Happenings... Rainbows Elect Pistilli To Office Helen Montgomery and Children Tina Pistilli, a student at Rocking ham Community College, has been elected Worthy Advisor in the Leaksville Assembly No. 17, Rainbow Girls. Worthy Advisor is the highest office in Rainbow Girls. Since becoming a member of the group 21/2 years ago, Tina has gotten seven service bars and this past summer she received the Grand Cross Color, an award for distinguished service. She has held three previous offices in the organi zation, Faith, Hope, and Charity, and was crowned Miss Service in February of 1977. She is the daughter of Maj. and Mrs. Edwin R. Pistilli. Her father is the Wackenhut project manager for Fieldcrest. Her mother, Mildred, is employed at the Fieldcrest Store. Employee's Wife Nets Three-Pound Catfish Helen Montgomery, a former Fieldcrest employee, knows there are some fine fish at Bugs Island, Va. Above, she and her children, Cindy (left) and Larry (right) show off a recent catch. The catfish weighed three pounds and measured 2IV2 inches long. Mrs. Montgomery’s husband, James, is a loom fixer in the Weave Room at the Blanket Greige Mill. MARGARET LAWSON Winning Watercolof Margaret Lawson recently won a fifth place ribbon for one of her' TINA PISTILLI color paintings in the third annual Jeb Stuart Art Show sponsored First National Bank of Stuart, Va. Some,70 works were entered in this year’s show which was held First National Bank in Stuart October 11-21. , Margaret, Fieldaie Towel Mill’s own artist-in-residence, is a thir°j weaver. She has only been painting for the past four years and won place ribbon in a show held at the First National Bank of Martinsville in ■ All of the winning art works in the Stuart show will be on display ^ Linville Art Center in Martinsville following the closing of the show^^^ That's Some Sweet Potato!! (No Brag, Just Fa JAMES SHOAF James Shoaf lives in Davidson County, N.C. and works in the Put Up Department at N.C. Finishing Company. Now everyone knows that Davidson County produces the “best and biggest’’ gardens. Everyone, that is, except Clarence Snider, another NCF empioyee. Snider works with Shoaf and kept bragging about his sweet potatoes. “They’re the sweetest and best in Rowan County,’’ he said. Shoaf, not to be outdone by his buddy, went home across the river and dug his own sweet potatoes. Of course, he had to use a backhoe to dig ’em and a chain saw to cut ’em!! He brought the proof into the Per sonnel Department at NCF. The three sweet potatoes (pictured at ieft) weighed 13 pounds, 2 ounces. Shoaf claims he can make enough sweet potato pie for ail of Davidson County out of those three potatoes. “Hope he’ll share some with some of us Rowan County people,’’ said Bob Beil, personnel manager at NCF. But that’s not the end of this sweet story ... Waiter Jeter works in the Housekeeping Department at NCF and iives in the Cleveiand section of Rowan County. When he heard Shoaf brag ging about his sweet potatoes, he got a bit hot under the coliar. Jeter had aiready taken his potatoes to market, aii the BiG ones, that is. The oniy ones left were a few LITTLE ones he had thrown away. He managed to recover one (shown at right) from the ieftovers. Anyone for “ieftover’’ sweet potato pie? WALTER JETEB THE MILL WH