The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1968, Side 31

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1968, Side 31
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 29 JOHN V. SAMSON newly elected Business and Circulation Man- ager of the Icelandic Canadian magazine. magazine from the beginning and has now entered into a contract with the Magazine Board for the work entailed in the circulation and printing of the magazine. John Samson entered the printing business in 1928. John Samson, who is an ex-alderman of the City of Winnipeg and served on the Winnipeg Police Commission for three years, has acquired experience in public relations work which will prove to be a distinct asset to the Magazine Board. Two new members are on the editor- ial staff, John Harvard and D. H. Bergman. John Harvard is with the C.J.O.B. Broadcasting station of Winnipeg. He has a clear radio voice and a pleasant TV appearance and has a promising future in this rapidly expanding call- ing. In an address at the Icelandic Canadian Club Dinner and Dance last spring, he properly emphasized that he was a Canadian and “had a respon- sibility to spread the spirit of Can- adianism”. He, however added: “We haven’t forgotten our past”, and “our responsibility to offer and pass along what was contributed to us.” David H. Bergman obtained his Bachelor of Science degree in Biology in 1963 from the University of Mani- toba. He took his undergraduate work at Brandon College, now the Univer- sity of Brandon, where his parents re- sided at that time. He taught biology in Brandon College for a while and then accepted a position in the Depart- ment of Biology at United College, now the University of Winnipeg where he is at the present time. David Bergman is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman S. Bergman, formerly of Brandon and now of Winnipeg, and grandson of Mrs. Emily Bergman and the late Mr. Justice Hjalmar A. Bergman. While on the subject of change it is in order to make two announce- ments. Reference has on former occasions been made to a quarterly published in English in Reykjavik. It was origin- ally called “The Iceland Review” but now the name is “ “Atlantica and Ice- land Review”. The change in name is significant. This quarterly seeks to reach across the Atlantic and in that way it is on common ground with The Icelandic Canadian which, during the years, has established contacts, primar- ily in Iceland, but elsewhere in Europe as well. While in Reykjavik last June the

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