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264527 � WHITE , - CITY CLERK 26452`� PINK - FINANCE GITY F SAINT PAITL Council CANARY - DEPARTMENT BLUE - MAYOR File N Co il Resolution Presented By • Referred To Committee: Date Out of Committee By Date WHEREAS, the "People-to-People Program" was inaugurated by the President of the United States in 1956 to establish greater friendship and understanding between the peoples of the United States and other nations through the medium of direct personal contact, and WHEREAS, all succeeding U. S. Presidents have endorsed said program, to be conducted for the broad purposes of the exchange of ideas and people between the citizens of the United States of America and the peoples of other nations, and WHEREAS, to implement this program Saint Paul and other communities in the United States have been requested by the Tawn Affiliation Association of the U. S., Inc., to affiliate with cities in other nations of similar characteristics and mutual interest, and WHEREAS, the City of Saint Paul, through its Council, does recognize and endorse this program with the hope that it will Lead to a lasting friendship between the people of Saint Paul and Quito, Ecuador; now, therefore, be it 3 RESOLVED, by the City Council of the City of Saint Paul, that this Council on behalf of the people of Saint Paul does hereby extend an invitation to the govern- ments and the people of the City of Quito, Ecuador, to participate with Saint Paul as its sister-city for the purpose of creating greater mutual understanding between the peoples of our two great cities and nations; and be it FURTI�R RESOLVED, That the Ma.yor is hereby authorized to act as official repre-- sentative of Saint Paul to carry out this program; and be it FINALLY RESOLVED, That copies of this resolution are to be sent to the Ma.yor and Council of the City of Quito, Ecuador, the Tawn Affiliation Association of the U. S., Inc. , and the Embassy of Ecuador. COUIVCILMEN Requested by Department of: Yeas Nays Christensen Hozza In Favor Levine \ Rcedler �� Against By Sylvester Tedesco President Hunt Adopted b nc : Date N QV 6 1974 Form Approved by City Attorney Ce ' ied sed by '1 Secret y By ?. By �Q , Approve e N� Appro d b �or S mission ouncil By By PUBLISHED NOV 16 197� � — ,� f �6452'� � � � ( � � . �- �- ���d ,� -, � M � - � � ,s � �;� g' , . � �� � � � ��' � . ' �c1Z( � . �'v R � � � A � ,�.�o� �� �%�� . D ' U � � M �7� �� —� � � ,i � �` � r . � /�S �3a � � � �� � �� � � ���� D. D. WOZNfAK � s��� ��� tr'' .,�,,. , ' � � �,�-� ;.�.. � .�:�:. ����:.,.. �s�����' ,� '"' ■�:�.r � . �� � � ,�4a,' � ii:: m"� � � ��. .��� � ,�:: ��Y.: � Fr. Halligan always has an audience with � �J �''� trouble. S K.'' , f�4 • ��.�:.:..� e � s om J.J. Halligan, S.J. � Working Bo9s• Center - Qu E ado Printin� and mailing comp ���� � � �� Mrs. William Conway 1021 - 15th St. BOOIIB� Iowa 50036 JOHN J. HALLIGAN S.J. Ecuador, one of the smallest of the Southamerican re- about one of the things CHRIST OF THE ANDES MIS- publics, is such a strikingly beautiful place that it will, no SION has in operation. IYs called The Working Boys Cen- doubt, become someday a most popular tourist haven for ter. We think it is the first long step in a movement that will the world's travellers. But at present it has a lot of its own spread all over Latinamerica like a presence of Christ Who necessary travelling to do along the road of human pro- said He wanted the little kids to have a chance to come gress while it suffers the typically Latinamerican pains in- close to Him without the adults keeping them at a dis- volved in cleaning and stabilizing its governmental system tance for one reason or another. —So let's talk about the and realizing and distributing its great potential wealth. I Working Boys'Center. have been in Ecuador for almost ten years; and from ob- There are more than six thousand shceshine boys and serving the various casts of characters involved in the ongo- other working boys in the city of Quito, Ecuador. For ing slapstick comedy of Ecuador's internal and external hu- each of them, life is a matter of survival in a world where man affairs, I think I know why Christ said, "The poor nobody understands the other guy any more than he you will have with you always." It seems obvious to me understands himself. (Desperation isn't conducive to gene- that we as a race simply want the poor to stay poor always. rosity, cheerful tolerance or christian charity.) Each day's A