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<br />e <br /> <br />cannot help but see the despair on their faces and understand the hopeless- <br />ness of their situation. <br /> <br />I am sure you see the sores of the homeless in our community as I do. Unless <br />we intervene, this proud community will pay the price of a weakened social <br />structure, providing a much less pleasant future than it has past. <br /> <br />We have had the strength to help ourselves. Now I challenge you to use that <br />same strength to help those that need our hand so that they may also be <br />contributing, productive members of our society. <br /> <br />Other things that I would like to share with you are other fronts that we <br />have worked on. Certainly we have created a lifestyle over many years that <br />is long on pride, that respects how the arts refresh the human spirit, and <br />that has developed a true understanding that education is the keystone that <br />will support a brighter future. <br /> <br />I am particularly proud of the tradition that has been established of this <br />community and this council working in lock step with the University of Ore- <br />gon. <br /> <br />e <br /> <br />As your mayor, I have travelled to Japan, Europ~, and the Soviet Union. I <br />have travelled this country from coast to coast, and border to border. For <br />the first time we have an office in Washington DC. Our relationships with <br />Senators Hatfield and Packwood and Congressman DeFazio have resulted in a <br />series of multi-million dollar paydays for the University of Oregon and the <br />City of Eugene. Our old friends in Japan and Korea, and our new-found <br />friends in the Soviet Union, can playa meaningful role in our future. <br /> <br />I believe our overseas contacts, through our Sister Cities Program, when <br />combined with the efforts of thousands of others, can help work the miracle <br />of world peace and a shared world through cultural and economic exchange. I <br />urge your continued and increased support for these efforts for we have both <br />a responsibility and an opportunity for living in this world. <br /> <br />As I prepare to hand over this honored office, I am reassured, for I know <br />that the citizens of the community, the council, and the new mayor believe in <br />many ways as I do and share those concerns. <br /> <br />e <br /> <br />Jeff, in parting, I would like to share with you that you will find this one <br />of the most interesting jobs of your life. Some days, it is like sitting in <br />a gymnasium full of people and yet you are all alone. Sometimes it is like <br />driving a speeding freight train and trying to guide it from the caboose. <br />Some days it consumes most of your hours and some weeks it consumes all of <br />them. When you think you have no more to give, it will ask for more. It has <br />given me some of the happiest and some of the saddest moments of my life. <br />There are things I find difficult to share with you because they have touched <br />me so deeply, but perhaps I will be able to share them with you another day. <br />The gift that has been given me in those touching moments is something I will <br />never be able to repay. No matter how lonely, how frustrating, or consuming, <br />I assure you, Jeff, that you will find this job enlightening, educating, and <br />very much exhilarating. It is a job whose reward is one of being in the <br />ultimate position of being able to make a contribution to the society in <br /> <br />State of the City Address <br />Brian B. Obie <br /> <br />January 9, 1989 <br /> <br />Page 4 <br />