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Show Enterprise Review, March 17, 1976 Device Lowers Costs of Flicks A major problem with movies is that films must be wound on two reels. in-roo- m Bank Addition Crudely Speaking But two Utahns think they have that problem licked. Don Mayer and Dennis Gourley of Film, Inc., have invented a two-hocassette by D. Van de Graaff ur for movies. The patent for the product pending and two prototypes are cur- rently in service, Mayer said. We will have the product out on the market within 60 in-roo- m Walker Bank and Trust has applied to the Department of Financial Institutions for permission to build an addi- tion to its main office at 2nd South and Main Street. The addition would be the first drive-i- n facility for Walker Bank downtown, according to President Mirvin Borthick. the oil we need a Herculean task by 1!se complexities of he refining and distribution days, predicted Mayer, a,so needs eonsidera-currentl- y adding that Film, Inc. is f?stem talking with rt Eroding all Crude d ls a wlde suff- - course, does not effect the processing. We learned that up to 15 percent Altamont could be mixed with other crude oils. If more than 15 percent Altamont was added to the mix, it caused severe processing problems at the refinery. As more wells were drilled and production increased, it of became me? 7th varey necessary to ship We are responding to- chemical properties and may trainloads of Altamont crude lend itself to different refining to numerous customer requests. refineries Some oil have where it could be mixed for Process may thlS ?eed en Borthick facility, explained, ?n ,exce processing. It was not that ue s: ProPane' butane, or Utah refineries could not even 8asbne. handle the quantity of oil distil-lates more Street. middle may yield produced; it was that they like diesel fuel or heavy could not handle the kind of oil industrial oils or even petro- produced. leum coke or asphalt. As the gods would have it, Sulphur content varies in oil train shipments of crude oil just as it does in coal, and as leaving Utah began at the we have found in Utah, the same time as the Arab Oil "The Name Youve Learned to Trust for Years paraffin content of crude oil Embargo, and consequently affects its processing. the gasoline shortage, reached SPECIAL LIMITED TIME OFFER! When refineries are built, full bloom. We received they are designed to process a numerous calls asking why we particular kind of crude oil and were shipping oil out of state to manufacture specific pro- - in the middle of a shortage, ducts. If a refinery were to TW MOST KVOUmONMY lose its source of supply, it WAVY DUTY OKTVOMC may be forced to cut back PRINTING operations, even if other crude was available on the world CALCULATOR market. The question would umcrsiwus be whether the other crude ADOS SUBTRACTS Other smaller, less expen- MATTIES sive systems are designed and manufactured by Evans and CONSTANTS ACCUMULATCS Sutherland. Their basic com- puter, the Picture System, Reg. $199.00 costs about $80,000. Its image HATH is not color, but black and AIMASTEI YOU MUST SEE THE white lines. It creates perspec- SMART" ADO FEATURE tive drawings on the display ' in Eastern Utah, has a high terminal, and then rotates the .M. paraffin content. At anything drawings, zooms in on the SAT. image, gets inside or on top of the product drawn, and BUSINESS MACHINES, INC. changes the drawings in seconds. 1865 SO. STATE 2260 WASHINGTON The Picture System, if used SALT LAKE CITY OGDEN ' to bright yellow. The color, of by the Utah Department of Transportation, could draw a exactly as a designer draw it. The computer operator could drive down the highway at various speeds, and with varying degrees of Creative Layout Design fog conditions. The Lithography Letterpress same computer, used by an Phototypesetting Intertypesetting architectural firm, could draw a proposed building and bring Commercial the designer inside the build- Business Industry ing to look at the outside view, put the designer on the street to .look at the building in FULL COLOR PRINTING relation to its neighbors; and Brochures Stationery could rotate the drawing at Forms various speeds from various Pamphlets perspectives. Memorex and 3M companies. Mont Rosenberg of Rose- mont Co., associated with new pjjm jnc saj product would reduce the cost movies by about 40 of percent, because it eliminates the need for a second machine and cuing devices. te in-roo- special m employment as domestic refineries cut down operations because of the lack of crude afimg f'S COMPLETE PRINTING SERVICE AND EQUIPMENT WE HAVE THE KNOW-HOFOR YOUR PRINTING REQUIREMENTS W Phone out-of-sta- te able source of supply for refineries has national implications as well. As domestic production decreases, more oil is imported from overseas. It is critical that the oil we receive from foreign sources be compatable with domestic refineries to which it is delivered. The alternatives are to ship the oil greater distances to find the type of refinery needed, or to import finished product instead of crude oil. In the first case, increased transportation costs would raise the price of petroleum products. In the second, higher costs for importing refined product in place of crude oil would adversely affect our balance of payments. Our economy w'ould be further threatened by loss of (801)487-065- 1 1952 West 1500 South Salt Lake City, Utah 84104 the Picture System took the place of the original system, offering more versatility at a lower cost. The company has followed the Picture System with four other systems. The Graphic Arts System helps the Los Angeles Times and other newspapers design advertise-e- d ments and lay out their news pages. The Novoview system helps eleven airline companies teach their pilots to land at airports by simulating both the airports and control panels of the airplanes. The Frame Buffer System and Continuous Tone Series, still in develop-highwa- y mental stages, produce spective drawings of models, Unlike the Picture System which produces only line drawings, these systems duce pictures of objects filled in with realistic colors and tones, Marketing the products in Japan, England and France as well as in the United States, the company caters mainly to larger institutions who can afford the equipment. The University of Utah is currently the only Utah institution using an Evans and Sutherland Evans and Sutherland, computer. . Employing about 150 people headquartered in Salt Lake City, was founded by David C. in its Salt Lake office, the Evans and Ivan E. Sutherland. company uses computers in Sutherland pioneered the manufacturing its equipment. wire wrap computer graphics industry with research he conducted at machines lead wire automatiMassachussets Institute of cally through the intricate Technology in the 1960s. The circuit board systems. Other graphics section of the indus- - computers test the products try is still in its infancy. We and help people assemble are now where the original them. The company has branch computer was 20 years ago, stated Craig Rasmussen, offices in Mountain View and Marketing Support manager Los Angeles, and California for the company. and New York City. They In 1969, Evans and Sutherexpect to establish offices in land introduced its first com Washington, D.C. and London puter graphics system. In 1973 England soon. per-wou- ld pro-simulat- Semi-automat- ic ed |