University of South Carolina Libraries
JULY. 1968 MRS. GARY A ?*v> 1 1 i^anui ci iiiin i\inaiu UC~ came the wife of Gary Prewett at 2:00 p.m. on June 13 at Epworth Methodist Church, Joanna. The Rev. J. Leland Rhinehart officiated. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kinard of Joanna. She was attended by her sister, Mrs. Judy Franklin, of Laurens and Miss Susie Prewett. sister of the groom, of Dayton, Ohio. Terry Freeman of Clinton served the f?room ns man TTcVior-o were Carl Kinard and Terry Martin also of Clinton. The newlyweds will reside in Dayton, Ohio, home of the groom, Mrs. Bernice Kinard, mother of the bride, is employed in the Lydia Plant Cloth Room. uir^ \ mrr"*> Now We Know . . . The tri is known as to how Furmar Overseer of Weaving, catches about at the annual Fishing C caught in the act last week u; Plant fire protection reservo Actually, he posed for Th< controls of a local contracto moving approximately 8.000 i from the 2' _. acre pond main the Plant. Removal of the sil the reservoir to approximate Cooper With S. C. Big Leaguers El 3E I i H Clinton Mills Personnel Director, Calvin A. Cooper, appeared in special ceremonies honoring Sout h Carolina born major leaguers at beautiful Duncan Park in Spartanburg, July 20th. South Carolina M a j o r PREWETT E5! I . I - ith is out! At last the secret 1 Bratcher, Lydia Assistant all "those big'uns" he brags 'lub Suppers. He was finally ;ing a drag line in the Lydia ir. 5 Clothmaker camera at the r's equipment which is recubic yards of mud and silt tained for fire protection of t will double the capacity of ?ly .'1,000.000 gallons. League Night, the first in history of its type, was conceived and promoted bv Pat Williams. General Manager of the Spartanburg Phillies. Williams was host to the major leaguers and their families at a pre-game picnic. The players, all former textile league stars, were introduced to the fans during a special pre- game show. Cooper was a three sports star at Newberry College before turning professional. Most of yesterday's standout athletes attending the reunion are well known to Clinton Mills fans. Many recall watching Joe Pandrum. Lou Brissie. Kirbv PUi-X O..I1 *r..L i , v I1H l\ vlillll'WilV, \ itII Muni*o, Sammy Meoks, Noil Chrislov. Sammy Taylor. Ernie While. Hod Barbary. Earl Woolen, and others play with or against Clinton Mills sponsored send - pro teams. THE CLOTHMAKER SNAPSHOT mere's plenty ot time yet to enter THE CLOTHMAKER's Snapshot Contest. The deadline is not until October 1st . . . but don't delay. Take and enter a snapshot this week. All employees are eligible to enter the contest. First, Second, and Third Place ;ii u~ ?i pi i?.co Will UC d W dl ueu. Two examples of good photographs were loaned to THE CLOTHMAKER this month by Fred Galloway. Clinton No. 2 loom fixer. Fred, an avid shutterbug. took the shot of his wife. Naomi, holding "Jacquc," a white poodle, on the patio of their home at 405 Elizabeth Street. This is an example of "family member and pet" type photo we would suggest for entry. The second photo reflects i the photographer's "country music" hobby. He took this action shot recently while attending a Country Music Show. The singer is per Roberts On UF Budget-Admission Committee D. H. Roberts. Vice PresiI ?i r*li.,.f TVTlii. x ?v . 11 tii v inn \'i mciuufactoring. is serving on the B u d g e t and Admission Committee of the 1969 United Fund of Greater Clinton. The 10 member committee of civic and charitable , minded local citizens hear the requests of appearing agency representatives and determine the amount to allocate to the agency from funds contributed to the agency to the "One Time One Gift Campaign" each fall. Eleven agency representatives of health, youth, and character building organi CONTEST ENTRIES \ f s i s s f I I 3 s c s nations appeared before the Committee in a 6-hour ses- t sion earlier this month, t Thirteen additional agen- s cies submitted requests by c mail. s Each agency request is z carefully analyzed and z evaluated by the Committee before granting admis- c sion to the UF or allocating ? any funds. High in priority t of evaluation is the services t rendered and benefits received from the agency bv i the citizens of the Greater t Clinton Area. t STC Coming in October ; Lists of exhibitors in the c 25th Southern Textile Exposition at Greenville. S C.. c Oct. 21-25 have been dis- \ tributed to management of 4 some 1.600 mills in the U.S. < and Canada. < 5 WANTED 9V 3 > T T umici ijurena J-iyxin, conidered by Fred to be the [reatest country music inger since Hank Williams. Homes and hobbies preent many opportunities or excellent photographs, lave your camera ready ind catch a favored expresion of a loved one, or the lever antics of a pet, and hare it with us. Photos should be of good nough quality to reproiuce satisfactorily. Photos vill be judged for orignality. composition, newsworthiness. and impact. Prizes will be: First Prize ? Piece of Luggage Second Prize?Electric Drill or Electric Can Opener Third Prize ? Electric Toothbrush Lists and accompanying loor plans are an aid for hose attending the expo ition to study the mahinery. equipment and upplies to be displayed by ilrnost 600 manufacturers ind suppliers. Representative members >f management at Clinton dills traditionally attend he giant textile show every wo years. Size of the exposition nakes it necessary for texile people to plan their our of Textile Hall, to ncmc ucai um.' ui iline and ivoid overlap travel over he 315.000 square feet of exhibits. Aisles in Textile Hall are lesigned "avenues" (lengthvise of building) and 'streets" (crosswise of the structure), to allow easy mentation in exhibits.