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253369 ` ��3369 � ORIQINAL TO CITY CLBRK CITY OF ST. PAUL FIOENCIL NO OFFICE OF THE CITY CLERK LICENSE COA�LLTT COUNC�L RESOLUTIO -GENERAL FORM PRFSENTED BY J April 1� i97i COMMISSIONE ATF W�REAS: The Council for Corporate Review has made application for permission to conduct a, Tag Day on Friday, April 2, 1971� between the hoars of 1Os00 a.m. and 6s00 p.m. on the streets of tY�e City of Saint Pau�� therefore, be it RESOLVED: That permission be and the same is hereby granted to the Council for Corporate Review to conduat such solieitations on the day� date� and between the hours requested. Informa.11y approved by Council on (Informal application presented same d�,y 4�1•-71� NE'Fl (Initial appn. by th�s organization� APR 119�ii COUNCILMEN Adopted by the Counci� 19— Yeas Naya ,�,�.�„ APR 11971 Carlson �,. A � 19— Z Levine �-��n Favor .1�tchth'� Sprafka yor `� A gainat Tedesco �._ � �g ��- . pu�Lis .n 3 1971 Mr, Vice President Mere;;'ith' � . � � j CITY OF��Y�1V`f, PAUL Capital of Minnksota �s��s p�; ^+..., �r��� aLJe aH��rcevct o ub�C'c �a et p � ADMINISTBATION Tenth and Minneso StP88t8 FIRE PROTECTION ro�.[cs DEAN MEKEDITH,C�mmiaeioner HESLTa RALPH G.MERAILL,Deyaty Commi�sioner DANIEL P.McLAUGHLIN.7iteen�e Iuspector Apri1 1, 1971 Honorable Mayor and City Council Saint Paul, Minnesota , Gentlemen and Madam: The Council For Corpor te Review make8 application for permission to condu�t Ta� Day on riday, April 2, 1971, between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 6s00 p.m. They have complied wit�� Ordinance No. 13338� ���n� Chapter No. 450.00 of the St. Paul Le�islative Code and Ordinances, which deals with solicitation of funds. The application is mad� b3r Mary Williams� President; and William Mahlum is the Secretary o� the org�anization. Very t�uly yours� . �,��� , License Inspector � . , . , . . C�TY OF STe PAUL Office of Lioense �nspector 202 Public Safet�r Build�.n,g St. Paul, �innesota 55101 A,pplication fur permisaion to solicit ftztzds, or° to conduct tag daye, upon the atres�a o� the City of St. Paul, Minnesotae Date of Appliaation: 19_�_ 1, Name of organization _ ��cil F�r (!ArnArat9 Reviev Addresa of organizatian . a n ve., nneapo s� nn, 2e Chief officer of arganizatian ary ams, ea. 3. Secratary of organisation am a Lm 4. Name of person or persons responsible for the distribution of colleeted funds. ounc or ornora e en eW 5. Purpose or Dbjset for which soliQitation is to be made American F'rien�3a : ervlce omm ee s uang ga osni a� .ro ec 6s Use to be �de of funda oollec�ed ee a ve 7g Solicitation will be made on da tes, . be�resn the hours of and . a. . . p.m. 8e Looation where solicitation will take placse ma�or shon-�in� 1nd business arer�s 9a Liat the amounta of any �va�;ea, fses, ccmm�issions, costs or exp�tnse� p�id or ro�ioh are expected to be paid in conneotion �rith solicitationa Also list names of parsons to �hoa�. p�yments have bsen msde or will be made; and th� amoun.ts af such �yfnents� (A financial statemant iacludiag this info�tian may be att�checi, . . p us a i ona es a e exnense o or au it ( Balloons from Moorlsne Inc. Minnea lis Minn. sn nr (��°) . . , , � . , 1�. Attach a copy of budget ahowing solicitationa for this fi�cal or ealendar Y��r• lla Haae you read Chapter 450 of the St. 2�u1 Legislative Code, which pro�videa for the securing of permis�ion to conducst the solicitation of fun.ds, or tag daysa upon the streeta of the City of St. Paul and do you fully understand the regu].etions also provided in said ordinance? y,Qs 12o AppliQation msde i.n behalf of the above organiza�ion bys Name Ma�'Y Williama Title or Office �sident Nama C�rolyn McGinnis Title or Of'fice �3ect Cocrdinator STATE OF MINNESOTA) �SS CQUNTY OF 1-i�irlYtPZ7y � � °� z and � being dul a�orn aay that they are the petitioners in the a ve application; that they ha � ead the foregoing petition and lrnow aontents an purposes therepf; that same is true of their o�vn lmowledge. � i . � h /� Sub�cribed and sworn to bef ore ma this 1 '� da y of � / 19� c� �//- . _ � � � / , � N otary io, Cotm y, Minnesota � M: JACQUELIN STEVENSON Nty Ctyri]m198iOri 9$pll"AS Notarv P�hlir+,Ha,�n�^ County, Minn. My Commission Expiras Dec,17,1972. � ' � � � _.� � � � 3�Z�, �'� � � � � � � • • � � , fi �� yae � �� �' ��� The total tonnage of bombs dropped on Vietnam—a country smaller than the state of Texas—now exceeds the total dropped by the United States in all theaters of the Second World War. By the end of 1969, 250 pounds of bombs had been dropped for every man, woman, and child in both NoRh and South Vietnam. Daily since the bloodiest fighting be- °` gan in 1965, American and Vietnamese rifles and machine � guns have discharged thousands of pounds of ammunition in and around the villages of South Vietnam. Countless pitched battles have raged over a countryside crowded with civilians, while routine search and destroy missions have swept whole villages off the map. To drive civilians from a countryside that cannot be con- trolled politically and into crowded refugee centers that can be, random artillery fire has been systematically directed against