US ENERGY CORP
DEF 14A, 1997-09-29
METAL MINING
Previous: UNITED ILLUMINATING CO, SC 13D, 1997-09-29
Next: VACU DRY CO, 10-K, 1997-09-29



[USE LOGO ]
                                U.S. ENERGY CORP.

                     MINERALS PLAZA, GLEN L. LARSEN BUILDING
                               877 NORTH 8TH WEST
                             RIVERTON, WYOMING 82501


                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                     TO BE HELD ON FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1997


TO THE SHAREHOLDERS OF U.S. ENERGY CORP:

      PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Annual Meeting of  Shareholders of U.S. Energy
Corp.,  a Wyoming  corporation  (the  "Company"  or "USE"),  will be held at the
Company's  executive  offices,  877 North 8th West,  Riverton,  Wyoming 82501 on
Friday,  December 5, 1997,  at 11:00 a.m.,  local time,  or at any  adjournments
thereof (the "Meeting"), for the purpose of acting upon:

        1. The  election of one  director  to serve  until the third  succeeding
           annual meeting of shareholders, and until his successor has been duly
           elected or appointed and qualified;

        2. Amending the Restated  1996 Stock Award Program to extend the term of
           the Stock Award Program through 2007 and eliminate the requirement of
           annual  shareholder  approval  of the number of shares  awarded  each
           year.  The total number of shares which may be issued under the Stock
           Award  Program  (approved  by the  shareholders  in 1996) will not be
           increased.

        3. Such other business as may properly come before such meeting.

        Only shareholders of record at the close of business on Friday,  October
10, 1997, will be entitled to notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting or any
adjournment  thereof.  The Company's  transfer  books will not be closed for the
Meeting.

        A list of shareholders entitled to vote at the Meeting will be available
for inspection by any record  shareholder at the Company's  principal  executive
offices in Riverton,  Wyoming.  The inspection  period begins two days after the
date this Notice is given and ends at the conclusion of the Meeting.

                                            By Order of the Board of Directors

                                               /s/ Max T. Evans

                                            MAX T. EVANS, Secretary

        Please date, sign and return your Proxy so that your shares may be voted
as you wish,  and to assure  quorum.  The prompt  return of your  signed  Proxy,
regardless  of the number of shares you hold,  will aid the  Company in reducing
the expense of additional Proxy solicitation.  The giving of such Proxy does not
affect your right to vote in person should you attend the Meeting.


                             YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT

Dated: November 7, 1997



<PAGE>



                                U.S. ENERGY CORP.

                     MINERALS PLAZA, GLEN L. LARSEN BUILDING
                               877 NORTH 8TH WEST
                             RIVERTON, WYOMING 82501

                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                       FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                     TO BE HELD ON FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1997

        The enclosed Proxy is solicited on behalf of the Board of Directors (the
"Board") of U.S.  Energy  Corp.  (the  "Company" or "USE") for use at the Annual
Meeting of Shareholders to be held at 11:00 a.m. local time on Friday,  December
5, 1997 (the  "Meeting").  It is  expected  that the  Notice of  Meeting,  Proxy
Statement and Proxy will be mailed to record  shareholders  on or about November
7, 1997.

                              REVOCABILITY OF PROXY

        The Proxy may be  revoked  at any  time,  to the  extent it has not been
exercised,  by: (i) written  revocation;  (ii) executing a later-dated Proxy and
delivering  it to the  Company;  (iii)  requesting  (in writing) a return of the
Proxy; or (iv) the shareholder voting in person at the Meeting.

                                 VOTING OF PROXY

        If the  enclosed  Proxy is executed  and  returned,  it will be voted as
indicated by the shareholder on the proposals.  Unless  otherwise  instructed to
the contrary in the Proxy, the appointees named in the Proxy will:

        1. VOTE FOR the management nominee to the Board; and

        2. VOTE in favor of extending the term of the 1996 Stock Award  Program,
           and eliminate the requirement of annual  shareholder  approval of the
           number of shares awarded each year.

        3. VOTE in accordance with their best judgment on any other matters that
           may properly come before the Meeting.

        As of the  date of the  Notice  of  Meeting  and  Proxy  Statement,  the
management  of the Company has no knowledge of other matters that may be brought
before the Meeting.

                                  SOLICITATION

        The costs of  preparing,  assembling  and mailing the Notice of Meeting,
Proxy  Statement,  Proxy,  (collectively  the  "Proxy  Materials")  as  well  as
solicitations of the Proxies and  miscellaneous  costs with respect to the same,
will be paid by the Company. The solicitation is to be made by use of the mails.
The Company may also use the services of its  directors,  officers and employees
to solicit Proxies,  personally or by telephone and telegraph,  at no additional
salary or  compensation.  The Board  does not  expect to use  specially  engaged
employees or paid solicitors, although it reserves the right to do so.

        The Company  intends to request banks,  brokerage  houses and other such
custodians, nominees and fiduciaries to forward copies of the Proxy Materials to
those persons for whom they hold shares and request  authority for the execution
of the Proxies.  The Company will  reimburse the nominee  holders for reasonable
out-of-pocket expenses incurred by them in so doing.

                                VOTING SECURITIES

        Only holders of record of shares of the Company's  $.01 par value common
stock (the  "Common  Stock"),  at the close of business  on Friday,  October 10,
1997,  will be entitled to vote at the Meeting.  On the record date, the Company
had  6,849,051  shares of Common Stock  outstanding  and  entitled to vote.  The
Company  has no other  class of voting  securities  outstanding.  Each  share of
Common  Stock is  entitled  to one vote,  in person or by proxy,  on all matters
other than the election of directors, with respect to which cumulative voting is
provided.  Cumulative  voting  generally  allows each holder of shares of Common
Stock to multiply the number of shares  owned by the number of  directors  being
elected,  and to distribute the resulting  number of votes among nominees in any
proportion that the holder chooses.



<PAGE>



        A  majority  of the  issued  and  outstanding  shares of  Common  Stock,
represented  in person or by Proxy,  constitutes  a quorum at any  shareholders'
meeting.

                     PRINCIPAL HOLDERS OF VOTING SECURITIES

        The  following  is a list of all record  holders  who, as of October 10,
1997  beneficially  owned more than five  percent of the  outstanding  shares of
Common Stock,  as reported in filings with the  Securities  Exchange  Commission
(the "SEC") or as  otherwise  known to the Company.  Except as otherwise  noted,
each holder  exercises  the sole voting and  dispositive  powers over the shares
listed  opposite the holder's  name,  excluding the shares subject to forfeiture
and  those  held in  ESOP  accounts  established  for  the  employee's  benefit.
Dispositive  powers  over  the  forfeitable  shares  held  by  employees  and  a
non-employee  director who are not officers is shared by the Company's  Board of
Directors.   Voting  and   dispositive   powers  are  shared  by  the  Company's
non-employee  directors  (Messrs.  Anderson,  Bebout,  Brenman and Fraser)  over
forfeitable  shares held by the Company's  five  executive  officers  ("Officers
Forfeitable   Shares").   The  ESOP   Trustees   exercise   voting  powers  over
non-allocated ESOP shares and dispositive powers over all ESOP shares. It should
be noted that voting and  dispositive  powers over certain  shares are shared by
two or more of the listed holders.  Such  securities are reported  opposite each
holder having a shared interest therein. See "Certain Other Transactions".

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                    AMOUNT AND NATURE OF BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP
                         ------------------------------------------------------------
                            VOTING RIGHTS       DISPOSITIVE RIGHTS          TOTAL         PERCENT
NAME AND ADDRESS         -------------------   --------------------       BENEFICIAL         OF
OF BENEFICIAL OWNER        SOLE      SHARED      SOLE      SHARED          OWNERSHIP      CLASS(1)
- -------------------        ----      ------      ----      ------          ---------      --------
<S>                      <C>       <C>         <C>        <C>              <C>              <C>  
John L. Larsen(2)        575,277   1,056,338   548,636    1,406,974        1,985,036        27.6%
201 Hill Street
Riverton, WY 82501

Max T. Evans(3)          108,461     868,726   108,461    1,117,512        1,244,259        17.8%
1410 Smith Road
Riverton, WY 82501

Daniel P. Svilar(4)      135,363     699,059   113,163      699,059          860,272        12.3%
580 S. Indiana Street
Hudson, WY 82515

Michael D. Zwickl(5)      65,839     512,359    65,839      512,359          578,198         8.4%
137 North Beech Street
Casper, WY 82601

Kathleen R. Martin(6)        -0-     512,359       -0-      512,359          512,359         7.5%
309 North Broadway
Riverton, WY 82501

Crested Corp.            512,359         -0-   512,359          -0-          512,359         7.5%
877 North 8th West
Riverton, WY 82501

Harold F. Herron(7)       84,674     368,079    79,067      719,615          819,615        11.8%
3425 Riverside Road
Riverton, WY 82501

U.S. Energy Corp. ESOP(8)155,811         -0-   404,597          -0-          404,597         6.0%
877 North 8th West
Riverton, WY 82501

Kennedy Capital
Management, Inc.         565,323         -0-   806,473          -0-          806,473        11.8%
10829 Olive Boulevard
St. Louis, MO 63141
__________

                                        2

<PAGE>



<FN>

        (1)  Percent  of class is  computed  by  dividing  the  number of shares
beneficially  owned plus any options held by the reporting person, by the number
of shares outstanding plus the shares underlying options held by that person.

        (2) Mr. Larsen  exercises sole voting powers over 242,536 directly owned
shares,  106,000  shares held in joint  tenancy  with his wife,  200,100  shares
underlying  options and 26,641  shares held in the U.S.  Energy  Corp.  Employee
Stock Ownership Plan ("ESOP") account established for his benefit.  The directly
owned shares include 27,500 shares gifted to his wife, that have remained in Mr.
Larsen's  name.  Shares over which shared voting  rights are  exercised  consist
155,811  shares  held by the ESOP,  which have not been  allocated  to  accounts
established for specific  beneficiaries and shares held by corporations of which
Mr.  Larsen is a director  consisting  of 512,359  shares held by Crested  Corp.
("Crested"),   125,556  shares  held  directly  by  Plateau   Resources  Limited
("Plateau"),  75,000 shares underlying  options held by Plateau,  100,000 shares
held by Sutter Gold Mining Company ("SGMC"),  75,000 shares  underlying  options
held by SGMC, and 12,612 shares held by Ruby Mining Company ("Ruby"). Mr. Larsen
shares voting and  dispositive  rights over such shares with the other directors
of those corporations. Mr. Larsen shares voting powers over the unallocated ESOP
shares and  dispositive  powers over all ESOP shares in his  capacity as an ESOP
Trustee with the other ESOP Trustees.  Shares over which sole dispositive rights
are  exercised  consist of  directly  owned  shares,  joint  tenancy  shares and
options, less the 27,500 shares gifted, but not transferred, to his wife. Shares
for which shared  dispositive powers are held consist of the 404,597 shares held
by the ESOP,  101,850 shares held by employees who are not officers or directors
of the Company and a  non-employee  director  ("Forfeitable  Shares")  which are
subject to forfeiture,  the shares held by Crested,  Plateau, SGMC and Ruby, and
the Plateau and SGMC option  shares.  The shares listed under "Total  Beneficial
Ownership" also include 29,426 shares  beneficially held by Mr. Larsen which are
subject to forfeiture.  The Company's  non-employee  directors  exercise  shared
voting and dispositive powers over such shares. The shares shown as beneficially
owned by Mr. Larsen do not include 42,350 shares owned directly by his wife, who
exercises the sole investment and voting powers over those shares.

