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Show Ben Lomond Beacon, June 1 5, 978, Page 2 1 Film available for club use concerning tourist Beacon is published each for each weeks issue is Deadlines Thursday. 5 We at welcome all articles p.m. Monday from those who wish to contribute. Business office is 5388 So. 1900 W., Roy, Utah Phone the 825-166- Ben Lomond Tourists why we need them and how to treat our largest private industrial them generating film 6. is the subject of a new produced by the Foremost West, a non profit Publisher Advertising Manager J. Howard Stahle Mrs. Bonnie Stahle Sue Ellen Sims travel marketing consortium partially funded by the Four Corners Regional Com- Editor Carol Shaw Correspondent IRS exam sets deadline Revenue Service. No fees will be refunded to The deadline for filing an application to take the IRS an applicant who fails to take they Special Enrollment the examination, but Examination is Aug. 15, the may be appliced as a credit Internal Revenue Service to next years application The fee. 1978 examination will The examination, to be given on Sept. 25 and 26, is given have an increased emphasis annually to qualify persons on Federal tax laws as they who are neither CPAs nor apply to business operations to represent such as sole proprietorships, attorneys and corclients before the IKS. partnerships, porations. The examination Persons who want to take will include true or false and SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH announced. must multiple choice questions the examination Form 2587, in all of the four parts of the submit Application for the 1978 examination. Special Enrollment Application Form 2587; to the Publication Examination, which 486, Director, Audit Division, identifies sources of tax Internal Revenue Service, Washington, D.C. 20224. No extensions of time to file applications will be granted beyond Aug. 15, the IRS said. information that may be helpful in preparing for the purposes only, and a check or money order for the examination fee, made Utah examination; Publication Booklet Enrollment and Sample Special Examination The application must be Questions and Answers, are accompanied by a recent available from the IRS photo of the applicant, which District Office at 465 South 4(K) will be used for identification East, Salt Lake City, 84111 in 693, 1977 or telephone 0 Salt Lake City. Elsewhere in Utah call toll-fre- e payable to the Internal mission. The Foremost West includes the states of Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona and Nevada. film focuses The on the importance of tourism to the overall economy of the region and on the role the public plays in tourism promotion by five-stat- e treating visitors properly making them feel welcome. In Utah, travel is one of and economic tivities and scenic wonders in the Foremost West. The sectors, close to $380 million in 1977, according to J. Phillip Keene III, director of the Utah Travel Council. The industry's continued growth depends not only upon organizations such as the Utah Travel Council and the Four Corners Regional Commission but also upon every individual in our state. One of the purposes of the film to encourage is residents to take pride in our scenic attractions, and to give examples of simple but effective things we can do to make the visitor welcome and keep him in the state longer. The film also showcases the vast recreational ac five-stat- e national Ground-breakin- national The Inflation, Panic, and the 5.5 For a few brief moments, for reasons unknown to the nation's most learned economists, inflation slowed earlier this year. But the moratorium was short lived. It was apparently only a precursor of a new wave of cost escalation which has the potential of reaching the rate. dreaded double-digThe President has promised an all- - out battle against this menace. Robert Strauss was named as chief inflation fighter; and Barry Bosworth, Wage and Price Stability Director, is on the road talking "tough" about voluntary compliance with the President's 5.5 percent ceiling on wages and prices. Bosworth is threatening to "publicly criticize" private firms which refuse to comply with the President's ceiling. He will subpoena business records to prove grasslands. 16 mm color film is to available clubs, organizations and groups through the Utah Travel Council, Council Hill, Salt Lake City, Utah Hall-Capit- 84114. it P Read and use ceremonies g ( are in recreation areas; 42 national monuments, historic sites and memorials; 37 national forests; 30 national primitive and wilderness areas and 3 Ground broken on LDS site for Seattle construction SEATTLE, Washington area includes 10 parks five of which Utah); 5 national were conducted May 27, at the site of a Mormon temple to be built by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints. Elder Marion G. Romney, second counselor to President y Spencer W. Kimball, presided over the ceremony and offered the dedicatory prayer. any lack of voluntary compliance. The "tough" talk may be doing just the opposite of what the President want Construction will begin immediately on the wooded 23 site here. Elder F. Arthur Kay, of Renton, Washington, has been named as president of the new temple, and his wife, Kay, will serve as temple matron. Two counselors will be appointed later. During the dedication, Elder Romney said the temple was to be a gate to heaven. I see the ladder reaching from here to heaven, he said. In the ordinances of the temple I see the steps on a ladder by which we rise from the lowly earth to the vaulted skies. The new Mormon Temple in Seattle will serve approximately 200,000 church members who reside in Washington, Oregon, Alaska, northern Idaho and British Columbia. wanted. Businesses, expecting bureaucratic hostilities, are prices and quickly increasing informed employees are asking for pay raises. Automakers have already made mid- - term price changes adding $100 to the price of fastselling small cars. Food industry ads Limit executives are moving prices upward weekly to prepare for what they call "inevitable" price mandatory controls. While the President publicly fights inflation, the bureaucracy him with increased frustrates regulatory costs, the Federal Reserve eases tight money, the federal deficit moves to $60 billion, and big labor pushes a bill that will add five percent to the consumer price index. There is no panacea to the price spiral. The only thing economists agree will help is fiscal and monetary discipline for business, for government, for labor, and