Newspapers / The Fieldcrest Mill Whistle … / Sept. 9, 1963, edition 1 / Page 3
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(Clifton Wins Saftey Talk Contest M. E. CLIFTON ^ ■p ~ ing '-Ilfton, foreman of the Sew- llill ®P®'^tment at the Sheet Finishing t^st winner of the safety talk con- llil] among supervisors at Fieldcrest was awarded a $25 Savings first-place winner. T. E. Touv S®neral night foreman at the >-■ Mill, was runner-up and re- $10 cash prize. ^st’' ’^®ls in the contest among Field- tgfg ^'^Pervisors were held in the con- Ttiuj.']? room at the General Offices evening, August 22. Judges •■ela*; ■ J- Frank, director of industrial .. ®«Ons; IVr' Williams, safety director. ■ PUft -11 i m;- th, Norman Young, assistant to Ji. to'^^'^ager of blanket operations; and Miju' *“lifton will represent Fieldcrest test’. general “Safety Talk Con- sponsored by the Central Safety Council in the More- Jsh School auditorium, Thursday, ^>lls P’ Fieldcrest this be host to the council for Tj^'tteeting, tailjj®,'Contest will feature eight safety ''^*^01 finalists in speech contests at companies in the central area. The contestants’ sub- "^^al with any aspect of acci- ®'^®vention and injury control, °ff-the-job or on-the-job. the f , will receive from the council ^aviu °^ing awards: first place, $50 "OHij.®® Bond; second place, $25 Savings third place, $10 cash prize. • Baucom, director of safety for Ip I '^reenville Leaders ^ \\7’* I tioj, ^*^^ers of the highest produc- I *'in the Karastan Spin- I: the^ Division in Greenville for I C- J^onth of August were: i St)i William Whaley I lining Joyce Jones I V . Annie Porter I tip • • Ethelyne Whitehurst 1 Rose Tripp T. E. BOYCE the North Carolina Industrial Commis sion, will introduce the program. Car lyle Nance, Jr., chairman of the coun cil, will preside. All Fieldcrest employees and the gen eral public are cordially invited to the program and Fieldcrest supervisors are especially urged to attend. Education Center To Provide New Courses The Industrial Education Center will offer two courses in the next quarter to the newest group of students enrolled in the textile technology curriculum. A course in economic history will be taught on Tuesdays from 6:30 to 8:30 p. m., beginning September 17. The in structor is to be announced within the next week. A chemistry course taught by Wayne Lawson, of the Fieldcrest Research and Quality Control Department, will be given from 7:00 to 9:00 p. m. on Wed nesdays, beginning September 18. These courses are intended primarily for students already enrolled in the textile technology curriculum now in its third quarter. Other enrollees will be admitted for special individual courses if they meet the entrance requirements. The general requirement is high school graduation. The chemistry course also has algebra as a prerequisite. It was announced, also, that the first group to enroll in the textile technology curriculum, now in its eighth quarter, is taking a course in yam manufacturing. This course, which began September 3, is taught by Gene Inman, of the Blan ket Mill. Classes meet on Tuesdays and Thursday from 6:30 to 9:00 p. m. Blood Donors Get ‘One Gallon’ Pins Left to right, Haven Newton, Thomas Meeks, James Fair and Kenneth Slaughter. Three local men ■— including two Fieldcresters — have donated eight or more pints of blood in the Tri-Cit.y Blood Program and have received cer tificates and pins signifying member ship in the “Gallon Club.” In a brief ceremony at the Fieldcrest General Offices recently. Haven H. Newlton, Bloodmobile chairman, pre sented the awards to Thomas Meeks and Kenneth Slaughter, both of the Finishing Mill; and to James Fair, of Fair Funeral Home. Mr. Newton announced that the next visit by the Bloodmobile will be on Thursday, October 10, when the unit will be stationed at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church (Rock Church) in Spray. He said 150 pints are needed on that visit to help blood collections catch up with the actual usage of blood for Tri-City patients. ^AY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1963
The Fieldcrest Mill Whistle (Spray, N.C.)
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Sept. 9, 1963, edition 1
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