        (3) Shares over which Mr. Evans  exercises sole voting powers consist of
2,901 directly owned shares,  36,389 shares held in joint tenancy with his wife,
11,971 shares held in an Individual  Retirement  Account ("IRA") for his benefit
and 57,200  shares  underlying  options.  Shares for which Mr.  Evans holds sole
dispositive  powers are  comprised of his directly  held shares,  joint  tenancy
shares, IRA shares and the shares underlying his options.  Shares over which Mr.
Evans  exercises  shared  voting  rights  consist of the shares held by Crested,
Plateau,  the  unallocated  ESOP shares and the Plateau  options.  He  exercises
shared  dispositive rights over the shares held by Crested,  Plateau,  the ESOP,
and the Plateau options. Mr. Evans shares voting and dispositive powers over the
shares  held by  Crested  and  Plateau  with the  remaining  directors  of those
companies.  The shares listed under "Total  Beneficial  Ownership"  also include
18,286 shares  beneficially  held by Mr. Evans which are subject to  forfeiture.
The Company's  non-employee  directors  exercise  shared voting and  dispositive
powers over such shares.

        (4) Mr. Svilar  exercises sole voting powers over 22,084  directly owned
shares,  12,700 shares held in joint  tenancy with his wife,  11,000 shares held
jointly with a deceased  family  member,  1,000 shares held as custodian for his
minor child  under the  Wyoming  Uniform  Transfers  to Minors Act (the  Minor's
shares),  66,000  shares  underlying  options and 22,200 shares held in the ESOP
account  established for his benefit.  He holds sole dispositive  power over his
directly  held  shares,  joint  tenancy  shares,  Minor's  shares and the shares
underlying  his options.  The shares over which he exercises  shared  voting and
dispositive rights consist of the 512,359 shares held by Crested and the 100,000
shares and 75,000 shares  underlying  options held by SGMC. Mr. Svilar exercises
shared voting and dispositive  powers as a director of Crested and SGMC with the
other  directors  of  those  companies.  He also  exercises  shared  voting  and
investment powers of 11,700 shares held by a nonaffiliated  company of which Mr.
Svilar is a partner.  The shares listed under "Total Beneficial  Ownership" also
include  25,850  shares  beneficially  held by Mr.  Svilar  which are subject to
forfeiture.  The Company's  non-employee  directors  exercise  shared voting and
dispositive powers over such shares.

        (5) Mr. Zwickl  exercises sole voting and dispositive  powers over 8,770
directly held shares,  3,444 shares held in an IRA  established  for his benefit
and 53,625 shares held by two (2) limited  partnerships.  He is the sole officer
and  director  of the  corporate  general  partner of those  partnerships.  As a
director of Crested,  Mr. Zwickl exercises shared voting and dispositive  powers
over the 512,359 shares held by Crested with the other Crested directors.


                                              3

<PAGE>



        (6)  Consists of shares  held by Crested  over which  shared  voting and
dispositive powers are exercised with the other Crested directors.

        (7) Mr. Herron  exercises sole voting powers over 54,486  directly owned
shares,  12,000  shares held for his minor  children  under the Wyoming  Uniform
Transfers to Minors Act (the Minor's shares),  11,000 shares underlying options,
5,607  shares  held in the ESOP  account  established  for his benefit and 1,581
shares  held by  Northwest  Gold,  Inc.  ("NWG").  Sole  dispositive  powers are
exercised  over the  directly  held  shares,  the  Minor's  shares,  the  shares
underlying  options and the shares held by NWG. Mr. Herron exercises sole voting
and  investment  powers over the NWG shares as NWG's sole  director.  Mr. Herron
exercises  shared  voting  rights over  125,556  shares held by Plateau,  75,000
shares  underlying  options held by Plateau,  12,612 shares held by Ruby and the
155,811  unallocated ESOP shares.  Shared  dispositive rights are exercised over
the shares held by the ESOP,  Plateau,  Ruby and the 101,850 Forfeitable Shares.
Mr. Herron exercises  shared  dispositive and voting powers over the shares held
by Plateau and Ruby as a director of those companies with the other directors of
those companies.  He exercises powers over the ESOP shares in his capacity as an
ESOP  Trustee  with the other ESOP  Trustees.  The shares  listed  under  "Total
Beneficial Ownership" also include 21,013 shares beneficially held by Mr. Herron
which are subject to forfeiture.  The Company's  non-employee directors exercise
shared  voting and  dispositive  powers over such  shares.  The shares  shown as
beneficially  owned by Mr. Herron do not include 2,895 shares owned  directly by
his wife who exercises the sole voting and dispositive powers over those shares.

        (8) The ESOP  holds  404,597  shares,  155,811  of  which  have not been
allocated to accounts of individual plan  beneficiaries.  The Trustees  exercise
the voting rights over the  unallocated  shares an  dispositive  rights over all
ESOP shares. Plan participants exercise voting rights over allocated shares.
</FN>
</TABLE>

                                  PROPOSAL ONE

                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

        Pursuant  to the Bylaws,  Company's  directors  are  divided  into three
classes, each consisting of two persons so far as is practicable.  Directors are
elected until the third  succeeding  annual  meeting and until their  successors
have been duly elected or appointed and qualified or until death, resignation or
removal.  Because of the addition of Mr. Fraser in 1996, and the  resignation of
Mr. Evans in 1997, only one director is in the class up for re-election in 1977.
The term of one director,  John L. Larsen will expire at the Meeting, and he has
been nominated for re-election. The current directors of the Company are:

                                    OTHER                         MEETING AT
NAME, AGE AND                  POSITIONS WITH        DIRECTOR     WHICH TERM
DESIGNATION                   WITH THE COMPANY         SINCE      WILL EXPIRE
- -----------                   ----------------         -----      -----------

John L. Larsen (66)              Chairman, CEO         1966           1997
 (nominee)                       and President                   Annual Meeting
                                 (c)(d)(e)

Harold F. Herron (44)            Vice President        1989           1998
 (continuing director)           (a)(b)(c)(e)                    Annual Meeting

David W. Brenman (41)            (b)(d)                1989           1998
 (continuing director)                                           Annual Meeting

Don C. Anderson (71)             (a)                   1990           1999
 (continuing director)                                           Annual Meeting

Nick Bebout (47)                 (b)(d)                1989           1999
 (continuing director)                                           Annual Meeting

H. Russell Fraser (56)           (b)(c)(d)             1996           1999
 (continuing director)                                           Annual Meeting


                                        4

<PAGE>




        (a)    Member of the nominating committee.
        (b)    Member of the compensation/stock option committee.
        (c)    Member of the executive committee.
        (d)    Member of the audit committee.
        (e)    ESOP trustee.

        As noted under "Voting Securities",  cumulative voting is allowed in the
election of directors.  The two directors receiving the greatest number of votes
cast at a duly convened meeting will be elected.  The proxy holders named in the
Proxies do not  currently  intend to cumulate  the votes of Proxies  received by
them, but reserve the right to cumulatively  vote such shares for the management
appointees, in such manner as they elect.

        Management  recommends that the shareholders vote for the re-election of
Mr. Larsen to the Board of Directors.

        Executive  officers  of the  Company  are elected by the Board at annual
directors' meetings,  which follow each Annual  Shareholders'  Meeting, to serve
until the  officer's  successor  has been duly elected and  qualified,  or until
death, resignation or removal by the Board.

FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS.

        HAROLD F. HERRON,  a director and  Vice-President,  is the son-in-law of
John L. Larsen,  a principal  shareholder,  Chairman,  President  and CEO.  Nick
Bebout, a director, is a nephew of Daniel P. Svilar, a principal shareholder and
General  Counsel.  There are no other family  relationships  among the executive
officers or directors of the Company.

BUSINESS EXPERIENCE AND OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS OF DIRECTORS AND NOMINEES.

        JOHN L. LARSEN has been principally  employed as an officer and director
of the Company and Crested Corp. for more than the past five years. He is also a
director of the Company's subsidiary,  Ruby Mining Company ("Ruby"). Crested and
Ruby have registered equity securities under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(the "Exchange Act"). Mr. Larsen is Chief Executive  Officer and Chairman of the
board of  directors  of Plateau  Resources,  Limited  and of Sutter  Gold Mining
Company, and he is a director of Yellow Stone Fuels Corp.

        MAX T.  EVANS has been  principally  employed  as an  officer  and chief
geologist  of the Company  and  Crested  for more than the past five years.  Mr.
Evans  resigned  as a director  of the Company in 1997.  He is  President  and a
director of Crested.  Mr. Evans  received B.S. and M.S.  degrees in geology from
Brigham Young University.

        HAROLD F. HERRON has been the  Company's  Vice-President  since  January
1989.  From 1976,  Mr.  Herron has been an employee of Brunton,  a  manufacturer
and/or marketer of compasses,  binoculars and knives. Brunton was a wholly owned
Company  subsidiary until Brunton was sold in February 1996.  Initially,  he was
Brunton's sales manager, and since 1987 he has been its President. Mr. Herron is
a director of Ruby and NWG, which have registered  equity  securities  under the
Exchange  Act.  Mr.  Herron  received an M.B.A.  degree from the  University  of
Wyoming  after  receiving  a B.S.  degree in  Business  Administration  from the
University of Nebraska at Omaha.