the villages, and herbicides have been sprayed on the rice paddies. Thousands of tons of artillery shells, rockets, mortars, grenades, and napalm have stripped and pitted a country- side that was once beautiful, and impoverished or destroyed most of the villages on which South Vietnam depended for � ���,��, I� ; , t� � ,�,�x,�,,.,����"� �. � � � � �� i � gi i 7 I�� � u �` � , � � its livelihood and stability. Over a half million a�res of �w� `�� ` crop-producing land have been sprayed, and five and a half �, _,<< ; million acres of forest have been defoliated.Under this con- � certed and terrible tonnage of U. S. firepower, the self- supporting economy of South Vietnam has collapsed and its traditional social structure has crumbled. But even the war in Indochina will someday end, and South Vietnam will recover and be rebuilt as Europe re- �� �' covered two decades ago. When the bombs and the napalm * � .�� stop falling and the spray of lead and shrapnel settles for the last time, the bomb craters can be filled again,the fields ° replanted, the mines disarmed, and the villages rebuilt. The �;, �'� simple economy can be restored or replaced, and the Social ` structure—like any other structure—can be repaired or �� ��� ������ � - - �. . .� overhauled. � . of 1970, the Quaker Rehabilitation Center began a small Quang Ngai Prison vocational training program for patients. Training activi- In addition to the AFSC's rehabilitation program in ties, most of which take place on the porch of the patient Quang Ngai, the Quaker team has a small medical pro- hostel, include hat and mat making and sewing. Other pa- �am at the Quang Ngai prison, a hundred yards from the tients make crutches, and a project to make wheelchairs Quaker Rehabilitation Center. The prison contains 1,000 from local materials is in the planning and experimenting to 1,200 civilians crowded into an assortment of buildings stage. around a central quandrangle. Barbed wire, to guard The Quaker staff estimates that 85 per cent of the in- against NLF attack and to control the prisoners, surrounds juries at the Rehabilitation Center are war-related. Many the buildings and the quadrangle. Most of the prisoners are of the patients are women and children. Typical patients NLF suspects, and about a third of them are women,many include Khanh thi Thanh, a 35-year-old woman now earn- of whom have their children with them. ing money as a tailor. She was a rice farmer before she Especially at night, when they are locked into the build- lost her right leg below the knee when an American bomb in s the prisoners are badly crowded, The supply of inedi- hit near her house as she was sleeping. She has been fitted cines in the prison is short. The food is adequate in bulk with an artificial limb. Another patient is six-year-old but not in nutritional value, particularly for children and Phung thi San, who was wounded by cannon fire from pregnant or nursing women. There are many minor and Korean gun emplacements while she was playing at home some serious illnesses, but even the sickest patients are not with her mother. San has only the heel of her left foot and readily transferred to the hospital nearby. is amputated below her right knee. Twelve-year-old Bui In June, 1968, the Prison Chief asked Quaker Service Duc, another patient, lost a leg when she stepped on a to help in providing medical attention for the prisoners, Korean mine while herding cows near an ARVN bunker. especially for the women and children. Since that time, Quaker Service has been furnishing small quantities of � ' soup, soap, cereal, and vitamins for the forty to sixty chil- dren and for pregnant women and nursing mothers. Babies born at the prison are supplied with a small set of clothes $ n °` � and towels. ie°3 � � '.. ,�'`,.e �� . Every hour the N�ar in Vietnam continues, hrrndreds more casualties are being created; more rice paddies are being destroyed, and more persons driven from their homes. The tragic past of the horrie�ess, the wounded and the bereaved cannot be undone, but with help the future for some Vietnamese af�ected by the tivar can be made less dim. The American Friends Service Committee is a corporate expres- sion of Quaker faith and practice. It is rooted in the conviction that each human 4ife is sacred, each man a child of God, and that love, expressed through creative action, can overcome hatred, prejudice and fear. To that end, the Com- mittee undertakes programs of reiief, service and education, min- istering to both the physical and spiritual needs of inen. Its work is made possible by the generous cooperation of thousands of con- cerned persons of all faiths. .onr.s-�i-n�'sc r�x�cb �6, �97'� Han. Deea MexeEi�f�t, Cc�nsr. ot Publ3c Sa�t'ety, � 101 E. lOth. Sto, St. Psu]., Mirit�. Attn: Mr. Daniel P. B�L�.l.it�. I)ea.r Sir: �e city �inail. toc�aa,y adapted a motican waivir�g the �aiacty d�,y applicsticra p�riad r�qu3r+ed in co�ctio� wit�x an appl,iasticm Por aolicitatic�n of tt��rrida permit for the Cauncil For Carporsts Rerrie�r !or a be�U.cyo� �e cn April 2nd., !or th� ben�fit o� a hoepital. in Sarnth Yietn�un. Vexy tru]�y y�ot�z's, City Ciezk AU/hp