OCR Text |
Show - v - Sun Times. December 1 2, 1 979, Page 6 Ben Lomond Beacon, December 1 3, 1 applications for seasonal LESSONS & -- DELIVERY low TERMS WE TAKE TRADE-M- S- LAYAWAY r:OWi! . LEASE PUN .MANY WATS TO Stop by today and too our ttoro manager FIT TOUR IUDCET WASHINGTON BOULEVARD PHONE employment coinciding with summer most school vacation periods. Some jobs, however, begin as early as April and continue as late as November, depending on weather conditions. According to Gary George, chief of BLM Management Services in Utah, each summer BLM employs a limited number of students and other temporary perto work with sonnel professional employees. This practice gives students and othersan opportunity to gain valuable training and to plan for a future career with the 979, Page your chosen field. It gives a basis for future jot selection and work ex perience. To apply, submit Federa physical duties. Good vision, with or without glasses, is BLM The job vacancies are at various locations in Utah under the jurisdiction ' of BLMs Utah State Office and the Salt Lake, Cedar City, Richfield, Moab and Vernal District Offices. Technician positions are available in the fields of required and a physical paid for by the applicant, may be before required ' ; V A ; valid state drivers license and a good driving record are required if the job includes operating t' a examination, Personal Qualificatior Statement (Standard Fora 171) to the Bureau of Lane , , ; ' government vehicle. Employees furnish their own clothing suitable for the job they are doing, including physical science (geology, boots, gloves, etc., and may, hydrology) and surveying. for some instances, have their in Applicants may apply two of these fields at two" own bed roll or sleeping bag. locations. Any equipment required to do the job, such as survey A minimum age of 18 is required since any seasonal equipment, is furnished by may be called ' the government. employee If selected, you must pay upon to perform hazardous work such as fire fighting. your transportation costs There is no maximum age from your home to the job limit. headquarters and return. You must be physically fit The work gives valuable and able to perform experience and allows you to to arduous work with professionals in moderate engineering, biology, range, realty, recreation, archaeology, forestry, . 393-673- 2 The deadline for research papers for the 32nd Annual Contest is Jan. 25, 1980. This contest is open to all junior and. senior students of public, private and parochial high schools and is sponsored by the Governors Committee on Employment of the Handicapped and the Presidents Committee on Employment of the Handicapped. Posters and rules should be posted in every high school, with additional details available in English departments. Students will not only compete for lucrative prizes statewide, but the winning entry will he entered in national competition. Each of the first five state winners will earn scholarships to the Utah college of their choice. In addition, first place winners will travel to Washingtonn, D.C., as the guest of the AFL-CIto the annual meeting of the Presidents Ability Counts Low-inco- me WASHINGTON, low-inco- D.C. tenants An estimated who overpaid rents in three-quart- er Management (951), 136 East South Temple, Salt Lak City, UT 84111, by Jan. l Copies of the Personal Qualification Statement may be obtained from any .State Job Service, Federal Job Information Center or BLM office. Be sure to include your dates of availability in the application. Students should also include a list of college courses that will be completed by next June. More information about this program may be obtained by contacting BLMs Utah State Office or by in Salt calling (801) Lake City. 524-42- million Section 236 housing between Feb. 1, 1975 and Sept. 30, 1977, are being sought througha massive direct mail and outreach effort so they can be paid some; $00 million in rent overcharges. The rent refunds of up to $500 per eligible tenant are a result of a settlemen in eleven class action suits including a nationwide class action filed on behalf of Section 236 housing tenants against the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Boxes of claim forms and instructions were mailed the week of Oc. 22, 1979, to theowners of sdrnd 4,800 Section 236 housing projects. The project' Owners will distribute claim forms to all current tenants. In addition, claim forms are being mailed directly to former tenants who have moved, if the project owner or former tenant has supplied forwarding addresses to the claim processing center. Temple Square lights to be modernized By Glen Perrins An extensive new lighting system is being installed on the grounds of Salt Lake's Temple Square and will be completed early in 1980, reports Elder Keith Harsenior electrical ding, engineer