(Continued from Page One) ijens, Greece, follows up on a ’‘■jninute request for an entry ■'K and information about the “nament. Possible favorite in the warp ''ision will be the 1973 winner, Uwrence of Dixie Yarns, " he can win his own com- y ohampionship. -Another 1973 champion, Teale of Cannon Mills, of the filling division , tet, will not be eligible for *976 tournament because he as Ao'^^’^'^ment, because he been promoted and is no a “working ■^“''ding to the rules. P b incomplete canvas of I hcipating companies ^cates that more women are ij,, 'ament i^ament in the 1976 than in the first , — three years ago. . ® Hawkins, of Mayfair Mills, lady contender in the 1973 jlrg bboent is back this time and jf b^.y a division winner, UsB.bb'og to Bill Peebles, com- y coordinator. ({j^.bbon Mills Company that three out of four pants at the company’s b 16 were women and the k scored first and second, bcr they can go to take it all bins to be seen. Ate, Crs bipionships, a woman, Mary lost out in semi-finals to ill. bt Blackwell after winning „ I*" home ground in Revolu- lojpone Mills Corp., where 138 vying for company 'JOll Plant Babe Kimbrell is fastest filling doffer at Alexander. Tracy Giibert is Alexander’s warp doffing champion. ^omoted Tanzanian Visits Fieldcrest New Foreman Elmira priddy K promotion of Elmira M. ^sl-by to general foreman of the Department at the Mill has been an- Cb'"cad cCed, effective recently. Priddy first ;i,^c Priddy first joined ‘crest in 1944 as a battery C ib the Bedspread Mill Room. She worked in that Cbity for the next eight IjP was transferred to the i^cting Department in 1952 Hi.i^orked on virtually every the department, including (lector, production recorder y loader, quality coordinator jpssistant foreman. was named a shift ijpan in 1970 and continued in J classification until her 'bt promotion. '^’^DAY, MARCHS, 1976 Fieldcrest was host recently to a most . interesting and distinguished visitor. His name is Uledi Faraji. He is from the African country of Tanzania, where he is a personnel training officer with National Textile Industries Co., Ltd. Under the sponsorship of the United Nations, Mr. Faraji is spending several months in the United States visiting various industries and taking personnel training courses to increase his knowledge of personnel management interviewing, selection, training manpower development and industrial relations. He spent a week in the Fieldcrest Industrial Relations Department, studying the com pany’s personnel policies and practices. Mr. Faraji is one of a group of seven Tanzanians from various industries who are participating in the UN progranf. On leaving Fieldcrest, he will spend a week in Raleigh in the State Personnel Department then a week at Dan River, Inc., in Danville. Va. He will then return to the University of Connecticut at Hartford for the remaining weeks of his stay in the U.S. He H^s^.^Ready spent several months at the university taking personnel courses. u V'u ^®"zanian said that he f ad begun to get very homesick for his wife, Asxi, and their six who range in age from 14 to four The family lives in a city of about 500,000. and Mr. Uledi Faraji, center, observes Fleldcrest’s computer-based per sonnel records system operated by Laura Horsley, personnel data control clerk. At right is R. L. Moore, regional personnel manager. Faraji says that life there is not very different from life here. One difference he noted was that no one there drives large cars such as Americans do. Tanzania does not import many cars from the U.S. because, “they are too large and consume too much petrol.’’ Mr. Faraji holds a diploma Charles C. Perdue, Jr., has been named a shift foreman in the Carding and Spinning Department at the Bedspread Mill, effective recently. He joined Fieldcrest in 1972 as a stock man in the Canteen Department. Later that year, he became a vending machine serviceman. He joined the Fieldcrest supervisory training program in November, 1975. A native of Martinsville, Va., he was previously employed as a supervisor by Southeast Vendors, Inc., of Danville, Va. He is married and the father of two children. from the Mzumbe Secondary School in Tanzania and received his education in business administration in Italy. He and his fellow Tanzanians will return to their country on April 16, hopefully taking back with them some useful techniques which can be applied there.