        DAVID W. BRENMAN has been a director of the Company  since January 1989.
Since September 1988, Mr. Brenman has been a self-employed financial consultant.
In  that  capacity,  Mr.  Brenman  has  assisted  the  Company  and  Crested  in
negotiating certain financing arrangements. From February 1987 through September
1988,  Mr.  Brenman  was a  vice-president  of  project  financing  for  Lloyd's
International  Corp.,  a  wholly-owned  subsidiary  of Lloyd's  Bank,  PLC. From
October 1984 through February 1987, Mr. Brenman was President,  and continues to
be a director of Cogenco International,  Inc., a company engaged in the electric
cogeneration industry, which has registered equity securities under the Exchange
Act. Mr. Brenman has an L.L.M. degree in taxation from New York University and a
J.D. degree from the University of Denver.


                                        5

<PAGE>



        DON C. ANDERSON has been a Company director since May 1990. From January
1990  until  mid-fiscal  1993,  Mr.  Anderson  was the  Manager  of the  Geology
Department  for the  Company.  Mr.  Anderson  was  Manager  of  Exploration  and
Development for Pathfinder  Mines  Corporation,  a major domestic uranium mining
and milling corporation,  from 1976 until his retirement in 1988. Previously, he
was Mine Manager for Pathfinder's  predecessor,  Utah International,  Inc., from
1965 to  1976.  He  received  a B. S.  degree  in  geology  from  Brigham  Young
University.

        NICK BEBOUT has been director and President of NUCOR, Inc. ("NUCOR"),  a
privately-held  corporation that provides  exploration and development  drilling
services to the mineral and oil and gas  industries,  since 1987.  Prior to that
time,  Mr. Bebout was Vice  President of NUCOR from 1984.  Mr. Bebout is also an
officer,  director and owner of other  privately-held  entities  involved in the
resources industry.

        H.  RUSSELL  FRASER has been  chairman of the board and chief  executive
officer of Fitch  Investors  Services,  L.P.  for more than the past five years.
Fitch Investors  Services,  L.P., New York, New York, is a nationwide  stock and
bond rating and information  distribution  company.  From 1980-1989,  Mr. Fraser
served as president and chief executive  officer of AMBAC,  the oldest municipal
bond issuer in the United States.  Under his  direction,  AMBAC's assets grew to
more than $1 billion at year-end 1988 from $35 million at the beginning of 1980,
while  statutory net income after taxes  increased to $57 million in 1988 from a
loss in 1979.

        Before joining AMBAC,  Mr. Fraser was senior vice president and director
of  fixed-income  research at Paine Webber,  Inc. While a member of the board of
directors at Paine  Webber,  Mr. Fraser  participated  in both the corporate and
public finance  departments and headed Paine Webber's  trading and sales for all
corporate bond products.  Previously, he managed corporate ratings at Standard &
Poor's,  supervising research analysis of corporate bonds,  preferred stock, and
commercial paper.  During his tenure at S&P he started  commercial paper ratings
'A-1' through  'A-3',  initiating  the plus and minus  qualifiers and rating the
first two financial guaranty companies,  AMBAC and MBIA. Mr. Fraser holds a B.S.
in finance and economics from the  University of Arizona.  He is a member of the
Municipal  Analysts  Group of New York and founder of the Fixed Income  Analysts
Society.

ADVISORY BOARD

        The Board of Directors has established an Advisory Board to be comprised
of individuals  with  experience in the areas of business,  financial  services,
national elected office, and other areas. The members of the Advisory Board will
meet  quarterly  to  review  topics  of  interest  or  concern  to the  Board of
Directors, and report to the Board of Directors the findings and recommendations
of the  Advisory  Board.  The Advisory  Board will not include any  directors or
officers of the  Company,  and none of the  findings or  recommendations  of the
Advisory board will be binding upon the Company.

        The first  appointment  to the Advisory  Board is the Honorable  Alan K.
Simpson.

        SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF NOMINEES, DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

        The following  table sets forth,  as of October 10, 1997,  the shares of
Common Stock,  and the $.001 par value common stock of the  Company's  52%-owned
subsidiary,  Crested, held by each director and nominee, and by all officers and
directors as a group. Unless otherwise noted, the listed record holder exercises
sole  voting and  dispositive  powers over the shares  reported as  beneficially
owned,  excluding  the  shares  subject  to  forfeiture  and those  held in ESOP
accounts  established for the employee's  benefit.  Dispositive  powers over the
forfeitable shares is shared by the Company's Board of Directors, while the ESOP
Trustees  exercise  dispositive  powers over all ESOP shares. It should be noted
that voting and dispositive  powers for certain shares are shared by two or more
of the listed  holders.  Such shares are reported  opposite each holder having a
shared interest therein,  but are only included once in the shareholdings of the
group presented in the table.


                                        6

<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                          COMPANY COMMON STOCK                    CRESTED COMMON STOCK
                    -------------------------------          ------------------------------
                         AMOUNT AND         PERCENT               AMOUNT AND        PERCENT
                          NATURE OF           OF                   NATURE OF          OF
                    BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP   CLASS(1)          BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP  CLASS(1)
                    --------------------   --------          --------------------  --------

<S>                     <C>                  <C>               <C>                   <C>  
John L. Larsen          1,985,036(2)         27.6%             5,879,182(9)          57.1%

Harold F. Herron          819,695(2)         11.8%             5,574,999(10)         54.1%

Don C. Anderson           222,813(3)          3.3%             5,300,297(11)         51.5%

Nick Bebout               229,764(4)          3.6%             5,300,297(11)         51.5%

David W. Brenman          218,658(5)          3.2%             5,300,297(11)         51.5%

H. Russell Fraser         218,658(6)          3.2%             5,300,297(11)         51.5%

Max T. Evans            1,244,259(2)         17.8%               414,236(12)          4.0%

Daniel P. Svilar          860,272(2)         12.3%               530,000(13)          5.1%

R. Scott Lorimer          239,379(7)          3.4%               265,000(14)          2.6%

All officers and
directors as a
group (eight persons)   2,444,772(8)         35.7%             6,244,235(15)         60.6%


<FN>

        (1)  Percent  of class is  computed  by  dividing  the  number of shares
beneficially  owned plus any options held by the reporting  person or group,  by
the number of shares  outstanding plus the shares underlying the options held by
that person or group.

        (2) See  footnotes  for this  person  to the table  presented  under the
heading "Principal Holders of Voting Securities".

        (3) Includes  6,100  directly  held shares,  3,055 shares held in an IRA
established for Mr. Anderson's benefit,  over which he exercises sole voting and
dispositive  power. Also includes 21,000 shares subject to forfeiture over which
Mr.  Anderson  exercises  sole  voting  power.  Mr.  Anderson  exercises  shared
dispositive  powers over the  101,850  shares  held by  individuals  who are not
officers of the Company which are subject to forfeiture  ("Forfeitable Shares"),
with the  other  directors  of the  Company.  As a  non-employee  director,  Mr.
Anderson  exercises shared voting and dispositive rights over 97,650 shares held
by executive  officers  which are subject to forfeiture  ("Officers  Forfeitable
Shares"), with the other non-employee directors.

        (4)  Consists of 16,056  shares held  directly,  50 shares held in joint
tenancy  with his wife and 213,658  shares  subject to  forfeiture.  Mr.  Bebout
exercises sole voting and  dispositive  powers over the directly held shares and
joint tenancy shares.  Mr. Bebout exercises shared  dispositive  powers over the
101,850  Forfeitable  Shares  with the  other  directors  of the  Company.  As a
non-employee director, Mr. Bebout exercises shared voting and dispositive rights
over  the  97,650  Officers  Forfeitable  Shares,  with the  other  non-employee
directors.

        (5) Consists of 5,000 shares held directly and 213,658 shares subject to
forfeiture.  Mr. Brenman  exercises sole voting and dispositive  powers over the
5,000 directly held shares. Mr. Brenman exercises shared dispositive powers over
the 101,850  Forfeitable  Shares with the other  directors of the Company.  As a
non-employee  director,  Mr.  Brenman  exercises  shared voting and  dispositive
rights over the 97,650 Officers  Forfeitable Shares, with the other non-employee
directors.

                                        7

<PAGE>



        (6) Consists of 1,000  directly  held shares and 4,000 shares held in an
IRA for Mr.  Fraser's  benefit,  and 213,658 shares  subject to forfeiture.  Mr.
Fraser  exercises  sole voting and  dispositive  rights over the  directly  held
shares and the IRA shares.  Mr. Fraser exercises shared  dispositive powers over
the 101,850  Forfeitable  Shares with the other  directors of the Company.  As a
non-employee director, Mr. Fraser exercises shared voting and dispositive rights
over  the  97,650  Officers  Forfeitable  Shares,  with the  other  non-employee
directors.

        (7) Mr.  Lorimer  exercises  sole  voting  powers  over 2 directly  held
shares,  17,444 shares held in the ESOP account established for his benefit, and
29,700 shares underlying options.  Mr. Lorimer exercises sole dispositive powers
over his directly held shares and the shares  underlying his options.  He shares
voting and dispositive  powers over 100,000 shares and 75,000 shares  underlying
options  held by SGMC as a director  of SGMC.  The shares  listed  under  "Total
Beneficial  Ownership"  also  include  17,233  shares  beneficially  held by Mr.
Lorimer which are subject to forfeiture.  The Company's  non-employee  directors
exercise shared voting and dispositive powers over such shares.

        (8) Consists of 1,002,182  shares over which the group members  exercise
sole voting  rights,  including  364,000  shares  underlying  options and 32,248
shares allocated to ESOP accounts  established for the benefit of group members.
The listed shares include 908,216 shares over which group members  exercise sole
dispositive  rights.  Shared voting and  dispositive  rights are exercised  with
respect to 1,179,846 and 1,530,482 shares, respectively.

        (9) Consists of 5,300,297  Crested  shares held by the Company,  100,000
shares and 150,000  shares  underlying  options held by SGMC,  60,000 shares and
150,000 shares  underlying  options held by Plateau,  53,885 shares held by Ruby
with respect to which shared  voting and  dispositive  powers are exercised as a
director  with the other  directors of those  Companies  and 65,000  forfeitable
shares held by employees,  over which Mr. Larsen  exercises  shared  dispositive
powers with the remaining Crested directors.

        (10)  Include  6,932  directly  held shares and 3,885 shares held by NWG
over which Mr. Herron exercises sole voting and investment powers. Mr. Herron is
the sole director of NWG.  Also includes the Crested  shares held by the Company
and Ruby,  and the shares and shares  underlying  options held by Plateau,  with
respect to which shared  voting and  dispositive  powers are exercised as a USE,
Plateau and Ruby director with the other directors of those companies.

