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I M Stiill I " sSmmBS m fmmssssi&mm -K;:re:!atMRW.,::K>;::si;iM::55553f3! V?L%sHK^;>:jnSJi;!3^Ve.^nat SINCE 1896 VOL. 20. NO. 8 Published I Bobby B. Cannon Heaton and Cannon Na Jerry J. Heaton and Bobby B. Cannon have been named to Assistant Overseer positions in Plant No. 1 and Plant No. 2, respectively. jerry was elevated to Assistant Overseer from combination spooler-spinning fixer, according to Plant Manager Sam Williams. He is married to the former Joyce ? Creswell and they have three children: Randall. 14; Susan, 11; and Cynthia. 5. The Heatons are members of the First TWENTY-TWO BEC< Twenty-two Clinton Mills employees will become members of the elite "Old Timer's Club" next month. Completing the 25 years continuous service necessary for membership durk ing the previous year were Everettc Allman, Carding; Robert Holden, Emma Dunaway, and Mary Harris, Spinning; Inez Byrum and L. F. Wilson. Weaving. All are Plant No. 1 employees. Plant No. 2 employees coming into the club are Robert Little. Carding: Douglas Medlock, Jr., and William Harris, also Carding; Robert Edge and Edna Lawson, Spinning; Morris Thibodeau, Ola Meadors, and J. C. Lawson, ) Weaving. Two Clinton Plants Shop employees KliijBMMH WE#eSies*s*ia ? .-.r*--*?: rrsrsrSH?:: ?? ? - ? ?? ---*"- .-.. ? *>! 3y and For Employees of Clinton Mills, C C^. \ 1 V J Jerry J. Healon med Assistant Overseers Pentecostal Holiness Church, Clinton. Cannon was promoted to Assistant Overseer from loom fixer. He had held this job since re-joining the company in 1969 Cannon, who lives at Rt. 6. Greenville. is married to the former Patsy Webb. They, too. have three children: Barry Lynn, 17; Joy, 15: and Kellie, 3. The Cannons attend Bailey Memorial Methodist Church. 3ME "OLD TIMERS" will become members. They are Lessie Jackson and Walter McAllister. John Shands, Outside; Wallace Young, Warehouse; Jim Tinsley, No. 2 (retired); and Annie B. Milam No. 1 (retired) have also completed membership requirements. Lois Pos and Hudson Davis are the only two Lydia Plant employees who are incoming 25-Year members. They are employed in Spinning and Weaving, respectively. Rllhv Qnlf Plnnl 1 I VV,. , W.1^ VIIIployee and Charles Dunaway, retired Plant No. 2 employee will become members of the 40-Year service group. (For a complete Old Timers listing, see page 4.) . . (, * ?? ?* tefe?S5E!ap|ip?iwl3SiS3:. V. * - -.--- : ' linion, S. C. OCTOBER. 1971 IT'S TIME FOR A CHANGE Clinton Mills, as well as South Carolina and most of the Nation, will return to Standard Time at 2 a.m. Sunday, October 31. All Clinton Mills plants, departments, and schedules will return to Eastern Standard Time October 31. This means that all clocks will be set back one hour, officially at 2 a.m., Sunday, October 31, but from a practical standpoint, most everyone will turn his clock back one hour before going to bed Saturday night, October 30, Any employees having questions about changing from Daylight Saving Time to Eastern Standard Time should discuss them with their Assistant Overseer. Nine Attend Human Relations Course Nine Clinton Mills employees attended a Human Relations seminar at Piedmont Tech September 28. t 41? iktiviiuiiig me luuiM* liuiii llltr Bailey Plant were Joe Nelson, Carding and Spinning Overseer; Raymond N. Lane. Cloth Room Overseer; Aiken Nunnery, Quality Control and Maintenance Overseer; James Bright, Carding Assistant Overseer; George Link, Robert E. Hooks, and Edgar Benjamin, all management trainees. Also participating in the course were Alexander Reeder of the Clinton Plants Warehouse, and Hank Cronic, Clinton Mills Training Director. The seminar consisted of information l*n 1 nf in ft /> Drtln4i/\r*c? T i viu?ui5 iv/ 11 u 111 (i 11 ivciaviuiid, ucauui ship. Motivation. Efficiency, Absenteeism, Turn-over, and Setting Objectives and Goals. It was taught by Lex D. Walters, Director of the Piedmont Technical Education Center, Greenwood.