December 198i Fage 6 Fop Warner Booster Moore Likes V/orking With Program When Beverly Moore was asked to serve on the board otme Kernersville Pop Warner Fwt- ball Boosters she answered the call and says she has enjoyed the opportunity. “Working with the young people makes me feel good,” said Moore, who is a folding instruc tor at Adams-Millis Plant 3. “It also lets me meet a lot of new people and work with different ones.” Moore has been involved in the booster program for six years, serving two years as secretary of the organization. Beginning in 1990 she will be director of the girls program which involves junior and senior dance squads, majorettes and cheerleaders. About 300 girls and boys, ages 5 to 15, participate in the Kernersville program, including her 12-year-old daughter, Amy. Her son, Adam, now a senior at Glenn High School, formerly was involved in the program. She said the program pro motes academic excellence as well as the athletic opportunity. The Kernersville program had eight regional and two national scholarship winners for the 1988 season. Those were selected by the Pop Warner national head quarters staff in Philadelphia. “A lot of hard work goes into Linda Jones, Silver Knit Payroll Department, models a designer sweat shirt she made. To make the design on the shirt cut a sponge in .the shape of a holly leaf. Wet the sponge in water. Pour fabric dye into a container. Dip wet sponge into dye and make design on the shirt. Retirees Following is a listing of several Adams-Millis em ployees who retired re cently. They are; John Edd Cummings Plant 3 Kathleen K. Chilton Plant 2 Annie L. Phillips Plant 7 Hazel Johnson Plant 11 Virginia Teague Plant 6 Ida J. Rogers ^ant2 Launa White Plant 2 ? J. Barnard Joan Whitlow Administrative Offices Kathleen K. Chilton Plant 2 merit team Ida Jane Rogers Plant 2 the program here,” said the Forsyth County native who is a 16-year Adams-Millis employee. “But it’s worth all the time I spend with it. The youngsters put as much effort into it as the adults.” The program requires a year- round effort, Moore explained, not just during the August- November football season which is culminated with the annual Sertoma Bowl played in Win ston-Salem’s Bowman Gray Stadium. “We do take December off,” she added. “But when January comes we’ll begin work on the 1990 season to make sure everything is ready when the time comes.” Moore said working with the program has allowed her to see how it works and to have a greater appreciation of it. “I certainly recommend that others get involved with pro grams like this,” she said. Beverly Moore displays booster jacket Drexel Knitting Millis helped to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the Drexel Community Fair earlier this year by entering a float in the parade.

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