Finn hall

Finn halls or Finnish halls were cultural centers of Finnish diaspora communities and labor organizations in the United States and Canada.[1]

Finnish Socialist Hall, constructed in 1910, Astoria, Oregon

Notable Finn halls

gollark: ||I'm pretty sure that's obvious to someone who watched it, or read the plot summary on wikipedia, Tronzoid.||
gollark: Plus the concurrency features are really overhyped. I mean, channels are neat, but not amazing, and there are libraries, and green threads... same thing.
gollark: Oh, and it goes for looking simple over actually being simple and consistent, hence the horrible verbosity.
gollark: *cough*generics*cough*
gollark: I agree with the Go thing. It seems to be designed so that you can pick it up quickly, but also seems to have the mentality that the people actually using it (as opposed to the implementors) can't be trusted with any advanced features.

References

  1. Reino Hannula, Bluberry God: The Education of a Finnish American, Quality Hill Books, 1981, ISBN 0960504427 pp. 184-202

Further reading

  • Reino Nikolai Hannula, An Album of Finnish Halls. San Luis Obispo, CA: Finn Heritage, 1991, ISBN 0962686018
  • K-G Olin, Guld och röda skogar, INBUNDEN, Svenska, 2002, ISBN 9789529600113
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