The clothmaker. [volume] (Clinton, South Carolina) 1952-1984, June 15, 1980, Image 1
CLINTON
MILLS
June 1980
As previously announced, all plants
June 27, at the end of second shift. Opei
with the third shift.
July 4th will be observed as a paid
Vacation pay checks will be distribu
Eligibility for vacation with pay will be
1980 Vacation Pay Policy.
Payroll checks for week ending June
Thursday, July 3, at the Payroll Depart
Office.
In order to receive your checks on Ji
along with your payroll check on Junt
department, and shift, and must be p
To pick up your check on July 3, this <
your Assistant Superintendent on Junp
the presence of payroll personnel.
If you wish to have someone else picl
name in the space provided on the cai
receiving your check must sign at the t
presence of the payroll personnel.
Employees who are working July 3
Checks not picked up on July 3 will b
with the first shift.
Mercer Silas Bailey
Scholarship
Advisory Co
a ~
Seven Laurens County representatives
from professional, educational, civic and
business interests comprise The Mercer
Silas Bailey Memorial Scholarships and
Loans Grants Advisory Committee.
The group meets annually to select the
recipients of the M.S. Bailey Scholarships
and Loans from qualified applicants
associated with Clinton Mills, its divisions
and subsidiaries in South Carolina,
North Carolina, Alabama, New York,
Oklahoma and Pennsylvania.
Members of the group are left to right:
Donald Ross, Laurens District No. 55
Guidance Counselor; Dr. Jim Macdonald,
a Clinton physician, who is chairman of
the Advisory Committee; Claude Howe,
Clinton High School Principal; Donny
Wilder, Editor of The Clinton Chronicle;
I w
r
The Mercer Sibs
Scholarships and Loans G
3B
Vacation
Schedule
will ston for thp .Tnl\? ? c_: j
r w**.j ? v?i t uvuliuii uii r nuay,
rations will resume midnight Sunday, July 6,
holiday for eligible employees.
ted June 27 with the regular payroll checks.
i determined in accordance with the July 4th,
i 29 will be paid from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
ment located on the ground floor of the Main
uly 3, you will receive a special printed card
? 27. This card will bear your name, plant,
resented when your check is picked up.
:ard must be signed by you in the presence of
27, and at the time your check is received, in
c up your check, you must write the person's
*d and sign your name. The person's name
ime the check is received from payroll in the
will receive their checks on the job.
e paid Monday, July 7, on the job beginning
Grants
mmittee
Joe Nixon, Dean of Students at
Presbyterian College; Dr. Clarice
Johnson, Director of The Synod Guidance
Center at Presbyterian College; and Ed
Little, Bell Street Middle School Principal.
since inception of the M.S. Bailey
Scholarships and Loans program, The
Bailey Foundation has awarded 46 fouryear
scholarships at a cost commitment
of approximately $200,000.
Approximately 100 interest-free college
educational loans have been made by the
Foundation totalling over $400,000.
Each scholarship has a current maximum
value of $7,000 each, and each
interest-free educational loan is valued at
$6,000 for four years of college study.
. I
Br
E3B
wen
Ti
Bailey Memorial
rants Advisory Committee
pTHMi
Published By a
RECIPIENTS?Left to Ri
Swetenburg, Dr. Jim Macdonal
Bailey Schola
Three Clinton Mills employees' sons r
and daughters have been named t
recipients of M.S. Bailey Memorial
Scholarships for 1980. ^
Each scholarship is worth up to a max- ^
imum of $7,000 each, depending upon the ^
other financial aids which are available to
the student.
This year's recipients, Allen Ray j,
Waters, Ada Catherine Swetenburg, and g
Richard Alan Finley. ^
Waters is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Prue ^
D. Waters and plans to enter Erskine
College in the fall. Prue is a Bailey Plant f(
Weaver and has been with the company g
for the past 22 years. At Clinton High, he ^
was a member of the football and q
baseball teams and sports editor of the -u
Clint onion.
Finley is the son of Mr anrtMm Hunr-.. t
..Vlllj L-J
Finley. Henry is a Clinton Mills Plant No. m
2 Assistant Spinning Superintendent. He F
has been with the company over 24 years. P
Mrs. Finley (Joyce) is a Bailey Plant Spinner.
She has been with the company for H
the past 13 years. W
Alan was editor of the Clinton High M
OSHA Dust J
Becomes Eff
The Occupational Safety and
(OSHA) standard for cotton d
March 27,1980.
The new standard, allowing
cotton dust per cubic meter of
ing areas and .75 of a milligra
ing, applies to Clinton's six
plants.
With this issue, THE CLOTHMAKI
articles on the new standard ai
will affect our operations.
~\m
md fr Embays { CI*? Mill
ght?Allen Waters, Ada
j _ i * "
u ana Alien Finley.
irs Named
tewspaper, The SmHmL He plans to atend
Clemson University.
Ada Swetenburg is the daughter of
fice President of Manufacturing and
4rs. J.R. Swetenburg. Swetenburg has
?en with the company for the past 16
ears.
While at Clinton High School, Ada was
ead cheerleader her senior year, in
chool musicals; and active in the
National Honor Society. She plans to atend
Clemson University, also.
In addition to the scholarships, the
^undation also awarded Clinton High
/?KAA1 aoniA^ ** * "
viiwi ovmoia rwutn mane Bannister,
lark Campbell, Rhonda Humphries,
hristopher Payne, and Frances Waldron
iterest-free college educational loans.
In addition, Mary Ellen Patricia Lyons,
inda Joan McCooy, and Joseph E. O'Conor,
whose parents are with Elastic
abrics of America, Fort Washington,
a., received M.S. Bailey Loans.
Other loan recipients included Barry L.
ooks, Clinton Mills of Geneva; and
rilliam S. Morgan, Mid-America Yarn
ills. Inc., Pryor, Okla.
\
Standard
active
health AHminictrQti^r?'o
MtlUll C5
lust became effective on
only .2 of a milligram of
air in yarn manufacturm
in slashing and weavspinning
and weaving
\R is beginning a series of
nd how its requirements