        (11)Consist  of the Crested  shares held by the Company  with respect to
which shared voting and dispositive  powers are exercised as a director with the
other directors of the Company.

        (12)  Includes  139,236  directly  held  shares,  and 60,000  shares and
150,000 shares underlying options held by Plateau,  with respect to which shared
voting  and  dispositive  powers  are  exercised  as a  director  with the other
directors of Plateau and 65,000 forfeitable shares held by employees, over which
Mr.  Evans  exercises  shared  dispositive  powers  with the  remaining  Crested
directors.

        (13) Mr.  Svilar  exercises  sole voting and  dispositive  over  175,000
directly  held shares and 40,000  shares which are held in joint  tenancy with a
deceased  family  member.  Also  includes  100,000  shares  and  150,000  shares
underlying  options  held by SGMC  with  respect  to  which  shared  voting  and
dispositive  powers are exercised as a director with the other directors of SGMC
and 65,000 forfeitable shares held by employees, over which Mr. Svilar exercises
shared dispositive powers with the remaining Crested directors.

        (15) Mr.  Lorimer  exercises sole voting powers over 15,000 shares which
are subject to  forfeiture.  In  addition,  as a director of SGMC,  Mr.  Lorimer
shares voting and dispositive  powers with the other SGMC directors over 100,000
Crested shares and 150,000 Crested shares underlying options held by SGMC.

        (15)Consists  of 376,198  shares over which the group  members  exercise
sole voting rights,  including  15,000 shares subject to forfeiture.  The listed
shares include 361,168 shares over which group members exercise sole dispositive
rights.  Shared  voting and  dispositive  rights are  exercised  with respect to
5,818,067 and 5,883,067 shares, respectively.


                                        8

<PAGE>



        Each  director   beneficially   holds  the   2,400,000,   2,040,000  and
255,000,000  shares of Ruby, NWG and Four Nines Gold, Inc. ("FNG") common stock,
respectively,  held by the Company.  They exercise shared voting and dispositive
powers over those shares as Company directors with the other Company  directors.
Those shares represent 26.7%, 7.6%, and 50.9% of the outstanding shares of Ruby,
NWG, and FNG, respectively. John L. Larsen beneficially holds 272,500,000 shares
of  FNG  common  stock  (54.4%  of  the  outstanding  shares),   which  includes
255,000,000  shares held by the Company,  5,000,000  held by USECC Joint Venture
and  5,000,000  shares held by Crested,  over which Mr. Larsen shares voting and
dispositive  powers with the  remaining  directors  of the Company and  Crested.
Harold F. Herron beneficially holds 2,400,500, 2,597,500, and 265,000,000 shares
of the common stock of Ruby,  NWG, and FNG,  respectively,  representing  26.7%,
9.7%,  and 52.9%,  respectively,  of those  classes of stock.  Daniel P.  Svilar
beneficially owns 14,000,000 shares of the common stock of FNG (4,000,000 shares
directly in joint tenancy with other family members),  representing 2.8% of that
class. None of the other directors or officers directly hold any other shares of
stock of Ruby,  NWG or FNG. All executive  officers and directors of the Company
as a group (8 persons) hold 2,400,500,  2,597,500, and 284,500,000 shares of the
stock of Ruby, NWG, and FNG,  representing  26.7%,  9.7%, 60.0% and 56.2% of the
outstanding shares of those companies, respectively.

        The Company has reviewed Forms 3, 4 and 5 reports  concerning  ownership
of Common Stock in the Company, which have been filed with the SEC under Section
16(a) of the Exchange Act, and received written  representations from the filing
persons.  Based solely upon review of the reports and  representations,  Messrs.
Larsen and Herron each had three late filings;  Messrs.  Evans, Svilar,  Lorimer
and Fraser each had two late filings, and Crested Corp. and Messrs. Anderson and
Brenman  each had one late  filing.  The  Company  believes  no other  director,
executive  officer,  beneficial  owner of more than ten  percent  of the  Common
Stock,  or other person  subject  obligations,  failed to file such reports on a
timely basis during fiscal 1996.

INFORMATION CONCERNING EXECUTIVE OFFICERS WHO ARE NOT DIRECTORS

        The following  information is provided pursuant to Item 401 of Reg. S-B,
regarding the executive officers of the Company who are not also directors.

        MAX T.  EVANS,  age 72,  has been  Secretary  for USE and  President  of
Crested for more than the past five years.  Mr. Evans had been a director of USE
for more than the past five  years,  prior to April 17,  1997.  He serves at the
will of each board of directors.  There are no understandings  between Mr. Evans
and any other  person  pursuant to which he was named as an  officer.  He has no
family  relationships  with any of the other executive  officers or directors of
USE or Crested.  During the past five years,  Mr. Evans has not been involved in
any Reg.
S-B Item 401(d) proceeding.

        DANIEL P. SVILAR,  age 68 has been  General  Counsel for USE and Crested
for more  than the past  five  years.  He also has  served  as  Secretary  and a
director of Crested,  Assistant Secretary of USE, and is an officer of SGMC. His
positions of General  Counsel to, and as officers of the  companies,  are at the
will of each board of directors.  There are no understandings between Mr. Svilar
and any other  person  pursuant  to which he was  named as  officer  or  General
Counsel. He has no family relationships with any of the other executive officers
or directors of USE or Crested, except his nephew Nick Bebout is a USE director.
During the past five years,  Mr.  Svilar has not been  involved in any Reg.  S-B
Item 401(d) proceeding.

        ROBERT  SCOTT  LORIMER,  age 46,  has been  Treasurer,  Chief  Financial
Officer,  Controller and Chief  Accounting  Officer for USE and Crested for more
than the past five years.  Mr.  Lorimer is also an officer of Sutter Gold Mining
Company, and is an officer of Yellow Stone Fuels Corp. Mr. Lorimer is also chief
financial  officer and a director of the Brunton Company.  He serves at the will
of the Boards of Directors.  There are no understandings between Mr. Lorimer and
any  other  person,  pursuant  to which he was named an  officer,  and he has no
family relationship with any of the other executive officers or directors of USE
or Crested. During the past five years, he has not been involved in any Reg. S-B
Item 401(d) listed proceeding.


                                        9

<PAGE>



                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

        Under a  Management  Agreement  dated  August 1, 1981,  the  Company and
Crested   share  certain   general  and   administrative   expenses,   including
compensation  of the officers  and  directors of the  companies  (but  excluding
directors' fees) which have been paid through the USECC Joint Venture ("USECC").
Substantially  all the work  efforts of the  officers of the Company and Crested
are devoted to the business of both the Company and Crested.

        All USECC  personnel  are  Company  employees,  in order to utilize  the
Company's ESOP as an employee benefit  mechanism.  The Company charges USECC for
the direct and indirect  costs of its employees for time spent on USECC matters,
and USECC charges one-half of that amount to each of Crested and the Company.

        The following  table sets forth the  compensation  paid to the USE Chief
Executive  Officer,  and those of the four most highly compensated USE executive
officers who were paid more than  $100,000 cash in any of the three fiscal years
ended May 31, 1997. The table includes compensation paid such persons by Crested
for  1995,  1996 and  1997,  and  Brunton  for  1995 and 1996 for such  persons'
services to such subsidiaries.

                                       SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

</TABLE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   Long Term Compensation
                                                             --------------------------------
                                    Annual Compensation              Awards          Payouts
                            -----------------------------------------------------------------
(a)                (b)          (c)         (d)      (e)         (f)          (g)       (h)       (i)
                                                    Other
Name                                               Annual    Restricted                        All Other
And                                                Compen-      Stock                  Ltip     Compen-
Principal                                          Sation     Award(s)     Options/   Payouts   Sation
Position          Year       Salary($)   Bonus($)    ($)         ($)        Sars(#)     ($)     ($)(4)
- --------          ----       ---------   --------    ---         ---        -------     ---     ------
<S>               <C>       <C>          <C>         <C>    <C>               <C>        <C>    <C>    
John L. Larsen    1997      $131,200     $4,000      --     $ 98,158(1)       -0-        --     $13,500
 CEO and          1996       148,600      -0-        --         --            -0-        --      15,566
 President        1995       144,023      2,751      --        9,000(2)       -0-        --      13,361

Daniel P. Svilar  1997      $109,700     $3,400      --       81,454(1)       -0-        --     $11,300
 General Counsel  1996       124,153      -0-        --         --            -0-        --      14,009
 and Assistant    1995       112,615      2,076      --        8,100(2)       -0-        --      11,008
 Secretary

Harold F. Herron  1997       $31,900    $   990      --      120,858(3)       -0-        --     $ 3,300
 Vice President   1996       113,600      -0-        --         --            -0-        --       4,037
                  1995       117,238      2,033      --         --            -0-        --       6,626

R. Scott Lorimer  1997      $100,395     $8,100      --       54,299(1)       -0-        --     $10,300
 Treasurer        1996       110,100      -0-        --         --            -0-        --      13,749
 and CFO          1995       112,403      2,098      --        5,681(2)       -0-        --      10,989

<FN>

        (1)  Includes  bonus shares of USE common stock equal to 40% of original
bonus shares  issued FY 1990,  multiplied  by $10.875,  the closing bid price on
issue  dates.  Also  includes  shares  issued  under  1996 Stock  Award  Program
multiplied  by $10.875,  the closing bid price on the issue dates.  These shares
are subject to forfeiture on termination of employment,  except for  retirement,
death or disability.

        (2) Includes  bonus shares equal to 20% of original  bonus shares issued
FY 1990,  multiplied  by $3.75 in 1995,  the closing  bid price on issue  dates.
These shares are subject to forfeiture on termination of employment,  except for
retirement, death or disability.


                                       10

<PAGE>



        (3) Includes  bonus shares equal to 100% of original bonus shares issued
FY 1990,  multiplied  by $10.875,  the  closing  bid price on issue  date.  Also
includes shares issued under the 1996 Stock Award Program multiplied by $10.875,
the closing bid price on the issue date.  These shares are subject to forfeiture
on termination of employment, except for retirement, death or disability.

        (4)   Dollar   values   for  ESOP   contributions   and  401K   matching
contributions.
</FN>
</TABLE>

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION PLANS AND EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENTS

        To provide an  incentive  to Mr.  Larsen to develop  the Green  Mountain
Mining  Venture (" GMMV") into a producing  mine as soon as possible,  in fiscal
1993 the USE Board  adopted a long-term  incentive  arrangement  under which Mr.
Larsen is to be paid a non-recurring  $1,000,000  cash bonus,  provided that the
Nuexco  Exchange  Value of uranium  oxide  concentrates  has been  maintained at
$25.00 per pound for six consecutive  months,  and provided further that USE has
received  cumulative cash  distributions of at least  $10,000,000 from GMMV as a
producing property.

