Film screenwriter

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In the last years of his life in the 1930s, Tattari became known as the screenwriter of Finnish films - the last of the films premiered after his death. As a screenwriter, he was in the following films: The Blue Shadow (premiere 1933), Helsinki's most famous businessman (1934), When the Father Wants ... (1935), VMV 6 (1936), The Wife (1936), The Bride of the Rafters (1937), And below was the Fiery Lake (1937).

Last resting place

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At the blessing of Tauno Tattar in Helsinki in April 1936, his friend Yrjö Jylhä presented a memorial poem to him. Buckwheat was buried in the family grave of his mother's June family in front of Alatornio Church.

  • Olympiakisat Amsterdamissa 1928 (toim. Martti Jukola), Pyöräily-osa, sivut 479–489, WSOY, Porvoo.
  • Granroth eli Junes-suku. Helsinki 1932 (Teos digitaalisessa muodossa Granroth-Junes-sukusivuilla)
  • Näin käy Los Angelesissa : Vähän Suomen ja muidenkin mahdollisuuksista. L. A. Salava, Helsinki 1932 (Teos digitaalisessa muodossa Doriassa)
  • "Occidental" : kansainvälinen kieli : historiikki, kielioppi ja kaksoissanakirja suomeksi ("Curs de Occidental in lingue finn"); toim. Tauno Tattari. Occidental-kerho, Helsinki 1935[1][4].

Referenties

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  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Cosmoglotta B 004 (oct-nov-dec 1935)
  2. Cgl. 1945 p.120
  3. Cosmoglotta B 009 (feb 1937)
  4. Cosmoglotta A 102 (may-jun 1935)