Newspapers / The Fieldcrest Mill Whistle … / Feb. 17, 1975, edition 1 / Page 6
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i *'» * -..xt it"' **'* i JOHN w. rodp:rick DON R. UTTI.K Promotions At NCF Two promotions have been an nounced at the N.C. Finishing Company division at Salisbury. John W. Roderick, previously night supervisor, has been named assistant general fore man in the Finishing Department and Don R. Little, former shift foreman in Grey No. 1, has been promoted to night general foreman. Mr. Roderick has been with NCF since 1972. He is a graduate of N.C. State University with a degree in general engineering. Since his employment, Mr. Clyde Brown ... an avid student of many subjects. Roderick has served as a management trainee, and as a shift foreman. He and his wife, Margaret, reside in Salisbury and are the parents of two sons. Mr. Little was a supervisor in the Bleach Department and in Grey No. 1 prior to his promo tion. He has been with he com pany since 1968. He is a graduate of Davidson County Community College. He and his wife. Hazel, are the parents of three children, Debbie, Chip, and Teresa. His daughter Debbie is employed in the Laboratory at NCF. Jerry Jones describes rug designing process for visitors from Cornell Unit Cornell Students Visit Karasft The Karastan Mill was host to a group of seniors and graduate students from the Department of Design and Environmental Analysis at Cornell University, Ithica, N.Y. The visit was in the form of a field trip during a semester break for a class dealing with various aspects of the textile and apparel industries. The group was headed by Professor Nancy Conklin Saltford. At Karastan the visitors heard talks by Jones W. Norman, area personnel manager, and Jerry Jones, designer. They spent most of their time in the showroom and the Designing Department. They then were given a guided tour of the manu facturing areas. Following the visit, Professor Saltford wrote to Mr. Nj follows: “Again thisjf Karastan Mill was a hijE- our textile visit to tli!^ Jerry Jones did an exci.®^ of describing the desigii;- as it relates to the prodi^ Karastan rugs. We eiif presentation, our toiii mill, and the discussij you regarding more: issues current in theiiu Cornell seniors and graduate students look over swatches in Karastan shown* Employee At Fieidale Is Spring Lines Arriving At Rug Shown# S( cl Man With Many Hobbies Clyde Brown is a man who has many interests and many hobbies. In addition to geology, Indian artifacts, botany, etching and archaeology, he also avidly reads the little fillers in news papers and periodicals and admits that he has accumulated more useless information than anyone he knows. An elevator operator in the Packing Department at the Fiei dale Towel Mill, Mr. Brown is more widely known for his rock I'ollection than anything else He 6 has been collecting minerals, rocks and fossils for some years and frequently speaks on these subjects at schools in the Fieidale area. Once he gets interested in a subject, Mr. Brown says he reads everything about it that he can find. His room at the Vir ginia Boarding House where he lives is lined with wall-to-wall books and they range from works on wildflowers to (Continued On Page Seven) Employees may now see samples of some of the Spring ’75 rug and carpet lines at the Employee Sales Rug Showroom at the AMP Building, according to Harold Mabe, cash sales supervisor. Samples of the com plete Spring line should be avail able by mid-April, Mr. Mabe said. Selections already available include “Yorktown Lancaster Grove’ “Riverton Grove’’, all irom Karastan’s new “Constitution Classics” Collection; and “Lanveau”, “Tambeau from to Hall”, and from un , and Correau , three new luxury wool broadlooms Karastan. Employees who wish lu purchase rugs and carpets may visit the showroom Monday through Friday from 1 p.m. until 5 p.m., make their selections and be advised by the cash sales supervisor if the merchandise is available. First quality merchandise may be purchased by employees at mill list price. Off-quality goods and remnants are also available and are sold on a first- come, first-served basis at less than mill price. Purchases may. ,CJ cases, be limited ty oi because dealers W p, priority on all goods All sales are on a c|er and must be for the e Jq personal use which nt by the employee W» w: parents, parents-m-l > pmnlnvpp’s child parents, ■/ employee’s childrefii lo stepchildren. c£ The rugs and fUr picked up at the m Service Center on Tu uj Fridays from 9 a.w se and from 2 p.m. Payment must be ® hi ,,cr in some t.CC (Continued OnPag%, the MiLb "
The Fieldcrest Mill Whistle (Spray, N.C.)
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Feb. 17, 1975, edition 1
6
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