The Revolution of Change Everyone now seems to be playing the change game. The rules are simple. Pick any segment of society and tear it down. The game goes on and you don’t have to think of ways to put society back together again. A picket sign, a brickbat, a loud voice — that’s all you need to play. But the game generates little change after tomorrow’s head line is forgotten We want a revolution of change, a revolution of imagination, of freeing the creative talents of men, where life is running instead of walking with an immediate, militant activism. The revolution of de struction is out of date. We do not defend any institution or establishment for its own sake. But we refuse to accept the idea that we must tear down what has been created simply because it has not gone far enough Science is transforming society at a rate never dreamed of before. This is the bewilderment of our age. But our generation is the first to feel that uncontrollable change is an asset and not a disaster This is the adventure of our age. In spite of the frustration and the uncertainty, we want to use all our resources, all our energy and imagination. We are a part of the future, a part of hope. —from “Provocative Proposals for a New Society” written by six students at Mackinac (Michigan) College for “Pace Magazine”. Mozer Joins Floor Covering Division In N. Y. Leonard Mozer has been named to the newly-created position of publicity and promotion manager for Fieldcrest Mills’ floor covering division which in cludes Karastan Kug Mills and Laurel- crest Carpets. The annormcement was made in New York by George Grulich, director of marketing services of Fieldcrest Mills’ floor covering division. Mr. Grulich stated that Mr. Mozer will be responsi ble for all publicity and the coordina tion of retail promotion activities for Karastan and Laurelcrest. Mr. Mozer will report to Mr. Grulich at Fieldcrest’s floor covering division’s headquarters at 295 Fifth Avenue. Mr. Mozer has been public relations director of the Carpet and Rug Insti tute since the beginning of the year. For five years before that he had been public relations manager of The Wool Bureau’s carpet division, and from 1958 to 1963 was publicity manager of the American Carpet Institute. His background also includes several years as account executive with the public relations agency of Selvage & LEONARD MOZER Lee, Inc. in New York. A native of Chicago, Illinois, Mr. Mozer is a grad uate of the State University of Iowa. Mr. Mozer and his wife Betty are resi dents of New York City. SS Covers Young Workers If Severly Disabled When 20-year-old medical corpsman, David Cotner of Newton, Kansas was so seriously wounded in Vietnam that doctors at first gave him up, he was outside the reach of any financial help from social security. So was Clark Patterson, Jr., 18, an innocent bystander who took a beating in a street fight in AsheviUe, North Carolina, a little more than a year ago. Doctors said he would never walk again. But Cotner now plans to enter law school. And Patterson, through a tre mendous effort of spirit that caused doctors to change their forecast, last June hobbled forth on crutches at Ashe ville Orthopedic Hospital to accept his high school diploma. They are two of 100,000 Americans for whom the most recent changes in the social security law have meant a lightening of the burden of sudden tragedy'—and help in living lives of dig nity and independence. Both are getting monthly SS disability checks although neither would have been eligible for benefits at the time they became disabled. Social security disability benefits (Continued on Page Seven) I the’mi ll. wh istl3 Si • .J Copyright, 199, Fieldcrest Mills, Inc. Eden, N. C. 27288 ^ Issued Every Other Monday For Employ®® and Friends of Fieldcrest Mills, Inc. ^ OTIS MARLOWE EDITOR SANDRA PENCE ASSOCIATE editor ADVISORY BOARD R. F. Bell J. S. Eggleston P. A. Brodie A. H. Justice J. L. Crabtree J. M. Moore W. F. Crumley J. M. Rimmer S. R. Culligan C. C. Wilson ^ Vol. 28 Monday, October 6, 1969, N^-J J^ERVICE ^^nniversarie^ Forty-Five Tears , Otra S. Chilton Blanks Forty Years Louise G. Suttenfield Karastan Thirty-Five Tears . Eva P. Powell Columbus To«'® 'Twenty-Five Years , Katherine W. Griffith i Vivian T. Harbour Industrial Twenty Years Juanita P. Brown Lewis Sheet F ' Sallie S. Bateman Blanket Frances S. Hall Sheet FinisbiW Gertrude E. Powers .... Columbus To-f George Shropshire, Jr Sheeti® Evelyn M. Amburn Sheet Finisbi" Annie M. Austin .... Bedspread Finisb^^ Violet M. Gray .... Bedspread Finishing Glenn McCart Columbus Tof Pauline S. Barham Sheet Finish! Josie C. Crowder Sheet Finisbi Edna M. Smith Blanket Finishiw Ellsworth C. Haggerty .... Field. Sa* Wiley S. Barwick Karast Edwin R. Mills Automatic Blank Mollie U. Edwards Ray N. Land Blanket Finish^ Joseph F. Smith Blank Fifteen Years , , Homer G. Moore Blanket Finisbih, Harvey R. Palmer Fieldale , Eugene W. Perry Blank, Jean F. Rorrer Fieldale Odell W. Mitchell Fieldale To'*', Willie Keith Scott Fieldale To!*', Whit D. Hampton Fieldale T'n^ . Loyce W. Dalton Blanket Finish!^ Lucille M. Martin Karast^ Ruby L. Williams Columbus Pauline M. Hyler Blank Carrie M. Hall Geneva H. Clark Fieldale John D. Compton Bedspr®® Dock Sims Karasj Daisy M. Barnes Karast® Lorraine W. Buckner Karast Annie C. Fuller Karast» Pauline R. Joyce Fieldale Virginia M. Tolbert Karast^ Ten Years j Kenneth R. Graham .... Columbus George N. Kingston Karast Joe C. Lackey Fieldale I’o'^» 'Thomas L. Cochran Blank THE MILL WHlSTb