IK Wasa (Wasa Sports Club) is a Swedish sports club established in 1907. The name originates from the street where the majority of the club's first football players had their homes. IK Wasa has been successful in sports disciplines such as gymnastics, skating, bandy, floorball and football.
Jarl Finne has written the book "Wasa idrottssallskap 1907-1937 Wasa gymnastik- och faktklubb 1884-1908" where the different sections are described in detail. The book can be read at the Royal Library in Stockholm.
Wasa may refer to any of the following:
WASA may refer to:
Wasa is an administrative ward in the Iringa Rural district of the Iringa Region of Tanzania. According to the 2002 census, the ward has a total population of 9,484.
Coordinates: 8°07′S 35°12′E / 8.117°S 35.200°E / -8.117; 35.200
The Swedish company Wasabröd is the largest producer in the world of Scandinavian style crisp bread (Swedish: knäckebröd, Finnish: näkkileipä, Norwegian: knekkebrød, Danish: knækbrød, Icelandic: hrökkbrauð). The Wasabröd company has been in business since 1919, opening its first bakery in the city of Skellefteå. Since 1983 it has been under foreign ownership, first by the Swiss pharmaceutical corporation Sandoz (later merged with Ciba Geigy to become Novartis), and from 1999 by the Italian food producer Barilla Alimentare S.p.A..
The first bakery in Skellefteå, founded by Karl Edvard Lundström, was supplemented by another, completely mechanized, one in Filipstad in 1931, which has since become the main seat of the corporation. It later acquired several other Swedish bakeries. It started exporting bread in the 1940s, with the first foreign subsidiary founded in Denmark in 1965 and the first foreign bakery built in Celle in Germany in 1967. In the early 21st century Wasabröd sells about 80% of its production outside Sweden.