i i m I Mt. Holly; Malcom Walker. Blanket Warehouse- J R Baff C,“ irM*n'“•: ' ' —iiaiit lepreseniauve is not shown. Eight Plants Are Presented l^afety Awards Eight Fieldcrest nlants and the Gen- hplnw thfiiT' -pQ+/i -f/-»-i^ lofjo _ 1 _ Eight Fieldcrest plants and the Gen- , ®*'al Offices have won awards for their I ^ood safety performance during 1969. The Mount Holly Spinning Mill and : as Blanket Warehouse were awarded as National Safety Council Certificate Commendation and the General Of- *aes the N. S. C. Award of Honor. The award to the Mount Holly Spin- *hg Mill was for operating without a Jasabling injury from March lO, 1967, arough December 31, 1969, accumu- ®ting 631,671 accident-free man-hours. The Blanket Warehouse operated fl'om August 18, 1968, through Decem- 31, 1969, without a disabling in- and accumulated 494,665 safe ^an-hours. The General Offices at the of 1969 had 5,057,949 safe man- below their rate for 1968 and more than 50 percent below the state aver age. The following earned awards by re ducing their accident frequency rate by more than 40 percent below the previous year: Automatic Blanket Plant (eighth year) , Sheet Finishing Mill (fifth year). Blanket Mill (first year). and North Carolina Finishing Co. di vision (first year). The National Safety Council Awards were presented at the Central Safety Committee’s quarterly meeting June 11. The North Carolina Department of Labor certificates are to be presented as soon as they are received from the state. ‘‘Ours since March 13, 1958. . In addition to the N. S. C. awards, 06 following units won Certificates of afety Achievement from the North arolina Department of Labor: Blanket % arehouse. Mount Holly Spinning Mill, General Offices, Blanket Finishing Mill, 5arastan Rug Mill, Automatic Blanket Jant, Sheet Finishing Mill, Blanket ‘yh and North Carolina Finishing Co. ^‘''ision. g The Blanket Warehouse, Mount Holly ^Pinning Mill and the General Offices j.^^ned the awards by operating ^ofoughout the calendar year 1969 with- a disabling injury. The Blanket Finishing Mill and the aiastan Rug Mill qualified by oper- j^‘hg throughout 1969 with an accident squency rate more than 40 percent New IBM Records System Being Tested Store Hours j. The Fieldcrest Stores at Eden and ®Iumbus, Ga., will be open during the his’ vacation period, except that the ji V LliClv blic Ores will be closed on Saturday, July ‘n observance of Independence Day. . Store hours at Eden are 9 a.m. until .P'tu. and at Columbus 9:00 a.m. until ■3o p.m. Monday, Test operations are under way on Fieldcrest’s new computerized personnel records system in which the IBM 2260 scopes shown above are tied in with the electronic data processing equipment at the General Offices, Eden. When the new set-up is in operation, the electronically-stored information from an employee’s record can be dis played on the screen by use of a code system. Information also is fed into the JUNE 2 2, 1 9 7 0 computer from the keyboards at these scopes. Watching the test operations above are Haven H. Newton (right), vice president-industrial relations, and Phil Shepard, of Information Systems, who is helping with the installation of the system. Seated at the scopes are Linda Bare (in foreground) and Nancy Bate man, personnel data control clerks in the Industrial Relations Department.