few years ago the Jesuits founded CHRIST OF THE business is to chase down the price of something to eat for ANDES MISSION, an apostolate dedicated exclusively to one's self and a few other people before the dark of night the service of the poorest people around these parts: It puts an end to the action. Each night is a few hours of keep- wasn't megalomania that made us think we could change ing each other warm in sleep on a floor with from seven things for the poor. It was a desire to share in the happiness to thirteen other kids and Mamma. Always "Mamma". and deep peace and constant hope of Christ who did all Never "Daddy". In almost every "family group" situa- He could to take the pain and ugliness out of human so- tion, there were several "Daddies" and no one of them ciety. Of course, this is not only a Jesuit desire; so, in the ever stayed around for longer than two or three new course of time, there have been others who have joined babies. More than one of the shceshine boys has told me the team, such as, the Sisters of Charity, B.V.M., local that if he knew who his father was, he would kill the rot- Daughters of Charity, U.S. Peace Corps fellows and girls, ten bum. These kids have high ideals; and sometimes they local volunteers, other foreign volunteers, and foreign burn themselves up with righteous indignation against the and local friends and relatives who sent the cash to finance older generation's corruption and unfairness. our efforts here. With its mixture of assorted believers But the working boys of Quito are not a crowd of lit- and non-believers, CHRIST OF THE ANDES MISSION tle rebels without a cause. They are the cause for which is almost as big a diversity as Noah's Ark. some kind of rebellion is inevitable. The Working Boys' In this issue of THE JESUIT we want to tell you all Center is a very serious and confident attempt to make Reprinted from THE JESVi'r Autumn 1972 �;,�� `� �wfi,�� P..,i� A ' d `-fi to see that he is following up on his necessary medical or • � educational programs and on his obligatory savings ac- '� ¶�� �'� ' � � , �,: count at the Center. He can eat breakfast and supper free every day. But for lunch he has to pay four cents (One Sucre) which is his deposit into his obligatory savings ac- count.That's the money which will start him off in life after he has finished with us. He is obliged to save (or "buy" lunch) at least four times a week. Meantime, each day he can forget about that awful "room" until nighttime be- cause at the Center he has a "home" where it is very ob- vious that we a}1 love him enough to bear down hard enough to make a strong, mature, christian man out of him instead of the victim of the society that used to reject him when he had no way. It's not wishful thinking that makes us at the Working Boys' Center think of ourselves as a "family". We are a gi- gantic family and spend our days in constant sharing of plans for the future and in the innumerable beautiful and awful intimacies of growing physically and spiritually. Some old-fashioned folks would love the way we go in for solid establishment of principles on who's in charge and Soon we'll be moving out of our old attic into a brand new butlding who obeys. of our own – the first"first class" Working Boys Center in LaHn- Five months from now, we'll be moving out of our old america. attic into a brand new four storey building which will be the �rst "first class" Working Boys' Center in Latinameri- their professional self-confidence and their calm, well- ca. Up on top, in our skyscraper dining room, we'll have earned voice in the matter of how the people of this worid room to feed �ve or seven hundred at one sitting. Our new should treat each other. dormitory for one hundred and twenty "emergency cases" All this happiness and progress has been made possible of boys who can't stay out of deep trouble unless they stay because our benefactors have been willing to take a long with us wip be located over a modern, spacious grammar chance on this new way to bring Christ's concern to the school with (can you believe it) a general library for our kids who were being boxed out of the assorted affairs kids who are in grammar school, on our scholarships to of inen. It hasn't only been a result of donations from other high school or in our technical training shops. There will parts. A local Ecuadorian contractor, Mister Galo be a medical and dental services department which the Pazmino, who is building our facilities for