        The Company  has  adopted a plan to pay the  estates of Messrs.  Larsen,
Evans and Svilar  amounts  equivalent  to the salaries they are receiving at the
time of their death,  for a period of one year after death,  and reduced amounts
for up to five years thereafter. The amounts to be paid in such subsequent years
have not yet been  established,  but would be  established  by the Boards of the
Company and Crested.

        Mr.  Svilar has an  employment  agreement  with the Company and Crested,
which  provides for an annual  salary in excess of $100,000,  with the condition
that Mr. Svilar pay an unspecified  amount of expenses incurred by him on behalf
of the Company  and its  affiliates.  In the event Mr.  Svilar's  employment  is
involuntarily  terminated, he is to receive an amount equal to the salary he was
being  paid at  termination,  for a two year  period.  If he should  voluntarily
terminate his  employment,  the Company and Crested will pay him that salary for
nine months  thereafter.  The foregoing is in addition to Mr. Svilar's Executive
Severance and Non-Compete Agreement with the Company (see below).

        In fiscal 1992, the Company signed  Executive  Severance and Non-Compete
Agreements with Messrs. Larsen, Evans, Svilar and Lorimer, providing for payment
to such person upon  termination of his employment  with the Company,  occurring
within three years after a change in control of the Company,  of an amount equal
to (i)  severance  pay in an  amount  equal to three  times the  average  annual
compensation  over the prior five taxable years ending before change in control,
(ii)  legal  fees  and  expenses  incurred  by  such  persons  as  a  result  of
termination,  and  (iii)  the  difference  between  market  value of  securities
issuable on exercise of vested  options to purchase  securities  in USE, and the
options' exercise price.  These Agreements also provide that for the three years
following  termination,  the terminated  individual will not compete with USE in
most of the western  United  States in regards to  exploration  and  development
activities  for  uranium,  molybdenum,  silver  or gold.  For  such  non-compete
covenant,  such person will be paid  monthly  over a three year period an agreed
amount for the value of such covenants. These Agreements are intended to benefit
the Company's shareholders, by enabling such persons to negotiate with a hostile
takeover  offeror and assist the Board  concerning  the  fairness of a takeover,
without the  distraction  of possible  tenure  insecurity  following a change in
control. As of this Proxy Statement date, the Company is unaware of any proposed
hostile takeover.

        The Company and Crested  provide  all of their  employees  with  certain
forms of insurance  coverage,  including life and health  insurance.  The health
insurance  plan does not  discriminate  in favor of  executive  employees;  life
insurance  of $50,000 is  provided  to each  member of upper  management  (which
includes all persons in the  compensation  table),  $25,000 of such  coverage is
provided  to  middle-management  employees,  and  $15,000  of such  coverage  is
provided to other employees.


                                       11

<PAGE>



        EMPLOYEE  STOCK  OWNERSHIP  PLAN  ("ESOP").  An ESOP has been adopted to
encourage ownership of the Common Stock by employees, and to provide a source of
retirement income to them. Because the persons performing duties for the Company
are  employees of USE,  they  benefit  from the ESOP and the other  compensation
plans of USE, as described below. The ESOP is a combination stock bonus plan and
money  purchase  pension  plan.  It is expected  that the ESOP will  continue to
invest primarily in the Common Stock. Messrs.  Larsen,  Herron and Evans are the
trustees of the ESOP.

        Contributions   to  the  stock  bonus  plan  portion  of  the  ESOP  are
discretionary  and are  limited  to a maximum of 15% of the  covered  employees'
compensation  for each year ended May 31.  Contributions  to the money  purchase
portion of the ESOP are mandatory  (fixed at ten percent of the  compensation of
covered employees for each year), are not dependent upon profits or the presence
of  accumulated  earnings,  and may be made in cash or shares of Company  Common
Stock.

        The Company made a contribution  of 24,069 shares to the ESOP for fiscal
1997, all of which were  contributed  under the money purchase  pension plan. At
the time the shares were contributed,  the market price was approximately  $8.87
per share, for a total contribution with a market value of $213,492,  (which has
been funded by the Company).  Crested and the Company are each  responsible  for
one-half of that amount (i.e., $106,746) and Crested currently owes its one-half
to the Company.

        Employees  are eligible to  participate  in the ESOP on the first day of
the plan year (June 1) following  completion  of one year of service in which at
least  1,000  hours are  credited.  Each  employee's  participation  in the ESOP
continues  until the ESOP's  anniversary  date coinciding with or next following
termination  of service by reason of retirement,  disability or death.  In these
cases, the participant will share in the allocation of USE's  contributions  for
the ESOP year in which the retirement, death or disability occurs, and will have
a fully-vested interest in allocations to the participant's account.

        An employee's  participation in the ESOP does not cease upon termination
of employment.  If the employment of a participant in the ESOP is terminated for
reasons  other than  disability,  death,  or  retirement  (unless  the  employee
receives  a  lump  sum   distribution   upon  the  termination  of  employment),
participation  continues  following  the  termination,  until  five  consecutive
one-year  breaks in service  have been  incurred.  An employee is deemed to have
incurred a one-year break in service during any year in which 500 or fewer hours
of service are completed.

        Employee  interests  in the ESOP are  earned  pursuant  to a seven  year
vesting schedule. Upon completion of three years of service for the Company, the
employee  is  vested  as to 20% of  the  employee's  account  in the  ESOP,  and
thereafter  at the rate of 20% per  year.  Any  portion  of an  employee's  ESOP
account which is not vested is forfeited upon  termination of employment for any
reason, other than retirement, disability, or death.

        The 24,069  shares  issued to the ESOP for fiscal  1997  included  1,524
shares  allocated to John L. Larsen's  account,  886 shares  allocated to Max T.
Evans' account, 371 shares allocated to Harold F. Herron's account, 1,274 shares
allocated to Daniel P. Svilar's account,  and 1,166 shares allocated to R. Scott
Lorimer's  account,  for a total of 5,221  shares  allocated to accounts for all
executive  officers as a group (five  persons).  Shares  forfeited by terminated
employees who were not fully vested were  reallocated to plan  participants  and
included  323,  188, 78, 271 and 247 shares to the  accounts of Messrs.  Larsen,
Evans, Herron, Svilar and Lorimer,  respectively.  The accounts of the executive
officers  are fully  vested,  as they have all been  employed by the Company and
USECC for more than the past seven years.  Allocations of shares for fiscal 1998
have not been made with respect to any participant in the ESOP.

        The maximum loan outstanding during fiscal 1997 under a loan arrangement
between the Company and the ESOP,  was $1,014,300 at May 31, 1997 for loans made
in  fiscal  1992 and  1991.  Interest  owed by the ESOP  was not  booked  by the
Company.  Crested pays one-half of the amounts  contributed  to the ESOP by USE.
Because  the loans are  expected  to be  repaid  by  contributions  to the ESOP,
Crested may be considered to indirectly owe one-half of the loan amounts to USE.
The loan was  reduced by  $183,785  plus  interest  of  $168,574.84  through the
contribution  of  shares by the ESOP to the ESOP in 1996.  There was no  similar
reduction, however, for fiscal 1997.


                                       12

<PAGE>



        STOCK  OPTION  PLAN.  The Company  has an  incentive  stock  option plan
("ISOP"),  reserving an aggregate of 975,000 shares of Common Stock for issuance
upon exercise of options granted thereunder. Awards under the plan are made by a
committee  of two or more  persons  selected  by the  Board  (presently  Messrs.
Herron,  Bebout,  Brenman and Fraser).  The committee  establishes  the exercise
periods  and  exercise  prices for  options  granted  under the plan.  The Board
ultimately  ratifies the actions of the committee.  Total grants to officers and
directors as a group may not exceed 275,000 shares.

        Options expire no later than ten years from the date of grant,  and upon
termination of employment,  except in cases of death,  disability or retirement.
Subject to the ten year maximum period, upon the death,  retirement or permanent
and total  disability of an optionee,  options are  exercisable for three months
(in case of retirement or  disability) or one year (in case of death) after such
event. In fiscal 1994,  conditions relating to periods of Company service before
vesting  of stock  purchased  on  exercise  of the  non-qualified  options  were
removed.

        For fiscal 1996, options to purchase 360,000 shares of Common Stock were
granted to USE  employees  (none were granted to officers or  directors),  at an
exercise  price of $4.00  per share  (the  closing  bid  price on grant  date in
December 1996). In fiscal 1997,  options to purchase 106,100 shares  (previously
issued to  employees  in 1992 and 1996) were  exercised.  None of the  exercised
options had been held by officers or directors.

        The following  table shows  unexercised  options,  how much thereof were
exercisable, and the dollar values for in-the-money options, at May 31, 1997.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

       AGGREGATED OPTION/SAR EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR AND FY-END OPTION/SAR VALUES

     (a)                    (b)            (c)                (d)                   (e)
                                                                                 Value of
                                                           Number Of            Unexercised
                                                          Unexercised          In-the-money
                                                        Options/sars At       Options/sars At
Shares                                 Fy-end (#)          Fy-end($)
                         Acquired         Value          Exercisable/           Exercisable
Name                  On Exercise (#)  Realized($)       Unexercisable         Unexercisable
- ----                  ---------------  -----------       -------------         -------------

<S>                         <C>            <C>            <C>                 <C>        
John L. Larsen,             -0-            -0-              100,000             $687,000(1)
  CEO, President                                          exercisable         exercisable and
                                                                                unexercised

                                                            100,100             $597,597(2)
                                                          exercisable         exercisable and
                                                                                unexercised

Max T. Evans,               -0-            -0-              57,200              $341,484(2)
  Secretary                                               exercisable         exercisable and
                                                                                unexercised

Harold F. Herron,           -0-            -0-              11,000              $65,670(2)
  Vice President                                          exercisable         exercisable and
                                                                                unexercised

Daniel P. Svilar            -0-            -0-              66,000              $394,020(2)
  Assistant Secretary                                     exercisable         exercisable and
                                                                                unexercised

R. Scott Lorimer            -0-            -0-              29,700              $177,309(2)
  Treasurer                                               exercisable         exercisable and
                                                                                unexercised
<FN>

(1)  Equal to $8.87 closing bid on last trading day in FY 1997, less $2.00 per share option exercise price,
     multiplied by all shares exercisable.

