Newspapers / The Fieldcrest Mill Whistle … / April 8, 1974, edition 1 / Page 8
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Business Courses Are Offered By RCC For Summer Quarter The Business Department of the Community College has made tentative plans for giving courses in the summer quarter to Fieldcrest employees and other Eden residents. A course in Business Com munications (English III) will be offered on Monday nights, a course in Business Law (Business 115) on Wednesday nights. Both courses will be given in the Fieldcrest Training Department in the Amp Building. Courses being given this quarter in the Amp Building are Grammar and Composition (English 110) and Techniques for Today’s Secretary. For those enrollees who are seeking an Associate of Arts Degree in Secretarial Science, English 110 is a prerequisite for English 111. For qualified enrolees who are not seeking credits toward the degree, the prerequisite may be waived; admission to English 111 in this case will be by permission of the instructor. There is no prerequisite for the course in Business Law. 40 Years Of Service LEONARD A. DISHMON Leonard A. Dishmon, a main tenance mechanic at the Blanket Greige Mill, recently completed an outstanding record of 40 years of continuous service with the company. Oxendine Children Children Of Employees Nominated For Outstanding Teenagers Award Mr. Dishmon has received the diamond-and-gold Fieldcrest service emblem, a $40 gift certificate for company mer chandise, and a letter of com mendation from President William C. Battle. He has worked at the Blanket Greige mill all of his 40 years of service. He began employment as a feeder in the Wool Carding Department on March 21, 1934. He remained in the Wool Card ing Department until 1966, working at various times as a finisher tender, oiler and strip per, grinder helper, grinder, card fixer and grinder over hauler. He went to the Plant Service Department as a maintenance mechanic in 1966. In 1968, he went to the Wool Picking Department as a picker fixer, returning to the Wool Carding Department in 1969 as a maintenance mechanic. Cathy Dianee Moore and Michael Eugene Whittemore were among the 11 students at East Rutherford High School who were selected as Outstanding Teenagers of America for 1974. Both are the children of Fieldcrest employees. Nominated by their principals, the Outstanding Teenagers of America are chosen from individual schools across the country for excellence in academic achievement and community service. Both students will now vie for the Outstanding Teenager of the Year trophy to be presented by the governor of North Carolina. Similar trophies will be presented to the winners in other .J,^ NCF Banquet Set Lisa and Leslie Oxendine are Oxendine. Their father is a the 21-month old daughters of courier in the Laurelcrest Roosevelt and Bernice Division. Top Weavers, Fixers Weavers W/E March 17 DobbyTey, Larry Martin Fixers W/E March 17 ua eny Hazelwood Weavers W/E March 10 Fixers W/E March 10 a r Dobby Terry n ^ i Jacquard Terry "A7 ^ Clarence Craig I Buy .Sell .Swap FOR SALE: Riding horse (mare), American Saddle Horse breed, SVa years old. $200. 16-ft. inboard-outboard boat with 120-hp Mercury motor. $1,800. Call 623-2307 after 3 p.m. FOR SALE: Poodle puppies, miniature. Both males. Call Fieldcrest extension 53253 or call 627-4939 after 5:30 p.m. FOR SALE: One 40” Hotpoint range with clock, timer, and glass door oven. Avocado green. Only one year old. Also 18-foot Glassmaster boat with tri-hull, open bow and walk thru windshield. Color — yellow and white. Also has sleeper seats, built-in 18-gallon gas tank. Many other extras. 150 h.p. Mercury outboard motor. Complete outfit on trailer. Small equity, assume loan. Call Fieldcrest extension 53260 or 956-2537 after 5 p.m. FOR SALE: One 16’ aluminum boat with trailer. 35 h.p. Evinrude motor, electric starter, steering wheel. Call 623-3004 after 3:30 p.m. FOR SALE OR TRADE: 19 Ft. Holiday Trailer. Fully self- contained. Sleeps 8. Call 627- 7283. FOR SALE: 1 set of Cypress Garden water ski’s. Also Cypress Garden Slalom and two life jackets. Call 623-9534 after 4:00 p.m. CATHY MOORE states. The state winners are selected by the Outstanding Teenager Awards Selection Committee, in cooperation with the Board of Advisors. Under the guidance of Ihe Board of Advisors, the Outstanding Teenagers of America program was created to encourage young people to take full advantage of the oppor tunities in this country. The awards are presented each spring, and biographies of all those honored are recorded in the annual volume, “Outstanding Teenagers of America.” In addition to being selected as Outstanding Teenagers, Cathy and Michael were also elected to the Society of Outstanding American High School Students, which is the nation’s leading high school honorary society. Both students have been very active in school activities. Cathy, a senior, is on the student council, the president’s cabinet (co-chairman of the committee on buildings and grounds), a member of the Beta Club, presi- \ M MICHAEL WHITTEkI dent of the'Future America, a member of Ifj club and serves as co the Lancer. She wasv( Leader” in her class, Cathy is the daughten and Mrs. Ernest Mooreii' boro, N.C. Her employed as a supervisor at the ft Sheeting Mill. Michael has beenaveri band member from school through highseW also involved in rnanj activities. Also a seoi president of the band, All-American band me solo contest winner am state band member, Hei'i member of the Beta C Club, Monogram Club, of the KeyClub.amemte golf team and a Scholarship nominee, i voted the “Most Tils member of the class. He is the son of Mr,® Fred Whittemore of Forii-..: His mother, Betty, is in the Payroll DeparWfi ; Alexander Sheeting Mi ! The annual 25-Year Club ban quet for employees of the North Carolina Finishing division at Salisbury will be held on April 20, 7 p.m. at the Catawba Com munity Center. This will mark the 27th celebration for NCF 25-year employees. Ten new members will be welcomed into the club at the banquet. New members this year will be Pauline Correll, J F Alexander, S. B. Allen, M. V. Graham', M. V. Nance, V. L. Thompson, D C. Wagner and E. L. Wofford. The principal speaker will be Dr. William W. Williamson minister of the First Presby terian Church of Salisbury. Recent Service Annivei$ari« Forty Years LilHan M. Pryor Draper Thirty-Five Years Cecil M. Coward Mary S. Bray Bessie T. Clark 0: Thirty Years James R. Graham Clarence R. Hopkins TalmadgeL. PoweU BlanW^^ Twenty-Five Years f. Martha C. Wilkinson Blanke J Mary B. Blackwell BlanW^ Beulah G. Lillard Blan « Estelle S. WiUard Blanket"^ Mabel J. Hughes James C. Witt Hugh A. Brown, Jr. Louise H. Martin Twenty Years ^ Fifteen Years Dorothy V. Harris Blank® G. Ronald Newman Henry L. Sanders Bettie H. Craper Roger D. Adams Ananias C. Abbot .. Thomas M. Ryals ... Clem C. Wilson Emmet L. Fulgham Betty C. James Ten Years THE
The Fieldcrest Mill Whistle (Spray, N.C.)
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April 8, 1974, edition 1
8
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