us on a no-profit boys can share with all the members of their family groups. basis, has loaned me two hundred thousand dollars of his Down on the first floor will be a fantastic dream-come-true own company's money in order to get this show on the in the form of technical trade shops, classrooms and work road. He believes in the kids' rights and chances;and he be- area where our kids will learn the trades that will give them lieves t�at within a reasonable time, I will pay back his company's money with no interest. The law is never far away. . .darn it! With a present expenditure of �ve thousand dollars �� per month to keep the Center going, and with a side � ��` ��` "' `�� money-raising campaign to float a low-cost, very decent type housing project for a �rst group of one hundred of our families, and with the need for things to make the new r°�� building of the Center functional, the task of raising the cash to carry the message is sort of getting out of hand. But I am not yet ready to confess that I have been trying the impossible which will never come to pass. I'll tell you ., �,hY LeYs pass over the obvious facts we all know about the price of education and the price of human develop- r ment and the shortage of funds to do all that we would all , �,�=;� like to do. Let's pasa on to the fact that Christ said He � , ; �y��,���i ^� � �^,�' '��� wants the kids to have a chance to be near Him. I think �s you'll buy that. If everybody who reads this article sends me '" ' g �I �,�d,,�";' � � something to help the cause, Pll be able to do two good � i II � � ' � ���������� P� � deeds: 1) start a new upwards movement for the kids of ��� � ' Latinamerica, and 2) have a complete, detailed, down to „, ,r� � i ��� `:� ���,. �a�, ��jl the penny account of how the smallest or greatest donation ��. ;s, .,`°ae �� .� was used directly for the kids. h •� °��,�d I should warn you that if you send me a buck or few, II,� � � '"'�; I will go down in history as the famous "Shceshine °'�" ' Priest",—That will be bad for my humility as a Jesuit. But '` "` if you don't help me, I will be arrested one of these days . � for stealing and then the whole Church will have to face the fact that they picked up a crook among the clergy. ' ' " ° Thanks for reading; and please help this bit of happiness �� � ���� �� ` � �� �� `".�� �P� `� , � ���ta� to continue. ;::j �. ,��.��w��G:���� ■�s:.�«��.� , �*�` ����r � °��ti �,��� .- �" 1 °" ,,,, � „ ; �� 4n a...:w .^' .. h i�,, .am , �„.� . f � , � M ' a; .. 1°^' i� �:� �1'�.: I, " Fr. Nallrgan always has an audience wtth J"''� trouble. C.:;,.. L�5 . • �°�� e i s om .....,. J.J: Halligsn, S.J. � Working Boye' Center - Qu d Printing and mailing comp em ��1e e t ut 9�ra. William Conway 1021 - 15Lh St. BOOi1A� Iowa 5��36 ]OHN J. HALLIGAN S,J. Ecuador, one of the smallest of the Southamerican re- about one of the things CHRIST OF THE ANDES MIS publics, is such a strikingly beautiful place that it will, no SION has in operation. It's called The Working Boys Cen- doubt, become someday a most popular tourist haven for ter. We think it is the first long step in a movement that will the world's travellers. But at present it has a lot of its own spread all over Latinamerica like a presence of Christ Who neceasary travelling to do along the road of human pro- said He wanted the little kids to have a chance to come gress while it suffers the typically Latinamerican pains in- close to Him without the adults keeping them at a dis- volved in cleaning and stabilizing its governmental system tance for one reason or another. —So let's talk about the and realizing and distributing its great potential wealth. I Working Boys'Center. have been in Ecuador for almost ten years; and from ob- There are more than six thousand shceshine boys and serving the various casts of characters involved in the ongo- other working boys in the city of Quito, Ecuador. For ing slapstick comedy of Ecuador's internal and external hu- each of them, life is a matter of survival in a world where man affairs, I think 1 know why Christ said, "The poor nobody understands the other guy any more than he you will have with you always." It seems obvious tb me understands himself. (Desperation isn't conducive to gene- that we as a race simply want the poor to stay poor always. rosity, cheerful tolerance or christian charity.) Each day's A few years ago the Jesuits founded CHRIST OF THE business is to chase down the price of something to eat for ANDES MISSION, an