(2)  Equal to $8.87 closing bid on last trading day in FY 1997, less $2.90 per share option exercise price,
     multiplied by all shares exercisable.
</FN>
</TABLE>

                                       13

<PAGE>




        RESTRICTED  STOCK  PLANS.  The  Company and  Crested  have issued  stock
bonuses to various  executive  officers and directors of the Company and others.
These  shares  are  subject  to  forfeiture  to the  issuer  by the  grantee  if
employment terminates otherwise than for death, retirement or disability. If the
required  service is  completed,  the risk of  forfeiture  lapses and the shares
become the unrestricted property of the holder.  Messrs.  Larsen, Evans, Herron,
Svilar,  Lorimer  and  all  executive  officers  who  are  participants  of this
restricted  stock plan,  as a group (five  persons),  received  25,200,  12,750,
18,900, 18,360, 15,120, and 90,330 shares of Common Stock, respectively, through
fiscal 1997.  Shares issued  through  fiscal 1997 also include 20,000 for Don C.
Anderson,  director.  The shares  issued in 1997  represent a 40% bonus (20% for
1996 and 20% for 1997) on this plan's original shares.  The expenses relating to
these stock issuances are shared equally by the Company and Crested.  Additional
shares  were issued in calendar  1997 under the 1996 Stock  Award  Program.  See
below.

        SUBSIDIARY PLANS.  During the year ended May 31, 1991, Brunton adopted a
salary deduction plan intended to qualify as a deferred  compensation plan under
Internal  Revenue Code Section  401(k).  Harold F. Herron and John L. Larsen are
the only Company  officers who are able to participate in this retirement  plan.
The fiscal 1994  acquisition of Brunton by the Company,  and the sale of Brunton
in 1996, have not affected the Brunton 401(k) plan.

        Other  than as set  forth  above,  neither  the  Company  nor any of its
subsidiaries have any pension,  stock option, bonus, share appreciation,  rights
or other plans  pursuant to which they  compensate  the  executive  officers and
directors of the Company.  Other than as set forth above,  no executive  officer
received other  compensation  in any form which,  with respect to any individual
named in the Cash Compensation  Table,  exceeded ten percent of the compensation
reported  for that person,  nor did all  executive  officers as a group  receive
other  compensation  in any form which exceeded ten percent of the  compensation
reported for the group.

DIRECTORS' FEES AND OTHER COMPENSATION

        The  Company  pays  non-employee  directors  a fee of $150  per  meeting
attended.  All directors are  reimbursed  for expenses  incurred with  attending
meetings.

        Prior to fiscal 1992, the Board  authorized  the Executive  Committee to
make loans to members of the Board, or to guarantee their obligations in amounts
of up to  $50,000,  if such  loans or  surety  arrangements  would  benefit  the
Company.  Any loans or surety  arrangements for directors which are in excess of
$50,000 will require Board rather than Executive Committee approval. The Company
loaned  $25,000 to David W. Brenman  under this plan prior to fiscal  1991.  The
loan to Mr. Brenman bears interest at the prime rate of the Chase Manhattan Bank
and was due  September  1, 1994,  but has been  extended to December 31, 1997 by
Board  vote  (Mr.  Brenman  abstaining).   The  loan  was  provided  as  partial
consideration  for Mr. Brenman's  representation of the Company to the financial
community in New York City. The loan to Mr.  Brenman  originally was approved by
the executive committee.

        1996 STOCK AWARD PROGRAM. The Board of Directors and the shareholders of
the Company have approved an annual incentive  compensation  arrangement for the
issuance  of up to 67,000  shares of Common  Stock each year (from 1997  through
2002) to the five executive officers of the Company, in amounts to be determined
each year based on the  earnings of the Company for the prior  fiscal year ended
May 31.

        Shares will be issued  annually,  provided that each officer to whom the
shares are to be issued is  employed  by the Company as of the issue date of the
grant year,  and provided  further that the Company has been  profitable  in the
preceding  fiscal year.  The officers  will receive up to an aggregate  total of
67,000  shares per year for the years 1997  through  2002,  although if in prior
years,  starting in 1997, fewer than 67,000 USE shares are awarded in any one or
more years,  the unissued  balance of the 67,000 share maximum will be available
for issue in subsequent  years.  One-half of the compensation  expense under the
Program is the responsibility of Crested.  The Board of Directors determines the
date each year (starting in 1997) when shares are to be issued.

        The number of shares to be awarded  each year out of such 67,000  shares
aggregate limit is determined by the Compensation  Committee,  and will be based
on certain criteria  including the Company's  earnings per share of Common Stock
for the prior fiscal year.  The total shares  issued shall be divided  among the
officers based on the following  percentages:  John L. Larsen 29.85%,  Daniel P.
Svilar 22.39%, Max T. Evans 17.91%, Harold F. Herron

                                       14

<PAGE>



14.93% and R. Scott Lorimer  14.93%.  Other factors  bearing on the prior year's
profitability may be taken into consideration by the Compensation  Committee. In
addition,  the  actual  issuance  of the  number  of shares  recommended  by the
Compensation Committee to be awarded to the officers presently is required to be
submitted for approval by shareholders of the Company at the Annual Meeting held
subsequent to the end of the fiscal year.

        In fiscal 1996, the Compensation  Committee determined the Program award
for fiscal 1996 to be 14,158 shares of Common Stock, as follows:  John L. Larsen
(4,226 shares), Harold F. Herron 2,113 shares), R. Scott Lorimer (2,113 shares),
Daniel P. Svilar (3,170 shares), and Max T. Evans (2,536 shares). This award was
approved by the  shareholders at the 1996 Annual Meeting.  Such shares have been
issued to the officers as of the date of this Proxy Statement.

       The 1996 Stock Award Program is proposed to be changed. See Proposal Two.

                                  PROPOSAL TWO

        To approve the Restated  1996 Stock Award Program to (i) extend its term
for an additional five years (through 2007), without increasing the total number
of shares  presently  issuable  under the Plan;  (ii) increase the incentive for
eligible  officers to remain with the Company by making  shares issued under the
Program forfeitable until retirement,  death or disability;  and (iii) eliminate
the present  requirement of annual shareholder  approval of amounts of shares to
be awarded to the eligible officers.

        The  Board of  Directors  has  approved  the  following  changes  to the
Program, which has been renamed the "Restated 1996 Stock Award Program" and will
take  effect  upon  approval  by  shareholders  at the 1997  Annual  Meeting  of
Shareholders.

        First,  the Program is proposed to be extended  for an  additional  five
years to allow for the distribution (if warranted by Company performance) of the
total number of shares available under the Program.  Currently, 67,000 shares of
Common Stock are issuable  each year  (402,000  shares from and  including  1997
through 2002).  Although  shares not issued out of the annual 67,000 share limit
are available for issue in future years,  the present  expiration of the Program
in 2002 could result in the premature  elimination of the Program if shares were
available  for issue from prior years,  but not issued out by 2002.  The term of
the Restated 1996 Stock Award Program has been extended through 2007.

        Second, to provide additional  incentive for the officers to remain with
the company over the years,  each  allocation  of shares to an officer under the
Restated  Program each year will be issued in the name of the officer,  and will
be earned  out  (vested)  over 5 years,  at the rate of 20% as of May 31 of each
year  following  the date of issue of the  shares.  However,  none of the vested
shares  shall  become  available  to or come under the control of the officer in
whose  name  the  shares  were  issued,   until  termination  of  employment  by
retirement,  death or disability. Upon termination of employment, the shares and
certificates  will be  released to the  officer.  Until  termination,  the share
certificates will be held by the Treasurer of the company. Voting rights will be
exercised over the shares by the non-employee directors of the Company, in their
discretion.  Dividends or other  distributions  on or with respect to the shares
will be held by the Treasurer for the benefit of the officers.

        Third, to eliminate  unnecessary corporate  administration  expense, the
number  of shares to be  awarded  annually  to each  officer  under the  Restate
Program, as determined by the Compensation  Committee,  will not be submitted to
the  shareholders  of the Company for approval,  as the overall 1996 Stock Award
Program was approved by the shareholders in 1996.

        Management of the Company  recommends the shareholders vote for Proposal
Two.


                                       15

<PAGE>



                        COMMITTEES AND MEETING ATTENDANCE

        During the fiscal year ended May 31, 1997 there were six Board  meetings
and  three  Executive  Committee  meetings.  Each  current  member  of the Board
attended at least 75% of the combined  Board meetings and meetings of committees
on which  the  director  serves.  From time to time,  the  Board  and  Executive
Committee act by unanimous written consent pursuant to Wyoming law. Such actions
are counted as meetings for purposes of disclosure under this paragraph.

        The Board has established an Executive  Committee to act in place of the
Board between meetings of the Board. The Executive  Committee had three meetings
in fiscal 1997.

        An Audit  Committee has also been  established  by the Board.  The Audit
Committee had one meeting in fiscal 1997.  Members of the Audit  Committee  have
also met  informally  at  various  times  during the year.  The Audit  Committee
reviews the Company's financial statements and accounting controls, and contacts
the  independent  public  accountants  as  necessary  to  ensure  that  adequate
accounting  controls  are in place and that proper  records are being kept.  The
Audit  Committee  also  reviews  the  audit  fees  of  the  independent   public
accountants.

        The Compensation  Committee reviews,  approves and makes recommendations
on the Company's  compensation  policies,  practices and procedures.  During the
year ended May 31, 1997,  the members of the  Compensation  Committee  discussed
compensation matters on an individual basis and had one formal meeting.

        A Management  Cost  Apportionment  Committee was  established by USE and
Crested in 1982, for the purpose of reviewing the apportionment of costs between
USE and Crested.  John L. Larsen,  Max T. Evans and Scott Lorimer are members of
this Committee.

        The Board of Directors  has a Nominating  Committee,  which did not meet
during the most recently completed year. The Nominating  Committee will consider
nominees   recommended  by  security  holders  for  consideration  as  potential
nominees.  Anyone wishing to submit a potential  nominee for  consideration as a
management  nominee for the 1998 Annual  Meeting must provide the nominee's name
to the  Nominating  Committee  not later  than  June 9,  1998,  together  with a
completed  questionnaire,  the form of which will be  supplied by the Company on
request.