for the individual. If the punishment for violation of five percent order is public criticism (which has been ineffective in the past), then a more agressive plan is bound to appear. As the Wall Street Journal said: "Right is mainly now, the strategy it but suggests a demagoguery, in the of inflation panic rising spirit White House . . . Anyone who needs a raise or price increase had better try to get it . . . because in six months the penalty for such blatant careerism may be a ducking stool" or perhaps even something infinitely more restrictive. onmoo Mining claims noted Clarifying instructions for allowing regulations dealing with recording unpatented mining claims on federal land have been issued by the of Land Bureau Management. The instructions, as set forth in the attached chart, give the dates when assessment work or notice of intent to hold a claim must be filed. These filing dates will differ depending on whether a claim was located before or after October 21, 1976. Also, according to the where these instructions, documents are not timely filed, the claim must be considered abandoned, and a decision issued declaring the claim void. According to Paul L. Howard, BLM Utah state director, current regulations, January 27, issued 1977, on to im- plement the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 (FLPMA), require owners of unpatented mining claims located on or before October 21, 1976 to record their claims with the BLM by October 22, 1979. Claims located after October 21, 1976, must be filed in the proper BLM office within 90 days of their location. Until FLPMA was passed, holders of unpatented mining claims on federal lands were not required to record their claims with the federal government. The only record of claims was Most Cars & usually filed in local county courthouses. The purpose of the recordation regulations is to enable the public and BLM to know where claims are located and how many exist, and to avoid costly and efforts to clear the title to apparently abandoned claims and to Trucks are without the Price Increase. time-consumi- preserve By Edwin Feulncr Petersen Motor FANTASTIC y will offer SAVINGS PRIVE-AWA- Y on Hatchbacks, Wagons WE HAVE in Stock and ready for immediate delivery. & Sedans OVER 180 DATSUNS Sale Runs: Most of the cars and trucks where in stock before the increase. Wed. June 14th, Thurs. June 15th, Friday June 16th, Sat. June 17th, and Monday June 19th. JUST AN EXAMPLE: & FREE j; 3788W Electric power shortages can begin to cripple our nation as early as 1980 unless corrective action is taken at once. This is the alarming message of a new Heritage Foundation study into our four most probable energy futures. These initial power shortages, which can so easily evolve into cascading blackouts," are a direct product of and inaction. governmental action America's energy future, the study determined, ranges from the possibility of catastrophe as early as 1980 to a most-likelfuture where the nationwide impact is delayed until 1986, but at a cost of 7 million jobs and $87 billion a year in lost wages. Minorities, women and the young will be the most badly injured in all cases. But no one, the study shows, will escape the radically changed life style that would be forced on us by food shortages, breakdowns in transportation, health services, police protection and finance, and the other consequences of electric power shortages. Which, if any. of the most likely futures actually materializes will depend largely on two factors: 1) Whether or not the government and the courts permit construction of new nuclear power facilities, and 2) Whether coal production goals can be met in view of the increased demand that is anticipated. The conclusion: Without nuclear power, the United States will sutfer whether or not coal production goals are met. Various parts of the country will be affected to greater or lesser degrees', but in the end we all will suffer. The real root ot our national energy problem lies in differing views of what our society should be. says Milton R. Copulos. who conducted the study. But those who yearn for a simpler way of life must face the fact that ours is a technological society dependent on the generation and use of electric power for new jobs. A stable-state- " or economy, sought largely by those who already have achieved success, would forever stop huge numbers of Americans mostly women, minorities and the young from ever improving their position in society, he says. This unconscionable result can be avoided. Copulos says. We need new Clean Air standards that protect our economy as well as our environment. We need to eliminate artificial .barriers to construction of badly needed electric power stations. And we must eliminate provisions of the Environmental Policy Act which have become to our national Decisions which must be made to avert catastrophe can still be made. Policy changes which must be implemented can still be implemented. We must make certain that they are. (Feulncr. is president of The Heritage Foundation, a Washington-base- d research organization.) Coke During This OPEN TILL 11,00 P.M. DURIKG SOLE counter-productiv- well-bein- ETERSEN UUU0T0R 3130 WASHINGTON BLVD. OMPANY PHONE 621-807- 0 e valid existing rights. To date, more than 200,000 mining claims have been recorded in BLM state of- fices since FLPMA was passed. Of these, 42,781 have been recorded in the BLM Utah state office. Roughly million unpatented mining claims are estimated to have been located on public lands since 1872. Since 1867, when the first mineral patent was issued, BLM estimates that about 3 million acres of land has been public patented. 6-- Photo contest announced Photographers are invited enter the documentary photo contest sponsored by the Utah State Historical Society. Photographs submitted for the contest are to be of Utah life and labor in its various regions and seasons. Highest consideration will be given for photos taken between May 1978 and April 1979. A $50 prize is offered for each of the 12 best entries. All entries must be to black-and-whi- te glossy prints the by accompanied negatives and identified as to person or persons, place and date. All entries become the property of the Utah Slate Historical Society. Entries will be judged on sharpness, accuracy, quality of light, and imagination as to what is significant in our contemporary life. Submit entries to: Photo Contest, Utah State Historical So. Library. 307 West Second South, Salt Lakt City, Utah 84101. Deadline for the contest is May 1, 1979. |