apostolate dedicated exclusively to one's self and a few other people before the dark of night the service of the poorest people around these parts: It puts an end to the action. Each night is a few hours of keep- wasn't megalomania that made us think we could change ing each other warm in sleep on a floor with from seven things for the poor. It was a desire to share in the happiness to thirteen other kids and Mamma. Always "Mamma". and deep peace and constant hope of Christ who did all Never "Daddy". In almost every "family group" situa- He could to take the pain and ugliness out of human so- tion, there were several "Daddies" and no one of them ciety. Of course, this is not only a Jesuit desire; so, in the ever stayed around for longer than two or three new course of time, there have been others who have joined babies. More than one of the shceshine boys has told me the team, such as, the Sisters of Charity, B.V.M., local that if he knew who his father was, he would kill the rot- Daughters of Charity, U.S. Peace Corps fellows and girls, ten bum. These kids have high ideals; and sometimes they local volunteers, other foreign volunteers, and foreign burn themselves up with righteous indignation against the and local friends and relatives who sent the cash to�nance older generation's corruption and unfairness. our efforts here. With its mixture of assorted believers But the working boys of Quito are not a crowd of lit- and non-believers, CHRIST OF THE ANDES MISSION tle rebels without a cause. They are the cause for which is almost as big a diversity as Noah's Ark. some kind of rebellion is inevitable. The Working Boys' In this issue of THE JESUIT we want to tell you all Center is a very serious and confident attempt to make Reprinted from THE JESU�T Autumn 1972 ,� ��� '�w�,�, to see that he is following up on his necessary medical or ' �� ��• y, � educational programs and on his obligatory savings ac- '� '��=��t �$. ,.�' count at the Center. He can eat breakfast and supper free every day. But for lunch he has to pay four cents (One Sucre) which is his deposit into his obligatory savings ac- count.That's the money which will start him off in life after � he has finished with us. He is obliged to save (or "buy" lunch) at least four times a week. Meantime, each day he can forget about that awful "room" until nighttime be- cause at the Center he has a "home" where it is very ob- vious that we a�l love him enough to bear down hard enough to make a strong, mature, christian man out of him instead of the victim of the society that used to reject him when he had no way. It's not wishful thinking that makes us at the Working Boys' Center think of ourselves as a "family". We are a gi- gantic family and spend our days in constant sharing of plans for the future and in the innumerable beautiful and awful intimacies of growing physically and spiritually. Some old-fashioned folks would love the way we go in for � � x solid establishment of principles on who's in charge and � � �fk F who obe s. Soon we'!!be moving out of our old attic into a brand new building Y of our own – the first"first class" Working Boys Center tn Latin- Five months from now, we'll be moving out of our old america. attic into a brand new four storey building which will be the first "first class" Working Boys' Center in Latinameri- their professional self-confidence and their calm, well- ca. Up on top, in our skyscraper dining room, we'll have earned voice in the matter of how the people of this world room to feed five or seven hundred at one sitting. Our new should treat each other. dormitory for one hundred and twenty "emergency cases" All this happiness and progress has been made possible of boys who can't stay out of deep trouble unless they stay because our benefactors have been willing to take a long with us will be located over a modern, spacious grammar chance on this new way to bring Christ's concern to the school with (can you believe it) a general library for our kids who were being boxed out of the assorted affairs kids who are in grammar school, on our scholarships to of inen. It hasn't only been a result of donations from other high school or in our technical training shops. There will Parts. A local Ecuadorian contractor, Mister Galo be a medical and dental services department which the P�mino, who is building our facilities for us on a no-profit boys can share with all the members of their family groups. basis, has loaned me two hundred thousand