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Show The Sait Lake Tribune, Friday, November tho SllG Of Prospectors r z- - ' By Charles ILllmger Los Angeles Tunes Wnter . - GRANITE MOUNTAINS, Calif.- of Southern California prospectors. -- , V V y:-- , ,f iks r - Jr r ili i ;x : j j , WASHINGTON (UP I) The world s largest w oi king windmill will be tested soon m a small New Mexico town where the government topes the winds of the Great Plains will help generate electricity for 3.000 resi- Shes the queen - Dale King, a widow, was 78 active mining claims in the Granite Mountains 120 miles northeast of Los Angeles. 'Thats 1,560 acres of government mining land wot ked by the tenacious prospector who has made her heme in a miner's cabin the last 20 years. Mrs. King stakes her claims by feel, explaining- When Im on top of a deposit of precious metals, my body tingles all over. 1 dents, federal energy officials said Thursday The site for the new windmill, Clayton, N M , is the first of four to be chosen by the Energy Research and Development Administration to test wind generation of power as an alternate energy source. ERDA plans to begin operating a Feels Metals Its like getting an electric shock. I can feel those precious metals in my bones. . She hasnt gotten nch yet, but she still has hopes. As she puts it, shes waiting for the fat cats with money to come along and invest in my mines. I'm sitting on top of nch veins of gold, silver, platinum, mercury and magnetite windmill, a shed behind her cabin, Mrs. King has a lab where she runs tests and assays samples from her Junes. v , V - X.X 'v A , j t Jl 5 v j. V-- 4 W s j fc & W , u J Ljs Anpeiet Time Photo Dale King, CaUfornia prospectors, 72yar-eJ- d "Qeen Is of Seet&era hard at work I on one of her 78 saining clalas northeast of Los Angeles In the GranitMcmataics. construction, mounting and administration cf works of art. The first bond issues for new building con struction since the law took effect were passed in the Nov. 2 election and the state Council on the Arts has set up a proce dure for selecting works of art. The principal tenants of the buildings also will be involved. "Public buildings be long to the people and they should be visually said Roy appealing, Helms, director of the council. "Art is every- - bodys usiness and this prograr will improve the qua y of life and the quality 1jof artists in Alaska. wind speeds. SALT LAKE CITY Bundle and put out your old newspapers on garbage collection days light exceeds 39 pounds, please make Please tie two ways, at shown. 2 bundles. ERDA spokeswoman Settle that active boy down to sleep in soft, A. Ski feature helps you to rest comfy sW p.j.s Their machine washable care too. polyestermodacrylic Easy easy blend. Shades of blue, brown, and green. Sizes 8 tQ 1 8. flame-resista- nt If perf. to 7.89 and already such meas- 39 Parka inA warm gift for the boy who plays hard.It The down-loo- k parkas with nylon shell and Dacron polyester filling. Complete with attachable hood, snap and zip front, and extra big pockets. The perfect gift for snowy weather. Navy, red, and royal blue. Sizes 4 to 18. havepassed ures, as have 17 cities and counties. The idea is nothing new. The Works Progress Administration of the Depression spent $11 million between 1935 and 1943, part of it on art works created for public buildings by jobless sculptors and painters. That program, however, was designed primarily as an employment measure. The Percent for Art plans have a cultural aim. 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Fashion Place Mall, and Ogden. (N25) v ft? ? V i&it ,, windows. 'Ct5, WhJ&Ud said preference in awarding commissions is gives to local residents and added that efforts are made to place the art in outside locations so it can be seen by as many people as possible. He Alaska high average CORPORATE a, s n RESIDENTS OF formally Oregon stained-glas- of 3,000 in New Mexa part of the ico is Great Plains known for The town northeastern DON'T fORG at Clayton generator, late next year Mounted atop a steel tower, the windmill d will have a propeller 125 feet in diameter. It will start turning when the wind hits 8 miles per hour, stopping automatically for safety reasons if the wind exceeds 40 m p h. Changes in the pitch of the blades will keep tne windmill turning a constant 40 revolutions per minute in any wind between those speeds. In terms of generating capacity, it will be the largest working wind- mill in the world," said laws have been introduced or are in preparation in 30 states. The council says Alaska, Hawaii, Califor-ni- four-year-o- ld 1 n Just In Time For Christmas ports that "Percent for Art seems strongest in the West, it actually started in the East. Brennan Rash, information director of the Western States Art Foundation, said Philadelphia passed a law providing art in public buildings 13 years ago. Baltimore has a similar law and the program has resulted in wall murals and several sculptures. 1 Percent to Art Hawaii enacted legislation in 1S67 requiring that 1 percent of the cost of any new state building be set aside for works of art. The budget is worked out by the state comptroller and the state Foundation on the Arts and Culture decides how the money should be spent. Alfred Preis, executive director of the foundation, said the law has coat . the state about $3 million se far and has resulted in sculptures, murals and larger to investigate potential use of wind power The Clayton experiment will be the first use of a large, utility-ruwindmill m more than 39 years for generating electric power for public consumption in the United States, ERDA said !SS two-blade- $ States Financing Public Art With Public Tikes Washington A w.ndmill one as is being developed part of ERDAs program 100-fo- X Associated Press Writer ; Look carefully the next Itime you see a painting or a statue on a new public building. You may have paid for it. 1 An Associated Press survey shows a small, but steadily growing number of states and cities are passing laws requiring that a tiny part of the cost of taxpayer-finance- d public buildings be set aside to provide original art. The National Council of State Legislatures re- ky, Ohio known as a "wind turbine , - In ;lBy LOUISE COOK Leslie Braunstem. The Clayton Municipal Electric Utility will operate the w nwbnili, officials said They said the machine wdl be capable of supplying between 5 and 15 percent of the towns electric power demand on a wmdv day ERDA has tested since last fall a prototype near Sandus- tt I "She dnves her pickup to her various mining properties, horizontal shafts 50 and 60 feet into the I mountainside and vertical holes as deep as 85 feet ;Lito which she lowers herself by rope. Sure it's all hard work. All dug by hand with pick -$1 shovel, she said. a King, she gave several of her mines royal njmes: Pharaoh, Rex, Queen Placer, Castle and the -Three Musketeers. I I Huge Windmill Readied jv! . '. F (176 1 if-- 4r 1 For Power Generation ? t F 26, passed its Percent for Art law M 1975. Th measure won unanimous approval in received the House only one dissenting vote m &e senate. The pream-jsA- e of the isw says. The state recognizes its to foster culture Mid the arts and the necessity for the viable development of artists a ail craftsmen. The legislature declares it to be stale M'cy that a portion ot appropriations for eap-H- 1 expenditures be set aside for the acquisition of works of art to be used for state buildings and other public facilities The measure Relf re qmres that at least 1 percent of the overall const ruction eoet of state buildings over $250,090 be set acide for Im dotiign. sd Special Tie Quilted WedgeCLD reg. 8.97 featherlight oxford with quilted tricot lining. On flexy crepelike sole. In bronze B with contrast stitching. Sizes only. A 0, Bargain Center Shoes, Sait Lake and Fashion Place Mail Mail and phone orders Indicate 2nd color choice where fee;, bio. thcsss, and 0c tor boots. 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