                           CERTAIN OTHER TRANSACTIONS

        TRANSACTIONS WITH SHEEP MOUNTAIN  PARTNERS ("SMP").  In fiscal 1989, the
Company and Crested through USECC sold a one-half interest in the Sheep Mountain
properties to Cycle Resource  Investment  Corporation  ("CRIC"),  a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Nukem,  Inc., and thereafter USECC and CRIC contributed  their 50%
interests  in the  properties  to a new  Colorado  partnership,  SMP,  which was
organized to further  develop and mine the uranium  claims,  market  uranium and
acquire additional uranium sales contracts. Due to disputes with CRIC and Nukem,
(which had been in arbitration  proceedings,  and the results of the arbitration
having been  appealed by Nukem and CRIC to the United States Tenth Circuit Court
of Appeals),  necessary mine maintenance has been funded by USECC alone.  During
fiscal 1997,  the Company and Crested  received  $4,000,000  from the SMP escrow
accounts as part of their monetary  damages  awarded by the  Arbitration  Panel.
This  $4,000,000  was first applied to the account  receivable  for mine standby
costs as  required  under  recovery  cost  accounting  rules.  At May 31, 1997 a
$8,600,000 monetary award remains unpaid as well as certain equity damages.

        TRANSACTIONS  WITH YELLOW  STONE FUELS CORP.  Yellow  Stone Fuels Corp.,
hereafter ("YSFC") was organized on February 17, 1997 in Ontario,  Canada. As of
February 17, 1997, YSFC acquired all the  outstanding  shares of Common Stock of
Yellow  Stone Fuels,  Inc. (a Wyoming  corporation  which was  organized on June
3,1996), in exchange for YSFC issuing the same number of shares of YSFC Stock to
the former  shareholders  of Yellow  Stone  Fuels,  Inc.  ("YFI").  YSFC and its
wholly-owned  subsidiary  Yellow Stone Fuels, Inc. will hereafter be referred to
collectively as YSFC.


                                       16

<PAGE>



        In order to  concentrate  the efforts of USECC on  conventional  uranium
mining  using the  Shootaring  and  Sweetwater  Mills,  USECC  decided to take a
minority  position in Yellow Stone Fuels,  Inc. and not be directly  involved in
properties  believed  suitable for the production of uranium through the in-situ
leach  ("ISL")  mining  process.  USECC will have first call on any  uranium ore
bodies YSFC discovers which are amenable to conventional  mining and milling and
YSFC will have a call on ore  bodies  discovered  by USECC  amenable  to the ISL
process.  In the ISL process,  groundwater  fortified with  oxidizing  agents is
pumped  into  the ore  body,  causing  the  uranium  contained  into  the ore to
dissolve.  The  resulting  solution is pumped to the surface where it is further
processed to a dried form of uranium which is shipped to  conversion  facilities
for  eventual  sale.  Generally,  the ISL  process  is more cost  effective  and
environmentally  benign compared to conventional  underground mining techniques.
In addition,  less time may be required to bring an ISL mine into operation than
to permit and build a conventional mine.

        As of May 31, 1997,  YSFC had  10,545,000  shares of Common Stock issued
and outstanding,  including  3,000,000 shares (28.5%) issued to USE and Crested.
Most of the funds used by YSFC have been provided by USECC under a $400,000 loan
facility.  As part  consideration  for the loan, USE and Crested  entered into a
Voting Trust Agreement having an initial term of 24 months or until the $400,000
loan facility is paid, with two principal  shareholders of YSFC, whereby USE and
Crested will have voting control of more than 50% of the  outstanding  shares of
YSFC. The majority of the remaining  outstanding YSFC shares are owned by family
members of John L. Larsen, Chairman of USE.

        YSFC has staked and/or leases or holds unpatented  mining claims,  state
leases,  and  patented  mining  claims  covering  approximately  10,200 acres in
Wyoming and New Mexico.

        YSFC  will   require   additional   funding  to  maintain  its  property
acquisition   program,   conduct  the  geological  and  engineering  studies  on
properties to evaluate their  suitability to in-situ  recovery  methods,  and to
build and operate in-situ recovery  facilities on suitable  properties.  YSFC is
currently  seeking  additional  funding,  but  there is no  assurance  that such
funding  will  be  obtained.   If  YSFC  obtains  equity  funding,  the  current
shareholders'  ownership  interest  would be reduced,  however the $400,000 loan
facility from USE and Crested is convertible to YSFC common stock, so that USE's
and Crested's equity ownership levels could be maintained.

        In fiscal 1997, USE and USECC entered into several agreements with YSFC,
including a Milling Agreement through Plateau  Resources.  The Shootaring Canyon
mill  facilities  will be  available to YSFC to  transport  uranium  concentrate
slurry and loaded  resin to the mill and  process  it into  uranium  concentrate
("yellowcake"),  for which Plateau will be paid its direct costs plus 10%. Other
agreements  include a Drill Rig Lease  Agreement  for YSFC to have access to USE
drilling rigs at the prevailing market rates; an Outsourcing and Lease Agreement
for assistance from USECC accounting and technical  personnel on a cost plus 10%
basis and a sublease for 1,000 square feet of office space for $1,000 per month;
and a Ratification  of  Understanding  by which USECC will offer to YSFC (with a
reserved  royalty  in  amounts  to be agreed on later but not  exceeding  10% of
uranium  concentrated  produced)  any  uranium  properties  amenable  to in-situ
production  which USECC  acquires or has the right to acquire.  In return,  YSFC
will  offer to USECC ( with a reserve  royalty in amounts to be agreed on later)
uranium properties  amenable to conventional  mining methods which YSFC acquires
or has the right to  acquire.  USECC also will make its  library  of  geological
information  and related  materials  available to YSFC.  YSFC also has a Storage
Agreement  with GMMV by which YSFC stores  used  low-level  contaminated  mining
equipment  purchased  from a third  party at  GMMV's  Sweetwater  Mill;  YSFC is
responsible for any bonding and handling  obligations for the stored  equipment,
and pays GMMV nominal rent for the storage.

        TRANSACTIONS  WITH SUTTER  GOLD  MINING  COMPANY.  In fiscal  1991,  USE
acquired an interest in the Lincoln Project  (including the underground  Lincoln
Mine and the 2,800 foot  Stringbean  Alley  decline)  in the Mother  Lode Mining
District of Amador County,  California,  held by a mining joint venture known as
the Sutter  Gold  Venture  ("SGV").  The entire  interest of SGV is now owned by
USECC Gold L.L.C., a Wyoming limited liability company, which is a subsidiary of
Sutter Gold Mining Company, a Wyoming corporation ("SGMC").

        In fiscal 1997,  SGMC completed  private  financings  totalling a net of
$6,511,200  ($1,106,700  through a private  placement  conducted  in the  United
States by RAF Financial Corporation, and $5,404,500 through a private

                                       17

<PAGE>



placement  conducted  in  Toronto,  Ontario,  Canada  by C.M.  Oliver &  Company
Limited). The proceeds from these financings (after deduction of commissions and
offering  costs) are being  applied to  pre-production  mine  development,  mill
design,  and property holding and acquisition cost. SGMC anticipates  production
mining will commence in mid-  calendar 1998 and that by that time,  construction
of a 500 ton per day gold mill will have been  completed.  Additional  financing
will be sought  in 1998 to  complete  mill  construction  and  start  production
mining.

        After completion of the two private financings,  and taking into account
a  restructuring  of the  ownership  of USE and Crested in SGMC (and  additional
issue of 75,000 shares to settle a dispute with Amador United,  see below),  USE
and Crested each own the following securities of SGMC:

        (a) 30.7% and 3.2% of the outstanding shares of Common Stock which would
be reduced to 23.5% and 2.5%,  respectively,  in the event outstanding  warrants
held by the Canadian investors to purchase 1,454,800 more shares of Common Stock
are  exercised  at Cdn$6.00  per share 18 months from the date of closing of the
offering in Canada and the outstanding  warrants held by C.M. Oliver to purchase
145,480 more shares of Common Stock are exercised at Cdn$5.50 per share,  before
May 13,  1999.  The  preceding  percentages  of SGMC Common Stock do not reflect
345,200 warrants that may be sold in the Offering or shares that may be acquired
by USE and Crested pursuant to the USECC  $10,000,000  Contingent Stock Purchase
Warrant  (described  below) issued as consideration for certain of the voluntary
reductions  in the  ownership of SGMC shares by USE and Crested,  in  connection
with the private offering in Canada. One reorganization of the capital structure
was  required  by RAF  Financial  Corporation  in  connection  with its  private
placement of SGMC shares, and the other was required by C.M.
Oliver & Company Limited in the Canadian private placement.

        (b)  A  $10,000,000   Contingent  Stock  Purchase  Warrant  (the  "USECC
Warrant") was issued to USE and Crested in connection with the  restructuring of
SGMC.  The USECC  Warrant is owned 88.9% by USE and 11.1% by Crested.  The USECC
Warrant  provides  that for each ounce of gold over 300,000  ounces added to the
proven and  probable  category  of SGMC's  reserves  (up to a maximum of 400,000
additional  ounces),  using a cut-off  grade of 0.10  ounces of gold per ton (at
minimum vein  thickness of 4 feet),  USE and Crested will be entitled to acquire
additional   shares  of  Common  Stock  from  SGMC  (without  paying  additional
consideration).  The number of additional  shares issuable for each new ounce of
gold reserves  will be  determined by dividing  US$25 by the greater of $5.00 or
the weighted  average  closing price of the Common Stock for the 20 trading days
before  exercise  of the USECC  Warrant.  The USECC  Warrant is to be  exercised
semi-annually. However, as an alternative to exercise of the USECC Warrant, SGMC
has the  right to pay USE and  Crested  US$25 in cash for each new ounce of gold
(payable  out  of  a  maximum  of  60%  of  net  cash-flow  from  SGMC's  mining
operations).  Additions  to  reserves  will  be  determined  by  an  independent
geologist agreed upon by the parties.

        In fiscal  1997,  SGMC issued  75,000  shares of Common  Stock to Amador
United Gold Mines to settle certain  disputes between such company and SGMC, USE
and Crested. In addition,  SGMC bought about one-third of the outstanding shares
of Keystone  Mining  Company owned by The Salvation  Army.  The Keystone  Mining
Company owns property in the Lincoln Project leased to SGMC.

        Effective June 1, 1996, SGMC entered into a Management  Agreement (dated
as of May 22, 1996) with USE under which USECC provides administrative staff and
services to SGMC.  USECC is reimbursed for actual costs incurred,  plus an extra
10% during the exploration and development  phases;  2% during the  construction
phase;  and 2.5% during the mining phase (such 2.5% charge to be replaced with a
fixed sum which with  parties will  negotiate  at the end of two years  starting
when the  mining  phase  begins).  The  Management  Agreement  replaces  a prior
agreement by which USE provided administrative services to SGMC.