dollars of his Down on the first floor will be a fantastic dream-come-true own company's money in order to get this show on the in the form of technical trade shops, classrooms and work road. He believes in the kids' rights and chances;and he be- area where our kids will learn the trades that will give them lieves that within a reasonable time, I will pay back his company's money with no interest. The law is never far away. . .darn itl With a present expenditure of five thousand dollars per month to keep the Center going, and with a side ' � °' °�' " ' money-raising campaign to float a low-cost, very decent ° `� type housing project for a �rst group of one hundred of our families, and with the need for things to make the new building of the Center functional, the task of raising the . cash to carry the message is sort of getting out of hand. But I am not yet ready to confess that I have been trying the impossible which wip never come to pass. I'll tell you why. Let's pass over the obvious facts we all know about °� the price of education and the price of human develop- ment and the shortage of funds to do all that we would all , ,�, like to do. Let's pass on to the fact that Christ said He � � ��. �- . �� r,y, �`` � wanta the kids to have a chance to be near Him. I think ���, � �� � �°� you'll buy that. If everybody who reads this article senda me �� � � EP'; ;�',�; something to help the cause, I'll be able to do two good �'���� �� ,„ ���� ��,� "' `" ' deeds: 1) start a new upwards movement for the kids of � '"� �r� Latinamerica, and 2) have a complete, detailed, down to ���� � �n `�j the penny account of how the smallest or greatest donation ' �����;�� r,�,„ t� ,� � was used directly for the kids. �� Ili��� .� ��� � ��� �� I should warn you that if you send me a buck or few, r '�� , �� I will go down in history as the famous "Shceshine ��� Priest",—That will be bad for my humility as a Jesuit. But if you don't help me, I will be arrested one of these days " .!� '"� �.i�� for stealing and then the whole Church will have to face ,;- � ;� � f the fact that they picked up a crook among the clergy. �� ��� ������� � ��` Thanks for reading; and please help this bit of happiness � �� "��,� we�'�a � �� �- � a � � � , to continue. ;��j �• s, � �4.. .`r �M'r'�Je+a.�wid&`�dGHNN&e fl�� ..:•�, ��A7�#�/� Ns' . 1`l ,r� ���� � �. .. �a s � , � ,. �,4J. r �. �^�' � Mk . . ��..• �`� r,�.. :r.. 1;'' i^ st.��: �� ..,...:;:. Fr. Halligan always has an audfence with ,.,. trouble. r,.,...: �1.5 • :��:�:.:.� e � s om .J. Halligan, 3.J. � �orking Bo9s' Center - Quit �let e � �� 'rinting and mailing compl a irs. lAilliam Conway .O`ZZ — 15th St. JOHN J. HALLIGAN S.J. 3oone, Iowa 50036 Ecuador, one of the smallest of the Southamerican re- about one of the things CHRIST OF THE ANDES MIS- publics, is such a strikingly beautiful place that it will, no SION has in operation. IYs called The Working Boys Cen- doubt, become someday a most popular tourist haven for ter. We think it is the first long step in a movement that will the world's travellers. But at present it has a lot of its own spread all over Latinamerica like a presence of Christ Who necessary travelling to do along the road of human pro- said He wanted the little kids to have a chance to come gress while it suffers the typically Latinamerican pains in- close to Him without the adults keeping them at a dis- volved in cleaning and stabilizing its governmental system tance for one reason or another. —So let's talk about the and realizing and distributing its great potential wealth. I Working Boys'Center. have been in Ecuador for almost ten years; and from ob- There are more than six thousand shceshine boys and serving the various casts of characters involved in the ongo- other working boys in the city of Quito, Ecuador. For ing slapstick comedy of Ecuador's internal and external hu- each of them, life is a matter of survival in a world where man affairs, I think I know why Christ said, "The poor nobody understands the other guy any more than he you will have with you always." It seems obvious to me understands himself. (Desperation isn't conducive to gene- that we as a race simply want the poor to stay poor always. rosity, cheerful tolerance or christian charity.) Each day's A few years ago the Jesuits founded CHRIST OF THE business is to chase down the price of something to eat for ANDES MISSION, an apostolate dedicated exclusively to one's self and a few other people before the dark of