Recipients of Grants, Scholarships Honored Some of the grant and scholarship recipients attending the lunchemi. ju “''Wnued from Page One) j.s® Upward to $1,000 per year. *as the scholarship program ?j ,“'^ed in 1960, a total of 116 *en Scholarships have ci)Q[ "'Ufded, including 13 new given this year. At fe p ^ Fieldcrest Scholars iiive ''r?hed in colleges and lOM^^’ties. Each scholarship is f Collover the four years fom » having increased In j chof^'tition to the Fieldcrest rovj?^ships the Foundation t jp®® u number of other types ollg^holarships on various ai(p® campuses, Mr. Newton He Oft" egio^'uted out that since its le ^'og in I960 and through oiio^tendar year 1975 the 3,62^^^tion has contributed >332 for aid to education and various charitable causes. The total contributed in the 1976-77 school year in grants-in- aid, Fieldcrest Scholarships and the various campus scholarships is $176,300. Contributions for all purposes approved for 1976 total $346,548, of which about 50 percent is for grants and scholarships. W. Clyde Pressley, superin tendent of Eden City Schools and a member of the Scholarship Committee, in a brief talk, congratulated the recipients and their parents. He said he had watched the Fieldcrest Scholars and noted a “high degree of consistency. They knew their goals and attained them.” Mr. Pressley expressed his pride in the students and their accomplishments and com- (Continued on Page Eight) More recipients and their parents shown following the luncheon. ^remosf Employees Create Float For Parade 7 £rh /cr^PWees at the Foremost ^rint Plant couldn’t let St parade in Stokesdale in occur without their Itid k,'P3tion, so they created JAr'ia float. itiig^’J'oer of them also accom- dressed in early ibfip costumes made from As ^ printed at Foremost. It a family affair with ®*'iployees and their Huju® participating. entirely by Foremost the float featured a 'sidp setting furnished with llitHw^est’s American Com- pattern which is ft.. ^he American Treasures ’®n taken from original f*'om the Smithsonian ' Created with the aid j'efjj^^ieldcrest Store at Eden, setting consisted of the Commemorative '''Veij'^.^omforter, sheets, — "Hi f. curtains were made and )acking fabric of the A ^ter number of Foremost ^fojg^^os participated in the including Zebedee tig *'» of the Plant Manager’s >th 'vho drove j “ Pulled 1 '^’^Day, the the tractor float; and Carolyn Williams and Cindy Arnold, both of the Quality Con trol Department; and Pat Pegram, Personnel Department, who coordinated the effort. Those accompanying the float are shown in the photograph at right. Inside the float is Wiley S. Pegram whose wife, Pat, works in the Foremost Personnel Department. In back row left to right are: Joy Bolling, Scheduling; Susan Doss whose sister, Jane Fulton, works also in Scheduling; Kathy Tucker, daughter of Jane Ful ton; Jane Fulton; Goldie Pres ton, Unit Print; and Cindy Arnold, Quality Control. In front row, left to right, are: Scott Tuttle whose mother, Lauris, works in Accounting; Dottie Osborne whose mother, Bettie, works in the Yard Goods -Office; YeVonne Pegram, daughter of Patricia Pegram; Also accompanying the float but not present for the pho- otgraph was Dolores Bolling, daughter of Joy Bolling, Scheduling, and David Bolling, Plant Services. Another Bolling daughter, Deborah, works in the Packaging Department. Some employees are shown with Foremost float in Stokesdale parade. SEPTEMBER 6, 1976