The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1968, Blaðsíða 43

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1968, Blaðsíða 43
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 41 All the scholarships were for $100 except the Good Templar scholarship which is for $200.00 Mr. Leifur Hallgrimson, the Pres- ident of The Icelandic Canadian Club presided. The final concert, conducted in Ice- landic, was under the auspices of the Icelandic National League, and was presided over by the Vice-President S. Aleck Thorarinson. Magnus Eliasson recited three poems. Mrs. Eve Allen nee Thorvaldson sang solos and Miss Snjolaug Sigurdson played a piano solo. An address was delivered by Her- mann Palsson, who is Professor of Old Icelandic and Old Irish in the Univer- sity of Edinburgh, Scotland. He is at present on a year’s leave of absence lecturing in the Centre for Medieval Studies, in the University of Toronto. The address is being published in Logberg-Heimskringla, and references will be made to it in the next number of the magazine. Following the concert, and as has been the custom, the President of the League resumed the chairmanship. The following were elected Honorary Members of the League. Dr. George Johnson, the Manitoba Minister of Education. Emil Jonsson, the Minister of Extern- al Affairs, Iceland. Professor Hermann Palsson, of Edin- burgh University. Rev. Philip M. Petursson, President of The Icelandic National League. All tire concerts were held in the Parish Hall of the First Lutheran Church and after each concert light refreshments were served in the lower church parlor. SOME SURPRISES IN D.E.C.D. STATISTICS Each year the Organization for Econ- omic Cooperation and Development prepares a table of comparative stat- istics showing “the diversity of the economies of the 21 member coun- tries”. Space limitations prevent show- ing the full comparison, but we are able to show here Canada’s position, at the end of 1966, relative to its major trading partners. In the complete table, there are some surprises for those who measure their country by statistics. It is relative- ly well-known, for instance, that Swe- den has overtaken Canada in Gross National Product per capita, but who would have believed that Iceland is also ahead. Canada stands fourth, at $2,670 (U.S.) of GNP per head, after the U.S. ($3,840), Sweden ($2,730) and Iceland ($2,850). (The above figures show the order to be as follows: United States, Ice- land, Sweden, Canada.) Not far behind are Switzerland, Nor- way, Germany, France and Denmark, all of which count more than $2,000 of GNP per capita. Iceland shares with Canada the dis- tinction of harboring the smallest num- ber of inhabitants per square kilo- meter. —Fin. Times, March 18-68.
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