night the service of the poorest people around these parts: It puts an end to the action. Each night is a few hours of keep- wasn't megalomania that made us think we could change ing each other warm in sleep on a floor with from seven things for the poor. It was a desire to share in the happiness to thirteen other kids and Mamma. Always "Mamma". and deep peace and constant hope of Christ who did all Never "Daddy". In almost every "family group" situa- He could to take the pain and ugliness out of human so- tion, there were several "Daddies" and no one of them ciety. Of course, this is not only a Jesuit desire; so, in the ever stayed around for longer than two or three new course of time, there have been others who have joined babies. More than one of the shoeshine boys has told me the team, such as, the Sisters of Charity, B.V.M., local that if he knew who his father was, he would kill the rot- Daughters of Charity, U.S. Peace Corps fellows and girls, ten bum. These kids have high ideals; and sometimes they local volunteers, other foreign volunteers, and foreign burn themselves up with righteous indignation aga'rnst the and local friends and relatives who sent the cash to finance older generation's corruption and unfairness. our efforts here. With its mixture of assorted believers But the working boys of Quito are not a crowd of lit- and non-believers, CHRIST OF THE ANDES MISSION tle rebels without a cause. They are the cause for which is almost as big a diversity as Noah's Ark. some kind of rebellion is inevitable. The Working Boys' In this issue of THE JESUIT we want to tell you all Center is a very serious and confident attempt to make Reprinted from THE JESUi7'Autumn 1972 ,�a� �� x;y r � ,*S�- .�_ to see that he is following up on his necessary medical or r �.�� � x � � educational programs and on his obligatory savings ac- � �`� `���� ��{s�e �� , .��. �_ � count at the Center. He can eat breakfast and supper free ,�� �� every day. But for lunch he has to pay four cents (One �� ' Sucre) which is his deposit into his obligatory savings ac- � count.That's the mone which will start him off in life after `A` Y "��:: he has finished with us. He is obliged to save (or "buy" �„ lunch) at least four times a week. Meantime, each day he '�"'' can forget about that awful "room" until nighttime be- cause at the Center he has a "home" where it is vety ob- vious that we all love him enough to bear down hard enough to make a strong, mature, christian man out of him �� � instead of the victim of the society that used to reject him when he had no way. It's not wishful thinking that makes us at the Working Boys' Center think of ourselves as a "family". We are a gi- gantic family and spend our days in constant sharing of plans for the future and in the innumerable beautiful and awful intimacies of growing physically and spiritually. � � ,,,, Some old-fashioned folks would love the way we go in for �� � ` �w. �.. . ���. �� � �r� � ,� �� �,. ., solid establishment of principles on who's in charge and Soon we'!!be moving out of our old attic rnro a brand new building who obeys. of our own – the first"first class" Working Boys Center in Latin- Five months from now, we'il be moving out of our old america. attic into a brand new four storey building which will be the first "first class" Working Boys' Center in Latinameri- their professional s�lf-confidence and their calm, well- ca. Up on top, in our skyscraper dining room, we'll have earned voice in the matter of how the people of this world room to feed five or seven hundred at one sitting. Our new should treat each other. dormitory for one hundred and twenty "emergency cases" All this happiness and progress has been made possible of boys who can't stay out of deep trouble unless they stay because our benefactors have been willing to take a long with us will be located over a modern, spacious grammar chance on this new way to bring Christ's concern to the school with (can you believe it) a general library for our kids who were being boxed out of the assorted affairs kids who are in grammar school, on our scholarships to of inen. It hasn't only been a result of donations from other high school or in our technical training shops. There will parts. A local Ecuadorian contractor, Mister Galo be a medical and dental services department which the P�mino, who is building our facilities for us on a no-profit boys can share with all the members of their family groups. basis, has loaned me two