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4 SPOTLIGHTh jbmr jKI Mr. and Mrs. Bradshaw B of these three fine children. 5; and Vickie, 15 months. r and Mrs. Bruce Bagwell and Mixed, Some Coarse . . . Some Fine . . CHARACTER: To have the same ailment as the other person is describing ?and not to mention it. CHIVALRY: Giving a lady a head start in the race for a seat on the bus. COCKTAIL PARTY: A place where you meet a lot of old friends you never saw before. CO-ED: A girl who didn't get her man in high school. CO-ED COLLEGE: A place where girls pursue learning and also learn pursuing. Great Thing The president of one of of department stores says t being sold by that company within the past five years, o within that time. A very conservative estir the items all m,nn'ifantnrm,< in the year 1990 have not yei It very well could be th< witness more changes in p the textile industry than we dred years. This being so, it will be i challenge the best in all of times. Today's textile industry quo" or the faint-hearted. ] employees must be imagina cnanges that will guide and ATTEND LOCA Management personnel fr attended the Twelfth Annu at Presbyterian College June Over four hundred perso tended to hear discussions on NG CM i agwell are the proud parents L to r are Chuck, 7: Connie, Their grandparents are Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Lusk. Ifa/utA, . Some with a Different Twilt COMMERCIAL TRAVELER: A fellow who leaves his seat only when the TV program he is watching is interrupted with a message from the sponsor. BAR: A place that has no steady customers. COMMON S:ENSE Something which would prevent a lot of divorces? and marriages, too COMPROMISE: A deal in which two people get what neither of them wanted. is To Come the world's largest chains hat 80'/? of the goods now were either new creations r had substantially changed r: te is that 50 per cent of industries will be producing L been invented, it the next ten years could roducts and equipment in have seen in the last hunln exciting decade that will ,,C ?ill- il - uo !.?.? rvwwjj jjul'i; wun me is no place for the "status Both management and the tive and ever alert to the determine our destiny. L WORKSHOP om all Clinton Mills plants lal Management Workshop 4-5. ns throughout the area atvital labor relations matters. CLOTHMAKER OYEES' CHIL J Barbara and Dale Fulmer are the grandchildren of Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Leopard. Dale, left, celebrated his first birthday in April. Mr. Leopard is a No. 2 warper tender. QUOT, "A total textile environmen is almost a certainty in the next decade. The Apollo mission couldn't have gotton off the ground without textiles. Automohilov: rmilHn't the military couldn't fight without them. "The industry is gearing for an expended range of textiles for a host of new uses in all areas of industry. Textiles will be used in combination with other materials, including rubber, metal and ceramics. "Synthetics will continue to be pacesetters, and the overall growth pattern for textiles will surpass the j?rowtn rate lor the population."?Donald F. McCullou^h, president of Collins and Aikmen Corp. Adult High Ijraduate Mike Ficklin, son of Mr. and Mrs. I). D. Ficklin, was among those receiving his high school diploma in night school this year. DREN Corine Greswell is the cute granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Campbell. Corine celebrated her second birthday June 8. OLE Q 1 "We must have a variable growing textile industry in the United States. We need it as a major source of employment for all of our population groups, particularly in the South for our minority groups who are employed in such great numbers in this industry. We need it as a mainstay for many depressed rural areas of our country. We need it is a keystone in the prosperity of our cotton farmers and sheep herders, as well as our chemical and machinery industries for sucn oi whom the American textile industry is a very important customer. And, we need it for national security reasons. "For all these reasons I want to make it quite Carwile-Young Eng Mr. and Mrs. Jake Carwile, Sr.. of 308 North Owens Street, announce the engagement of their daughter, Mae Frances to Mason Jasper Young. Mr. Carwile is a No. 2 Carding employee. Mr. Young is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Young, Rt. 1, Clinton. Miss Carvvilc is a '66 graduate of Bell Street High School; '67 graduate of The Automation Institute of Newark, New Jersey; and a '69 graduate of Greenville County School of Nursing. She is currently employed on the nursing staff JUNE, 1970 4 Sound Advice "Here we are the greatest industrial nation in the world with vast technical resources. Instead of encouraging our basic manufacturing industries, like steel, automobiles and textiles, we open the floodgates to a rush of products which sell in this country i primarily because they are made for wages which would not be legal here. "It is illegal to move goods in interstate commerce which are not made under fair labor standards. But if they are made by exploited workers beyond the 12-mile limit, we embrace them with enthusiasm." ?Sen. Herman Talmadge (D-Ga.) U O T E S clear .... We have no intention of letting it go down the drain. "Our need is so great, our objectives so reason able, our resolve so determined, I know we will find a solution to the textile import problem."?Rep. Wil- ^ bur Mills (D-Ark.) ' "We are willing to allow all producers to share in the growth of our market. All we seek to do is to stop a growinp vvavp nf imnnrt? - o o Tw* v" that will deluge our markets and bring catastrophe to our (textile) industry and its workers. Tsn't this reasonable?"?U. S. Secretary of Commerce Maurice ^ H. Stans. agement Announced at Whitten Village. Young is a '62 graduate of Bell Street High and is presently enrolled at Piedmont Technical Education- f al Center, Greenwood.