Done
^hemselves don’t seem at all
'^•■prised at what they have
Accomplished. They are happy
and very proud, but not
^nrprised. They also are
annvinced that they will be able
n sustain a high level of
aificiency along with a low
Percentage of seconds in the
future.
. If people keep communicat-
8 and working together the
^ay they have been doing, we’ll
Wilkr-® fo keep it up, ” said Virgil
es, second shift fixer.
It made me feel real good.
,j^'^®*’ybody just did their jobs
fiiD /
nest they knew how and
^ Ped everybody else out when
needed it. Everybody
, fngether, that’s why we
th' ^ ^n it.” — Mary Deweese,
shift weaver.
“In
do
‘ nay mind, I knew we could
‘ngethi
it. Everybody worked
to
nr and that’s what it takes
get the job done” — Dalton
^Ds, third shift fixer.
I Conti
mued On Page Eight)
GETTING THEIR “ALL YOU CAN EAT’’ BARBECUE are, from left, Ron
nie Benton, Harold Wombles, Nathaniel Morgan, Sherman Moore, Billy
Hudson, Robert Jackson, and Byron Windham. Serving at far ieft is
David Lockhart.
“We were abie to do it because
everybody cooperated.’’—VIRGIL
WILKES
“Everybody really felt good about it.’’—BONITA DAVIS
■v|^^^*^ade me feel real good.’’
Deweese
‘Day
-OCTOBER,10,1977