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Show The Utah Enterprise Review , February 2, 1977 Page 6b Recommends Engineer Financing Finalized Parking Request be Denied for Racquet Club The Hamilton Racquet Club has finalized financing for construction of a SI million tennis club to be located at 8th South and 8th East, formerly Hamilton School. Roger Boyer, president of the Boyer Co. and partner of the Hamilton Club, announced last week that Prudential Federal Savings will provide both construction and permanent financing for the project. Construction in October and is began expected to be complete in May, 1977, The club will consist of nine tennis courts, six of which will be covered with a bubble in the winter, and two platform tennis courts, as well as a club house. R. Eric Peterson is con- ing the courts. Gary E. Peterson is the architect. Gillham Awarded Contract Gillham Advertising, Inc. has been awarded a contract by the Salt Lake Board of Realtors. According to Craig Ogen, spokesman for the agency, the amount has not been announced. The thrust of the campaign will be to inform the public of the services a realtor performs. The contract would be open, to maintain the Ogen said, realtors' professionalism. It is slated to begin by tractor for the club house; George McDonald is build- - Salt Lake traffic engineer, P.D. Kiser has recommended a request for 10 parking adequate its patrons, while street parking is for public use. additional angle parking spaces by the O.C. Tanner Company at its factory O.C. Tanner did not off-stre- et SERVICE cate further plans to expand parking facilities at this time. DEPENDABILITY QUALITY indi-fo- r SERVICE loca- tion be denied. Kiser told the city commissioners research shows nearly twice as many accidents occur where angle parking exists instead of parallel. A city ordinance presently states angle parking will not be allowed unless specific conditions exist, street such as a with minimal traffic. Kiser added if a building permit is requested for an existing building which also uses dead-en- d angle parking, the parking pattern must also be This policy apchanged. plies to any major remodeling, demolition, and reconstruction, Kiser explained. The city takes the position the individual business is responsible for providing O a s BUSINESS CARDS Q ENVELOPES LETTERHEADS FORMS LEGAL BRIEFS REPORTS BOOKLETS fri W E H . O v Q i O' M M 25 a oo H WORK COMPLETED H U ON TIME-EVERYTIM- ' 06 U 5 E ti M TWO X LOCATIONS ti dotvnton'n-1- H 79 industrial-22- 90 3 W. 400 So. So. Redwood 363-029- M O M 4 972-175- 5 O instats !U8S2 5 az w G & QUICK PRINTING cu u Q SERVICE QUALITY DEPENDABILITY SERVICE On the Hill Living Could Be Harmful to Your Health byJerraldD. Conder Part of the interest in being on the Hill during a legislative session is the opportunity to observe who is lobbying for what. This year the P.T.A. appears to have n assumed the role of a Carrie Nations in a renewed battle against that demon rum." The P.T.A. legislative committee officially perceives a drinking problem in the student populous and therefore is lobbying for the passage of almost any bill which will have a negative effect on those amongst us who partake of an occassional libation. One such bill the P.T.A. is actively supporting is H.B. 77 which requires warning statements be placed on all alcoholic beverages dispensed by the state. The warning statements, of course, tell us that liquor is harmful to our health. The P.T.A. representatives with whom I have spoken justify their support with the logic that the warning statement is educational. The fact that the legislative fiscal note sets an estimated price of $200,000 does not seem to be important to them at all though it did raise a few brows among legislators in the House. The debate on the floor of the House centers around the effect of warning statements and how the additional cost would be paid. As you might expect, there were plenty of supportive statistics on each side of the issue regarding the effectiveness of warning statements. Ultimately most agreed the statement could not hurt and the big problem thus became financing. One representative attempted an amendment which would require the manufacturers to label the bottle. Great idea, but manufacturers will not even attach our state seal. Had the amendment passed, the death knell would have tolled for whiskey drinking in Utah. Finally a majority agreed that the cost should be borne by those folks who drink booze, and therefore need to be warned. Liquor costs will go up a slight amount in the event H.B. 77 passes the Senate, and it is hard to gauge their feelings right now. My assessment is that a party line vote could be in the making. The Republicans appear to have another opportunity to hang the liquor albatross around the necks of Democrats as they did with the approval of Otis Plant as Liquor Commissioner. I hope this doesnt happen but I will not be surprised to see a party line vote on this issue. In the event this bill gets past the Senate, perhaps the state could contract with the P.T.A. as liquor label sticker-on-er- s at a price of say $100,000 and they could then use the funds to support a meaningful liquor education program. The merits of H.B. 77 as an effective educational program, in my opinion, are at best questionable. semi-moder- ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS BY FRANK ERICKSON AND OTHER NOTABLE ARTISTS. OPEN MON.-SA- 1:00-6:0- 0 T. p.m. 467-960- SUPERVISION AND QUALITY EMPLOYEES MAKE THE DIFFERENCE! 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