Gunn Imsen (born 11 June 1946) is a Norwegian educationalist.
She took her undergraduate education at the University of Oslo. She has been a professor at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology since 1993. Notable publications include Elevenes verden. Innføring i pedagogisk psykologi (1984) and Lærerens verden. Innføring i generell didaktikk (1997). [1]
Eva Wenche Steenfeldt Stang, better known as Wenche Foss, was a leading Norwegian actress of stage, screen and television.
Kirsti Bergstø is a Norwegian politician for the Socialist Left Party. She has served as one of the party's deputy leaders since 2017.
Merete Agerbak-Jensen is a Norwegian politician for the Conservative Party.
Egil Werner Erichsen was a Norwegian corporate director and politician for the Conservative Party.
Johan Randulf Bull Hambro was a Norwegian journalist, translator and biographer. He was the fourth son of Norwegian politician C. J. Hambro, whose biography he wrote in 1984. He lived in the United States from 1939 to 1982, where he studied and worked as a foreign-affairs journalist, press attaché and consulate-general. He was secretary general of the Norse Federation for 27 years, from 1955 to 1982. He was decorated as a Knight, First Class of the Order of St. Olav in 1975.
Liv Køltzow is a Norwegian novelist, playwright, biographer and essayist.
Morten Ruud is a Norwegian civil servant.
Guri Hjeltnes is a Norwegian journalist and historian. Having mainly researched Norwegian World War II history during her career, she is a professor of journalism at the BI Norwegian Business School since 2004. She has also spent considerable time as a journalist and commentator, currently in Verdens Gang. She became director of the Center for Studies of the Holocaust and Religious Minorities in 2012.
Olav Versto was a Norwegian journalist and editor, primarily known for his work for the newspaper Verdens Gang.
Else Werring, née Wilhelmsen was a Norwegian royal hostess.
Vilhelm Dybwad was a Norwegian barrister and writer. He wrote comedies, revues and songs. In his later years he wrote several memoir books from his life as a lawyer.
Carl Joachim Hambro was a Norwegian novelist, journalist, essayist, translator and Romance philologist. The son of the Conservative politician C. J. Hambro, he embarked on a philological career, graduating in 1939. During the Second World War he lectured at Oslo Commerce School and the Norwegian College in Uppsala. After the war, he taught Norwegian at Sorbonne, and also started working as Paris correspondent for the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation and a few Norwegian daily newspapers.
Leonard Waldemar Hoff was a Norwegian railway director.
Einar Hoffstad was a Norwegian encyclopedist, newspaper editor, writer and economist. He remains best known as the editor of the encyclopedia Merkantilt biografisk leksikon and the business periodical Farmand. Although initially a classic liberal, Hoffstad embraced fascism and collectivism at the beginning of the Second World War.
Harald Juell was a Norwegian diplomat, ambassador and military officer.
Johan Johannson was a Norwegian businessperson.
Kari Skjønsberg was a Norwegian academic, writer and feminist.
Thoralf Pryser was a Norwegian journalist and newspaper editor.
Dag Klaveness was a Norwegian ship-owner.
Freske fraspark is a Norwegian comedy film from 1963 directed by Bjørn Breigutu. The script was written by Kjell Aukrust and Breigutu. The story was previously arranged for stage for the Norwegian Theater in Oslo as the play Dobbeltsats og freske fraspark, which was based on scenes from Aukrust's books Simen and Bror min, published in 1958 and 1960.