OCR Text |
Show TT 1 I A I 5 j i The National Enterprise, August 31, 1977 ai ii Page nineteen I i I Denial posed. Retail stores are planned for the lower levels of the Continued from pitfje one i buildings and completion of the stores along 2nd South is planned to coincide with completion of the Arts Center across the street. Two levels of underground parking with capacity for little over a thousand cars would serve Arts Center aud- i mid-ris- e t 5 u I f, '! si i s ' k Its the amazing new CASIO printingdisplay calculator that is a Desk Calculator: adds, subtracts, multiplies, divides, has memory, plus special functions Tape Readout or Visual Display: eliminates tape errors and provides accuracy check Payroll Machine: converts hours, minutes directly to R-2- 20 , i ;l decimal form Three machines in one. Write or call Suzy for free color brochure andor demonstration. DONT SAY CALCULATOR, SAY CASIO Office Equipment Associates 1367 Major Street 487-299- 1 As of last Friday, Lignell told the Enterprise he and Todd had had some success finding possible alternative funding sources but had nothing definite as yet. First Security hadn't been ruled out yet either. According to Lignell. representatives of the bank and the Redevelopment Agency had met with him and Todd on Friday to discuss possible clarifications in the developers' land sale contract with the city that would make the situation more palatable for the bank. The bank's main concern, Lignell said, was in being certain it wouldnt be forced to complete the project as agreed upon by Todd and Lignell if the developers could not complete it and the bank The meeting repossessed. concluded as the bank's attorney agreed to redraft portions of the contract, subject to approval by the agency and the developers. Changes received favorably City commissioners did look favorably upon proposed changes presented by architect Ron Molen in tentative construction plans for the project, although a decision was deferred until commissioner Glen Greener and Mayor Ted Wilson returned to the city. Changes call for construction of three mid-ris- e y buildings instead of e one high-riseight to ten for offices and story building stores, Lignell told the Enter prise. The tall building would have contained 147.000 square feet. The smaller ones will contain about 50,000 square feet each. A planned hotel of approximately 14 five-stor- floors with 384 rooms be moved southward than being built on the of 2nd South and Temple as originally iences. Lignell said, and provide convenience with entrances on 2nd and 3rd South and West Temple. Lignell also said among other possibilities, three major hotel companies had expressed interest in occupying the site, but nothing definite had been agreed upon as yet. The parking area will also be leased to one of two interested companies. would rather corner West pro The Any Paper" copier. SF-7Z- 0 Kamas telephone rates will rise ! Kamas-Woodlan- d Av 7 Tele- Co. wras phone granted apa rate substantial for proval increase from the Utah Public Service Commission, its first increase since 1963. f Appearing before the commission last week, company president Wayne Blaz-zar- d explained current rates used for Kamas' 850 customers did not provide sufficient revenue to cover cost of furnishing adequate service nor return an equitable profit to the company. All rates were affected by the commissions approval, including a service connection tariff change from $5 to $25. The rate change became Sharp Mighly-Max.- It copies on M everything-fro- m bond paper to bag paper. Many high priced copiers can copy only on hond paper. Bui Sharp the affordable hond paper copier ean copy nmny paper. That's right, any paper. From bond to brown paper bags. And its copies aiv as clear, crisp and clean as you've ever seen. liven if you make a minimum number of copies, the Sharp Mighty-Ma- " will prove practical for you. and impmvc your image. Its (lie any paper copier any business can afford. So afford yourself a f ree demonstration. Phone us today. effective immediately. Hat your business bean paying expensive g costs because you felt monthly ou' couldn't afford your own compute' Has your small business gone without the services of a computer because you thought the cost prohibitive, Tor the procedures too' hard to leamrWEVE.GOTi.GREAL.NEWS time-sharin- FORJTOUt ffnWTTl fl generation of computers just right for small businesses! Micro-compute- rs fcanlhandlt inventory managements payroll. tales analysis and general, accounting.? And the cost is even lets than most efjhe Computer Room introduce you to ourjtnew generation concept foil talet," service? ant education? A small computer could be your company's big slap forward time-shari- V I PARK CITY, UTAH OPEN NOON TO 10:00 PM 7 DAYS A WEEK ng |