“The Slow Pace of Lectures and Excursion Exchange” in this week’s new newsletter, according to the front page, “Mutually, to make mutually friendly deals” by D-Backs and Maricopa County. We deepened our questions about how you can make a friendly deal. Works by Hupka, Vanek, Picolo and Sealy from the Republic of Arizona. The team’s current lease expired in 2027, and “critical provisions to promote contract extensions are still under negotiation.” Significantly, these include “the amount the team needs to invest in order to make hopeful improvements to the ballpark and how those funds are collected.” The document also details that “teams want a way to collect tax revenues” like Cardinals at State Farm Stadium in Glendale. According to documents, D-Back and Maricopa County are “still tens of millions of dollars apart. Teams need to invest in advance to lease the land and develop it around the ballpark.” The county said the money was I hope that it was invested in Chasefield. “Faster than the structure laid out at the team’s suggestions.” And the county is proposing an additional $200 million investment from the team if it “gets the ability to acquire the ability to build complex development on-site at the ballpark.” Both sides “explained a warmer relationship in recent years,” but “questions remain as to whether the ballpark should own or operate, and who should pay what.” Jack’s seller, chairman of the oversight committee, said the amount of investment Hall proposed was “not practical or viable.”Republic of Arizona, 9/18).