D858 Pnk l
Wh C e rFinanceDept. ' CITY OF SAINT PAUE — ��
No:
Canary— Dept. C�C G1�❑
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR �7 1 8 1973
Date:
ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER
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ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER,
THAT, WHEREAS, the Saint Paul Winter Carnival Association, Inc.
in a statement to Finance and Accounting Division dated March 15,
1973, over ,the signature of Eugene R. Strommen, Managing Director
of the Saint Paul Winter Carnival Association, Inc. , a copy of said
statement being attached hereto and incorporated herein by reference,
indicates 4hat certain costs have been incurred in connection with
the subject carnival in the amount of $4,950.00, said expenses being
listed as follows:
general liability insurance;
abor and materials for construction of the
ramp into the Saint Paul Auditorium
Repair and maintenace of the Ski Slide; and
WHERI$AS, It is to the economic advantage of the City to foster
and. partic�pate in the Winter Carnival; and
• WHEREAS, the sum of $5,000.00 is available in the Civic
Organizations Contributions account, Activity 09100 of the 1973
Budget for payment of these expenses; now therefore it is
ORDE D, that the reimbursement of expenditures by the Winter
Carnival Association in the herein mentioned sum of $4, 950.00 is
hereby authorized and approved, said payments being reimbursement
for the heTeinabove mentioned expenses; subject however, to a
deduction for the claims of various City departments for damages
incurred t6 City property by said Association or its agents.
$1,620 is to be allocated to the Department of Community Services
for the replacement of shrubs on Kellogg Boulevard.
$ ,330 is to be paid to the Carnival Association for reimbursement
of its expenses in accordance with letter attached.
APPROVED AS TO FORM
sistant City Attorney Department Head
Date
Administrative As tant to or
ST. PAUL FIRE and MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY
- ST PAW €IABILITV P MKY 910AX0
".:TslvlEL; INSUIRED AND Al DRESS(No,Strert,City,Stwe and Zip Code)
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AUDIT PERI00: (if applkaWa
YAnnual unless othewise staved
FIRST NAT'L BANK BLOG - ST PAUI-, MINN - 224 7671
Pol than one year,premium Is payable:•' Premkim Total e
From; — `�`o --T— —moist ear Second Year Third Year
I s $ $ $
f 5,366-,
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• 12:01 A. M., Standar Time at the address of the Named Insured.
'•Automobile premiums re for one year only. Additional years will be computed at the Company's prevailing rates.
r ❑ ❑Corporation; ❑(Other)
The Nomad Insured is: Individual; ❑Partnership; Joint Venture; C atlon� .. ... .. ....... .. . .......... . . .
Thebusiness of the Named Insured is:. . . . . .,. .. .. . . . . ... . . . . . . ... ... ............. .......... ....... ........ .. . . .
During the past three yea rs no insurer has canceled insurance, issued to the Named Insured, similar to that afforded hereunder unless otherwise
stated herein: ... .... ................ �
.. ... .. �
...... ...............
The insurance afforde is only with respect to those Coverages for which an X is shown in the appropriate 6ox-
COVERAG ES LIMITS OF LIABILITY ADVANCE
Bodily Injury--each person $ PREMIUMS
Comprehensive Automob'a Liability ❑ Bodily Injury—eoch occurrence
Property Damage—each occurrence a $
Protection Against Uninsured Motorists ❑ See Coverage Form $
Automobile Medical Payff ents. Each Person ; ;
Automobile Physical Damoge See Coverage Fort and Schedule $ --
Garage 0 See Coverage Form and Schedule
Comprehensive Genera road Q Bodily Injury—each occurrence $ 1,000,0b%$ 4,6(-1. -Y'1
Comprehensive General— ureou ❑ Bodily Injury--aggregate $
Owners', Landlords' and Tenants' Liability ❑ Property Domoge—each occurrence $ 1,000,000
Manufacturers' and Con roctors' Liability ❑ Property Damage—aggregate $ 1,000,E
Contractual Liability ❑ Property Damage coverage is not included
Owners' and Contractors Protective Liability ❑ unless a limit of liability is shown.
If on "X" is insert4id in the box opposite one of the following optional exclusions, then
such exclusion, ns set forth in the Coverage Form, shall apply to the ineuronce afforded.
_ Exclusion: l.J I losion LJ 2--Collapse ❑3—Underground Property Damage
Premises Medical Payments ~ ❑ Each Person $ $
Each Accident $
Personal Injury ❑ Aggregate $ $
Comprehensive Personal suronce ❑ Liability--eoch occurrence $ $
Former's Comprehensive ersonal Insurance ❑ Medical Poyments--4=h person $
Medical Payments--*ach accident $
Physical Damage to Property--each occurrence $250.
Including Animal Collision Market Value, not exceeding $300. each animal
Farm and Ranch Insuran a See Coverage Form $ _
Endorsements: (Identify >y form number or title) $
16 2.
st ,inapr Liab. 595
Countersignature Dote Countersigned at Authorized Represents
16101 SLJ Rev, 1•73 Pri red in U.S.A. MARSH & MCLENNAN, INQ d
INSURED
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ENDUititMENT
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The following spaces pr eded by an asterisk ( ) need not be completed if this endorsement and the policy have the same inception date.
ATTAC FILD ?O AND FORMI •EFFECTVV£ DATE *ISSUED TO
PART ni POLICY No OF (NDOR`:S M'•+T
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ir•,:, •5 :... - r "} ? Jtt r `@r2t of St. Ppoil Wi.nt,r
3n u i ,s ;?-iy o , `:ouneil ".i r,
- P,s , �?'.inhPr1in ".lub, Royal-
t t_` i. 'l- ;)rr;F:^ Of Fire & BriR?stone, ides
I= ,, t•
hnk, only as respP.&S ,
Nothing herein contained shall be held to vary, alter, waive or extend any of the terms, conditions, provisions,
agreements or limitations of the above mentioned Policy, ether than as above stated.