hundred thousand dollars of his Down on the first floor will be a fantastic dream-come-true own company's money in order to get this show on the in the form of technical trade shops, classrooms and work road. He believes in the kids' rights and chances;and he be- area where our kids will learn the trades that will give them lieves that within a reasonable time, I will pay back his company's money with no interest. The!aw is never far away. . .darn it! With a present expenditure of five thousand dollars per month to keep the Center going, and with a side � ' money-raising campaign to float a low-cost, very decent �� '° type housing project for a �rst group of one hundred of ` .: our families, and with the need for things to make the new �� � ���� building of the Center functional, the task of raising the ' cash to carry the message is sort of getting out of hand. But I am not yet ready to confess that I have been trying the impossible which will never come to pass. I'll tell you re�:: why. Let's pass over the obvious facts we all know about ��"'�� �� the price of education and the price of human develop- g° ment and the shortage of funds to do all that we would all ��� , � � ; like to do. Let's pass on to the fact that Christ said He ,�g �� ' wants the kids to have a chance to be near Him. I think ',��'� ��°�•R^�� you'll buy that. If everybody who reads this article sends me ��„ `'' something to help the cause, I'll be able to do two good deeds: I) start a new upwards movement for the kids of � � Latinamerica, and 2) have a complete, detailed, down to '� the penny account of how the smallest or greatest donation was used directly for the kids. � I should warn you that if you send me a buck or few, � � ��,�°� I will go down in history as the famous "Shceshine � Priest",—That will be bad for my humility as a Jesuit. But d��*' if you don't help me, I will be arrested one of these days `� for stealing and then the whole Church will have to face � ,„� the fact that they picked up a crook among the clergy. ������"' Thanks for reading; and please help this bit of happiness .�� .� e., ae � �„,���� ,„ , to continue. � ,��j ,� , � � � , � . ' �64 2'7 i � SAMPLE RESOLUTION �� RESOLUT I ON OF T NC I L OF THE C I TY OF F'ffltt�R-- SAINT PAUL �r�Y) � EXTEND I NG N I NV I TAT I ON TO THE C I TY OF QUITOs E UADOR �y#Et�-Ctfi�",--e fR � , TO BECOME A S I STER-C I TY AND I NV I T I NG HE PE LE OF (it�fR-�rf1`;-�.'Otlt�lil�`�)QUITO, ECUAD4 TO PARTICIPATE IN SAI PROGRAM . ` � :-, WHEREAS , the "People-to-People Program" was inaugurat�d by the President of the United States in 1956 to establish gr ater friendship and understanding between the peoples of tfie Unite ' States and other nations through the medium of direct persona A; contact, and WHEREAS , ali succeeding U . S . Presidents have endorse said program, to be conducted for the broad purposes of the e - change of ideas and people between the citizens of the United States of America and the peoples of other nations , and I Saint Paul WHEREAS, to i mp l ement th i s program (�otx�-Et#y ) and atF�er communities in the United States have been requested by the T wn Affiliation Association of the U . S . , Inc . to affiliate with cities in other nations of similar characterisfiics and mutual interest, and Saint Paul WHEREAS , the C i ty of (�fvt�r-6-i�-y�) , th rough i ts counc i I does recognize and endorse this program with the hope that it ! w i I I I ead to a I ast i ng f r i endsh i p between the peop l e of (�rar-� Saint' Paul C��y ) a n d (Ti�Fr-�i-ty;--G'oon-hr�3-- Qui to, Ecuador i NOW, T���Fp(���, BE I T RESOLV ED BY THE C I TY COUNC I'L OF � ' TNE C I TY OF (1h�Qr�-�i-tq-Y, AS FOLLOWS : Saint PaI�IECT I ON I . That th i s Counc i I on beha I f of the peop l e of (Yau.c_CJty ) does hereby extend a invitat' an to the governmen and the peop�l,e�q�fpa�h e C i ty of (Jhei���g�E�L��t��t� to part i c i pat with (Yofj`r i`tiyy7 as its sister-city for the purpose of creati g greater mutual understanding between the peoples of our two g eat cities and nations . SECTION 2 . The mayor is hereby authorized to act as � of f i c i a l rep resentat i ve of �����#�+ ) to ca rry out th i s p rog am. SECTION 3. That copies of this Resoluteion are to be sent to the mayor and counci I of the City of ('Tliei r'�ifiy�'Cour� 'r=Y)�u t0, the Town Aftiliation Association ot the U . S . , Inc . , and the tCUa�ldr Embassy of (Ihai.r-.C.oua.t�=�.1_ Ecuador. PASSED AND APPROVED, this of ; � � : i � i � , l A