The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1968, Side 40

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1968, Side 40
38 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Spring 1968 The editor, Mrs. Baldur Lindal, was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and, while a student at Boston University specializing in journalism, she met Baldur Lindal from Iceland who was doing postgraduate work in chemical engineering. A courtship started at the International Students Club in Cam- bridge and they were married in 1949 and have lived in Reykjavik ever since. They have four boys, Rikki, Jakie, Eirikur and Tryggvi. The front page cover of the 35 page first number of the magazine .shows two maps of Iceland; one is right side up on which a page from an original Ice- landic Saga has been superimposed; the other is upside down on which words in English are irregularly scatter- ed, such as transition, techniques, lit- erature, fishing, etc. The annual subscription abroad of 65° is $4.00, American currency. W. J. L. by BOGI BJARNASON We met that first time in a mirror facing a snack-bar on Hastings St., Vancouver, B.C.—the old saloon-days type of mirror, wide and clear. Shoulder to shoulder on stools, we had not spoken, but his reflected glance was a friendly “Hi’ Pal’’, which I reciprocated. We then fell to con- versing, with the result that he insisted on paying for both snacks, in the process displaying a roll of bills “fit to choke a cow”. I was impressed. In days and weeks following we met frequently, he on his rounds as a sales- man of sorts (I was not to learn till much later what it was he peddled). Like myself a bachelor we met often at nearby restaurants, and in time took to looking in at each others’ digs, af- fably and unceremoniously. Having much in common we ‘hit it off in the friendliest fashion. It appeared to me that he supplied something I much needed, the intimacy of a fellow- human, for at times I was lonesome. When he leaned an elbow on my shoulder and spoke into my ear, al- most conspiratorially, I felt the ‘lift’ of belonging. He was like that. Yet he puzzled me; I couldn’t quite make him out. Well-off and carefree, dressing expensively and in style, if not always in the best taste, he was an agreeable companion. That my girl Mary did not approve of him, even to the extent of “either he or I”, was not enough to break my bond with him. His apartment was usually in a mess of disorder, the bed unmade, his clothes strewn about on the floor. That was just his way, and he made no excuses for it. Take it or leave it. Who cares! ★ ★ ★ I had a desk-job with a finance con- cern that paid well, work that I liked, and my savings account grew at a satis- factory rate. Young and healthy and with no dependents I could look for- ward to a career of security and com- fort. In spare time I worked diligent- ly at a mail-order course leading to a degree in economics and a better position. All very well. Then one day my pal, by now quite intimate, told me about an “order”

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