for the Mormon Church. New overhead lights also will be placed at each entrance to Temple Square, said the engineer. Lights also will be placed MWli The first five winners will share in cash prizes offered by the Disabled Americans Veterans and the Maurice Warshaw Foundation, in addition to the scholarships. ces of The contest theme for 1980 is Speaking Disabled People. At last Americas largest minority is awakening and is being heard throughout the nation. This minority group is composed of your handicapped neighbors in Salt Lake City, St. George, or Logan, throughout the state and nation. These disabled individuals are now actively fighting for rights granted to them by law, which is an equal chance to enter the mainstream of society. Students who are willing to reach out to learn about current legislation, civil rights of the handicapped and the social consciousness reflected by legislation will open a door to new awareness which will affect and enrich their own lives. Out-Voi- tenants sought government-subsidize- d mmsmm 1 Deadline set for writing contest BOB CURTIS DESERET FAMILY MUSIC 1581 2, 1 summer emptoymeiniii If you are 18 years of age or older and interested in summer' employment with of Land the Bureau Management in Utah, the time to act is now. Through Jan. 15, 1980, the BLM State Office in Salt Lake City will be accepting t ' Clearfield Courier, December 979, Page 6 BILRfl MUSIC Come in and lets msSce a deal. Have one under your tree this Christmas. ( , . FAMILY FDGC . J in the fountain, a focal point for viewers standing nside a panoramic window at the center. The new lights and wiring will all be enclosed and covered, reports Elder Harding. Although more lights than ever before will illuminate Temple Square, all of them are types, such as fluorescent, mercury or metal hallide, to conserve energy. Persons who are unsure whether an apartment project in which they lived at any time between Feb. 1, 1975 and Sept. 30, 1977 was a 236". project should contact the apartment owner or manager or look at their leases or any other forms completed when moving in, or contact a local HUD office or a community group providing free legal assistance. , r In order to receive their refunds, eligible tenants must return the completed forms no later than Jan. 31, 1980, to the Clerk of the U.S. District Court, P.O. Box 60864, Los Angeles, Calif. 90060. 236 housing call the claim mIMgn00)W7980. All claims will be processed and evaluated, and all checkes will be sent at one time, in the Spring of 1980. Eligible tenan- ts, on the average, will receive approximately $15 a month, for 32 months. The nationwide class action suit was brought in 1976 against HUD, which had refused to follow a congressional mandate to distribute funds to Section 236 project owners to subsidize increased tax and utility costs being borne by the tenants. ? A tenant in Carson, California was the first named plantiff in the nationwide case. The Western Center is a grantee of the Legal Services Corporation, a private nonprofit organization established by Congress to provide free legal assistance to the poor in civil matters. At least 40 other lawsuits many of them filed by LSC funded legal services programs - were brought before the nationwide class action suit was filed to comple HUD to pay the rent subsidies. - the Legal Aid Bureau of Baltimore, on behalf first suit. The next suit was filed by Connecticut legal services attorneys on behalf of a statewide tenant class. Suits were also filed by other legal services attorneys including the LSC funded National Housing Project in Berkeley and the Legal Aid Foundation of Long Beach, Calif. In April 1975, of eligible clients, brought the The settlement, which was agreed to by former HUD Patricia Harris, directs the distribution of the rent secretary 2gmj a orama sibqihbucissb 1978 refunds. The nationwide effort to reach the thousands of eligible tenants, being undertaken by the media and through the network of legal services attorneys, is necessary because many eligible tenants do not realize that they are members of the class to whom the settlement has been awarded. One problem in reaching eligible tenants is that an es0 timated percent of the renters who lived in section 236 subsidized apartment housing during the two-yeperiod have since moved out of government-subsidizehousing. 30-5- d S II PE RIS AVJ NGS NEW YEARS 50? jfoEE03 DECORATIONS QffiEGSHffl e frtoro (EXPIRES NOV. tiiliitv Ce3u37 'JwiJH dlbrntfaltil frill 23 30, 1979) DOWN HOLDS DEALS TILL DICEMCKMStli. Dol$ accomodatu 0 (or m low ai $19.96. 25-5- O!fflGl?GjtllD00D(!Mk GQCDCQlP UD(!titstMiSm Confetti DISCOUNTS ' tii limit!) Nobemokers $ msmmsmmmmm&m O0DGl!tf Bonners Hots Horns QBSGOmUS) I IS -- Ordor Nov A Savo $ hciKWAH 0AIC3 Ctaoitoofl A DS37. CO., ICZ3. 41 03 tffiE D UI.3M4S71 2157 Grant Ava., Ogdan g3 x I |