Agency Name and Address to witness whereof, the Company has caused
thi s endorsement to be signed by its Pscsident
at St.Paul,Minnesota and countersigned'by a
• duly authorized representative of the Company.
—��� PrrriArn�.
• - AUTMOf� D R EEPPIKSEENTATIVEE�yT _
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SPORTS , I LUSTRATED,, Dec. 18, 1972
a sample f our—state publicity generated during outys
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Each winter can seem like an Ice Age across k x
unless one determines, as the snow-belters;leave`shot .`
tar to love it than leave it. In St. Paul and
ens of cities like them, the longest season,is livAhed
t r
carnivals, festivals in which the courageous Come.but
That Stonehenge-like affair ringed by cars (tbQve) is ra
frozen White Bear Lake where 10,000 %jtft_*"ton
�, fishing for northern pike and carnival prix s ' o ng
' occasion, they also race cars on the ice and, in F
A
• tug, paddle and wallow canoes right across
Lawrence. There are parades to see ice to scufpt plp1
dogsled and snowshoe races to bring evarybodyu for fwirat
air and fun. And in each city the event doubleses aar
binger: if the' carnival comes, can spring . be f�►r: 'be `` a
50
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1 N'T IS F TmFUNI'
What are all those crazies doing out- banana split, served outdoors, no re
doors on days like this? He it is zero frigeration necessary.
to 20 below, the tips of the noses are While St. Paul's is the je,vel of car-
turning white, and they're o t there ca- nivals, there are similar winter perker-
vorting. Well, there is an planation. uppers all across the snow country.Since
)aside their longies,swBtC1 in sheep- 1911, the Dartmouth Winter Carnival
skins,bemittened and wrap into miles (Feb.9-11)has been an Eastern fixture,
of mufflers, they ttre provi a couple. built around ski competition and snow
of cold points. One: no ht dens rattly sculpture. The college influence also
are the hardy, fearless folk y believe dominates the annual festivities(Jan. 30-
themsetves to be, Ttifo: a$ 1 ng as win- Feb. 3) on the Michigan peninsula at
ter won't go away, tuaybe is best to Houghton, one of the coldest regions
get out sod throo around ' it. of the world. Michigan Tech's Blue Key
This madness ofTici4lly be,pabackin ` sponsors the celebration, the men grow`
1886 in Minnesota—where the winter warm beards and select a snow queen.
air is so cold that it crack -when a Tech-'s dogsled races leaturr real, live -u-� IV
few hearties began tossing s mebody in undergrads acting as the does, and the
a blanket and,amazingly, w'a crowd. big snowshoe race lasts one-eighth mile tdottbtBJ>N7 ;
Hardly had high-throw victim set- or until everybody collapses, whichever
tied to eart h WTV the St. aut Winter comes sooner. Snow sculpture is the
Carnival was born icy tavat that highlight, with statuary tending to the
has since been widely copied and now monumental, 30-foot scale, creating a a
fires up the entire town over the coldest yearly show for the entire to\\n,
days of its year. In Colorado, Denver University's car-
Blanket tossing and all,the Minnesota nival (Jan; 27-28) offers up genuine ski
rnival has become one mmunity's competition, but other Coloradans are
answer to the winter s, grow not as serious: in some of the best events
to the point where there are now 55 the racers slalom down the course car-
events in 10 days, somethin to lure ev- rying trays of drinks. A sinuous torch-
erybody outside this Jan. 26-Feb. 4. light parade of night skiers keynote the
There are two giant parac es, one by celebrations at Steamboat Springs Web.
day and one by torchlight at night;there 9-11), creating a stunning effect calcu-
is family competition in cod sports of dated to last until spring.
all sorts and a 500-mite innipeg-to- The Laurentian Snow f-e tival in Can-
St. Paul snowmobile dash.7here also is ada (Feb. 8-171 features a number of
trite nation's oldest aoe-fishin contest on minicarnivals around Sainte Agathe des
White Bear Lake which, as uredly, can Monts,complete with motorcycle racing
support the 5,000 to 10,000 natics who on frozen Lac des Sables and the an-
get out on it,cars and all,t drop min- nual dogsled derby, this one with se F" K
nows through holes predr led by the riOUs drivers harnessed up to even more >)*1 ry a
parks department. Natural y, the first serious huskies. `pi�ttat.@t5t1lixS `
prize—a three- or four-pou d northern Certainly the most cotnageous car- ar>.iristc„txr
or walleye pike could win t—is a new nival event of all is the course en canoe,
snowmobile. And this sea n, in case the annual canoe race crashing through' f
any of these activities mig it have left the ice floes of the St. Lawrence River
some poor soul indoors by k warm fire, between Quebec City and Levis on the
the carnival also will featurc a mite-long opposite shore,while 100,000 spectators
shiver and cheer.The Quebecois in their
festival (Feb. 22-March 4) also parade
The biggest snow sculptures rise up at by day and night and stage a chilled na-
Michigan Tech and the c ldest floats tional championship motorcycle race.
slide past in Quebec City s night pa- Crazy,yes.Still, if a new Ice.Age is in-
deed coming, as was predicted recentIN
rode—while in all cases sp ctators,like in a scientific report. at least half the
two St. Paul youngsters at left,are country will be ready.
ably packaged for Oe occasion. --BoB Orru%r
19"MRANS BY JOHN G ZIUMERMA14
55 .