6-Million Man-Hour Safety Record Set J«tomatic Blanket Plant pliployees Receive Recognition or ‘Best Record In Fieldcrest In Southeast’ pEi-npioyees of the Automatic Blanket have achieved a six hion man-hour safety record which described as “the best at Fieldcrest tli5 industrial plant in j Southeast.” shiff ^ program at the mill, first «t u ®*pPloyees assembled in the Blank- gf Department and heard con- sstit lotions extended to them by repre- gp„ of fhe mill management and aeral management. Pi P®3kers were Robert A. Harris, tjij,'fo^'ost vice president-manufacturing; F- Sambleson, manager of the jj Blanket Plant; and Haven H. tpw. Fieldcrest director of industrial '®tions. 5 first shift employees were served f>orbecue dinner at the regular Poriod. Arrangements were made oiji^®oond and third shift employees to barbecue dinners from the cater- Credit Union Grows 6}.Fieldcrest Mills Credit Union has ^(i 6,500 mark in membership 6fln ^ assets totaling approximately ; y0,000. Loans outstanding at present Si total w'Pce its '“Oft $1,031,000. organization, the Credit has loaned approximately $5- to members to help them finance j wrtant purchases or tide them over ”j^®fgencies. are made for a wide variety of Poses: school expenses, taxes, medi- dental bills, consolidation of Vyj ’ Piaking cash purchases instead of thsg ^ “on time” and many other pur- - s beneficial to the members. Credit Union was formed among ia ^j®'P-Ployees of the mills and officer Tri-City area in 1958. The mem- W] ^P was subsequently extended to in all locations, including the divisions. Ptoyees who are not members of ^5 (, '^Pdit Union may join by paying a fee and signing a card authoriz- tiao'P® company to deduct a specified Pt of savings from each paycheck. ing restaurant. As part of the award earned by the employees for their rec ord, the canteen was redecorated and a music system installed. The Automatic Blanket Plant pre viously has received the highest awards given lor safety performance. Included is an Award of Honor, the highest award given by the National Safety Council. Also received previously were an Award of Excellence given by Field crest Mills, Inc., and the third consecu tive blue ribbon award as a Certificate Muscogee Employees Give $28,012 To Fund In a phenomenally suecessful cam paign among the 1,567 employees of Muscogee Mills at Columbus, Georgia, 1,535 employees, or 97.96 per cent, con tributed to the United Givers Campaign. A total of 1,213 employees, or 77.41 per cent, gave a Fair Share or more and 698 employees, 44.54 per cent, signed up for continuing deductions on the Fair Share basis. A total of 828,012 was pledged by the employees at the Muscogee plant, repre senting a per capita gift of ?17.88 for all Muscogee employees and an average donation of $18.25 for each contributor. of Safety Achievement, given jointly by the N. C. Department of Labor and the U. S. Department of Labor. Technically, the Award of Honor was given to the plant for having operated 3,561,561 man-hours without a disabl ing injury between September 21, 1960, and December 31, 1963. The blue ribbon award was for the employees’ having worked the entire year of 1964 without disabling injuries. The plaque from Fieldcrest Mills, Inc., was given as an Award of Excellence to the employees in recognition of five mil lion man-hours without a lost-time acci dent, a record which was attained on June 18, 1964. Barbecue Won In Safety Contest The barbecue dinner was given under terms of the Fieldcrest safety contest in which the company gives a barbecue dinner for all employees in any mill which operates without a lost-time in jury for an average of 2,000 hours per employee. Fieldcrest for many years manufac tured automatic blankets at Spray and the six million man-hour record dates from July 27, 1956, when the last dis abling injury occurred at the Spray mill. To date, there has not been a dis abling injury since the Automatic Blanket Plant began operations at Smithfield in June, 1960. Only 66 Pints Donated At Bloodmobile The visit by the Bloodmobile to tht Meadow Greens Shopping Center No vember 8 was a near-failure as only 66 persons contributed blood. It was the poorest turnout of donors since the Tri- City Blood Program was started in 1961. The quota for the Central Area visit was 150 pints, an amount necessary to maintain a balance between blood do nations and the actual usage of blood for the benefit of Tri-City patients. Blood Program officials expressed ex treme disappointment at the number of donors. They pointed out that 154 pints were contributed at Spray September 30 and that 189 pints were donated on the Bloodmobile visit to Leaksville August 5. The record blood collection was in May, 1964, in the Central Area, when 282 pints were given. Of the 66 pints given November 8, 37 were given by Fieldcrest employees, pri marily from the General Offices and the Karastan Mill. General Offices em ployees rallied to help a fellow worker, Ernestine Cox, of the Data Processing Department. Sixteen pints were given as replacements of blood for Miss Cox, who remains a patient at Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem. The General Offices and the Karastan Mill furnished 15 donors each. Other mills or staff units accounted for seven pints. Four donors, all Fieldcresters, gave their eighth pint and became eligible for the “Gallon Club”. They were: Paul Kitchens, Karastan; Edward Specht, (Continued on Page Eight)