        TRANSACTIONS WITH DIRECTORS.  Three of the Company's directors,  Messrs.
Larsen,  Evans and Herron,  are trustees of the ESOP. In that capacity they have
an obligation to act in the best interests of the ESOP  participants.  This duty
may  conflict  with their  obligations  as  directors of the Company in times of
adverse  market  conditions  for the Common  Stock,  or in the event of a tender
offer or other significant transaction.


                                       18

<PAGE>



        In general,  the ESOP trustees exercise  dispositive  powers over shares
held by the ESOP,  and exercise  voting  powers with respect to ESOP shares that
have not been allocated to a participant's  account. In addition, the Department
of Labor has taken the position that in certain  circumstances ESOP trustees may
not  rely  solely  upon  voting  or  dispositive  decisions  expressed  by  plan
participants,  and must  investigate  whether  those  expressions  represent the
desires of the participants, and are in their best interests.

        Harold F. Herron,  son-in-law of John L. Larsen,  has been living in and
caring for a house  owned by the  Company  until such time as the  property  was
sold. In fiscal 1995, Mr. Herron purchased the house for $260,000, the appraised
value  of the  property,  and  was  reimbursed  by  the  Company  for  leasehold
improvements  totaling  $22,830.  The Company  accepted a promissory note in the
amount of $112,170 with interest  compounded  annually at 7% due on September 6,
1999 as a result of this  transaction.  This note is secured by 30,000 shares of
USE common stock owned by Mr. Herron.

        OTHER INFORMATION. The Company has adopted a stock repurchase plan under
which it may  purchase up to 275,000  shares of its Common  Stock.  These shares
would be purchased  in part to provide a source of shares for issuance  upon the
exercise of various outstanding options.

        Three of John L.  Larsen's  sons and a  son-in-law  are  employed by the
Company (as manager of USECC's  commercial  operations,  uranium fuels marketing
director,  as chief pilot and landman,  respectively).  Mr. Larsen's  son-in-law
Harold F. Herron is an officer and director of the Company,  and president and a
director of Brunton.  Collectively,  the five individuals  received  $265,500 in
cash  compensation  (paid by the Company and Crested) for those services  during
the  fiscal  year  ended  May 31,  1997,  which  amount  includes  $81,250  cash
compensation  paid Mr.  Herron  (principally  in his  capacity as  president  of
Brunton,  and also for his service as a Company vice  president,  see  Executive
Compensation  above).  The  foregoing  compensation  expense  was  shared by the
Company and Crested,  in accordance with the  compensation  arrangements for all
employees. Mr. Herron continues as president and a director of Brunton.

        The Company and Crested provide management and  administrative  services
for affiliates under the terms of various management  agreements.  Revenues from
services by the Company and Crested from unconsolidated affiliates were $397,700
in fiscal 1997 and $92,900 in fiscal  1996.  The Company  provides  all employee
services  required by Crested.  In exchange  Crested is obligated to the Company
for its share of the costs for providing such employees.

                              CERTAIN INDEBTEDNESS

        TRANSACTIONS  INVOLVING  USECC. The Company and Crested conduct the bulk
of their activities through their equally-owned joint venture,  USECC. From time
to time the Company and Crested  advance  funds to or make payments on behalf of
USECC in  furtherance  of their joint  activities.  These  advances and payments
create  intercompany  debt between the Company and Crested.  The party extending
funds is subsequently  reimbursed by the other venturer.  The Company had a note
receivable of $6,023,400 from Crested at May 31, 1997 ($6,199,700  during fiscal
1996).

        DEBT ASSOCIATED WITH USE'S ESOP. During the year ended May 31, 1997, the
Company  made a  contribution  of 24,069  shares  of  Common  Stock to the ESOP.
Because Crested engages the Company's  employees to discharge  substantially all
of its functions,  these contributions  benefitted Crested. As a result, Crested
owes the Company  $106,800 for  one-half of the  Company's  contribution  to the
ESOP.  Regular  and  substantial  contributions  by the  Company to the ESOP are
required to maintain the ESOP in effect. In fiscal 1996 the Company  contributed
10,089  shares of Common Stock to the ESOP,  for one-half of which  Crested owes
the Company $43,650.

        LOANS TO FOUR  DIRECTORS.  As of May 31,  1997 four  directors  owed the
Company $487,000 as follows (each loan is secured with shares of Common Stock of
the Company owned by the  individual):  Harold F. Herron $11,000 (1,000 shares);
John L. Larsen $413,600  (124,000  shares),  Max T. Evans $37,400 (7,500 shares)
and David W.  Brenman  $25,000  (4,000  shares).  The  outstanding  loan amounts
represent  various loans made to the individuals over a period of several years.
The loans mature December 31, 1997 and bear interest at 10% per year. For

                                       19

<PAGE>



information  on an additional  loan to Mr. Herron,  see below.  At May 31, 1997,
John L. Larsen and members of his immediate  family were indebted to the Company
for $745,300  secured by 160,000  shares of the  Company's  Common  Stock.  Such
indebtedness  of the Larsen family would be paid by the Company  withholding  an
equal  amount out of the $1 million  cash bonus  payable to Mr.  Larsen when the
GMMV properties have been placed into production and certain related  conditions
have been met. See "Executive Compensation Plans and Engagement Agreements." The
preceding amounts do not include the loan to Mr. Herron, see below.

        In fiscal 1995,  the Company made a five year  non-recourse  loan in the
amount of $112,170 to Harold F. Herron.  The loan is secured by 30,000 shares of
the  Company's  Common Stock,  bears  interest at a rate of 7% and is payable at
maturity. The Board approved the loan to obtain a higher interest rate of return
on the funds  compared to  commercial  rates,  and to avoid having the USE stock
prices   depressed   from  Mr.  Herron  selling  his  shares  to  meet  personal
obligations. See Transactions with Directors above.

                    RELATIONSHIP WITH INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

        The Board has  selected  Arthur  Andersen LLP as  independent  certified
public  accountants  for the year ending May 31, 1998. Such firm has audited the
Company's  financial  statements since 1990. A representative of Arthur Andersen
LLP may be present at the Meeting and if present,  will be  available to respond
to  appropriate  questions,  and  will be  provided  the  opportunity  to make a
statement at the Meeting.

                          ANNUAL REPORT TO SHAREHOLDERS

        A copy of the 1997 Annual Report to  Shareholders,  including  financial
statements,  has been forwarded to all record  shareholders  entitled to vote at
the Meeting. If any recipient of this Proxy Statement has not received a copy of
that Annual Report, please notify Max T. Evans, 877 North 8th West, Riverton, WY
82501, telephone (307) 856-9271, and the Company will send a copy.

                             SHAREHOLDERS' PROPOSALS

        The next  Annual  Meeting  of  Shareholders  is  expected  to be held in
November  of 1998.  Shareholder  proposals  to be  presented  at the next Annual
Meeting of  Shareholders  must be  received  in  writing  by the  Company at its
offices in Riverton,  Wyoming, addressed to the President, no later than June 9,
1998.

                                  OTHER MATTERS

        The Board does not know of any other  matters  which may  properly  come
before the  Meeting.  However,  if any other  matters  properly  come before the
Meeting,  it is the  intention of the  appointees  named in the enclosed form of
Proxy to vote said Proxy in accordance with their best judgment on such matters.

        Your cooperation in giving these matters your immediate  attention,  and
in returning your Proxy promptly, will be appreciated.

                                            By Order of the Board of Directors
                                            U.S. ENERGY CORP.

                                              /s/ Max T. Evans

                                            MAX T. EVANS, Secretary

Dated: November 7, 1997


                                       20

<PAGE>



PROXY                           U.S. ENERGY CORP.                        PROXY
        KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS: That the undersigned shareholder of U.S.
Energy Corp. (the "Company") in the amount noted below,  hereby  constitutes and
appoints  Messrs.  John L. Larsen and Max T. Evans,  or either of them with full
power of substitution,  as attorneys and proxies, to appear, attend and vote all
of the shares of stock  standing  in the name of the  undersigned  at the Annual
Meeting of the  Company's  shareholders  to be held at the  Company's  executive
offices,  877 North 8th West,  Riverton,  Wyoming 82501, on Friday,  December 5,
1997 at  11:00  a.m.,  local  time,  or at any  adjournments  thereof  upon  the
following:

        (INSTRUCTION:  Mark only one box as to each item.)

1. Election of Director:
   __  FOR the nominees listed below      __  AGAINST the nominees listed below
                                   __ ABSTAIN

                                 John L. Larsen

    TO WITHHOLD  AUTHORITY TO VOTE FOR ANY  NOMINEE,  PLEASE DRAW A LINE THROUGH
THE NAME OF THAT NOMINEE.

    In the event you wish to vote your shares cumulatively, write the name(s) of
the  person(s)  you wish to vote for in the  following  space,  and indicate the
number of votes to be cast for each such nominee immediately after the name.

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2  To adopt an amendment to the current 1996 Stock Award Program for executive
   officers.

    __ FOR                      __ AGAINST                     __ ABSTAIN

3. In their  discretion,  the  Proxies  are  authorized  to vote upon such other
business as may properly come before the Meeting.


<PAGE>


                                U.S. ENERGY CORP.

    THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED BY THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS.  THE SHARES  REPRESENTED
HEREBY WILL BE VOTED AS SPECIFIED  HEREON WITH  RESPECT TO THE ABOVE  PROPOSALS.
WHERE NO VOTE IS SPECIFIED,  THE PROXYHOLDER WILL CAST VOTES FOR THE ELECTION OF
MANAGEMENT'S  NOMINEES AND, IN THEIR  DISCRETION,  ON ANY OTHER MATTERS THAT MAY
COME BEFORE THE MEETING.
    Sign your name  exactly as it  appears on the  mailing  label  below.  It is
important to return this Proxy  properly  signed in order to exercise your right
to vote, if you do not attend in person. When signing as an attorney,  executor,
administrator,  trustee,  guardian,  corporate officer, etc., indicate your full
title as such.

                                               ---------------------------------
                                               Sign on this line - joint 
                                               holders may sign  appropriately)

                                               ----------     ------------------
                                               (Date)         (Number of Shares)
                                               PLEASE NOTE:Please sign, date and
                                               place this Proxy in the enclosed
                                               self-addressed, postage prepaid 
                                               envelope and deposit it in the 
                                               mail as soon as possible.
                                               Please check if you are planning
                                               to attend the meeting.  __

                                               If  the  address on the mailing
                                               label is not correct, please
                                               provide the correct address in
                                               the following space.

                                               ---------------------------------

                                               ---------------------------------




<PAGE>





© 2022 IncJournal is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission