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Page 11 text:
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ljj- FRONT ROW Cleft to rightl-Bernard S. Gerskovitz, Avon Karp, David Grier Perkins, Lawrence C. Dei- bold, Lawrence C. Kline, Paul VV. Badger, Stanley M. Hansen, VVilliam B. Tench, Ralph W. French, Ben S. Pollock. SECOND ROW Cleft to rightj-Hilton Watts, P. Edward Iefferis, Thomas. Charles Camp- b ll Leonard Arki s Henr R be k Wari H Griffi jam G Ma kechnie Ir Ir in Harri Alfrel e , s , y o c , f . n, es . c , ., w s, c Rawlinson, O. C. Harris. BACK ROW Cleft to rightj-Walter Reinhard CManager, Engineering Depart- mentl, C. H. Lanham CDirect0r of Schoolb, Earl Aiken Gross, Gordon Pigott, Preben Becker, Albert C. Menk, Jr., Robert Henry Stoer, Presley A. Martin, Edward James Blois, George johnson CGeneral Managerj. Members not in photograph-Paul McCoy, Maurice Papp. od after method, our fires burned lower and lower until as a very tired crew we hopped in the bus to be whisked Jolietward. Then came the advent of the chart of Fac- tors Influencing Production. Sure we memo- rized it. . .after a while. . .but it took a long time for us to see how valuable it is in inte- grating the entire problem of efficient work. For our social debut, one cold evening, we of the class and several of the staff, gathered at the Armory for a skating party. The side- line sitters were both amazed and amused as the evening wore on. Shortly after mid- night we found our way homeward and grate- fully dropped our weary and battered bodies into bed. It was during the Production course that the now famous Sudsmen came into being. Basketball suddenly became a veryfpopular sport and quite a few of the boys went down to the Y in the afternoons for practice. The first Y basketball league of the season was organized, in which the Sudsmen partici- pated with some success. Student Laundry came every afternoon, but we soon got into the swing of it and worked willingly and with great accuracy, attempting to get good production and better quality. We did! It was during the early part of the course that Ed Blois, who was on the receiv- ing side of the Flatwork Ironer, said to Pete Becker, who was feeding, Never mind, Pete, I'll fold it after it comes through. This sort of work was the exception rather than the rule and we did some mighty fine work, even if that does seem to be bragging somewhat. After wsorking day and night we finally finished our Problems, took final exams and left Joliet for the Christmas holidays. Page Nine I sz' :-I 'ef' .vzffvff-'.--. -K. ff. --rr ef' '. ' 1-we-,.e!..,..-,rr .L 1 a 'f V , .. ,,,. --fi . -.,-4, - o, 'f ' Q 1 -1 . . 1 ' Yr ,f ,l,,f'3,:, 'wp-ogI,.1':fi :Q r- 3:24.
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Page 10 text:
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plant production course For fifty percent extraction, this ma- chine takes about twelve minutes running time. T WAS in early November when we began this, our second course in the American Institute School of Laundry Management. A few of the old guard set forth to make their fortunes in the wide, wide world and several new seekers for knowledge of laundering registered with the same frightened look and strange appearance that we had had just two months ago. We soon found out that this course was divided, like Gaul, into three main parts. Laundry Management sneaked in along with the main part of the course, Production, and was lectured on by Walt several hours each week. Many were the hours we slaved bent over our drawing boards making a fewclines, many erasures and smudges on that piece of paper which was to become the perfect laundry. At the very beginning Walt tried to scare us by hinting about the Problem, As old hands we scoffed at him, thinking that we could take this mighty work in our stride. Walt said to us many times, HD., old boy, you'll be burning the midnight oil before you are through with me. . . .and how right he was! A After studying in class about good laundry production and bad, we set out one fine morn- ing to pass judgment on methods as prac- ticed by some of the Chicago plants. When the bus arrived in Chicago we began very enthusiastically to criticize point after point in the laundries whose managers welcomed us so hospitably fin very quiet whispers, of course, so as not to disturb the operators, or arouse the ire of the managers, or show our ignorance. . .for ignorant we werej. As the day wore on and, we walked and walked through laundry after laundry and saw meth- You could use a 48 x 54 wash wheel -instead of that one and get a better flow of work. ' Page Eight
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Page 12 text:
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textiles and waslmroom practice The potentiometer indicates a pH of 5.3 in this sample from the last rinse. HE opening day of this course was an eventful one in that new students were greeted and the rest of us retold the happenings of the just recent holiday vaca- tion. A feminine touch was added to the class with the enrollment of our one female stu- dent, Margaret Schwartz. It was shortly after that she became known as A+ Marga- ret. Paul McCoy continued to be late for class. This time, however, he had excuses. He used the one about the governor on his new Plymouth. , - The school saw fit to purchase new uni- forms for the Sudsmen. Very nice, too. They finished the first round play-off in a tie for iirst place, but in the second round our Sudsmen tied for second. The season ended with a better than .500 average for the team. Snow fell by the bucketfull until it reached almost a foot in depth and enforced a most welcome holiday, for it was impossible to drive through the streets and walking was treacherous. A few hardy students who did make it on foot to the Institute, helped out in the commercial plant. O. C. Harris and Tommy Campbell making an ideal two girl shirt unit. Some of the students who did not have their snowshoes with them were content to stay in the Y and make model airplanes. It seems that Ben Pollock and Dick Impson made more and better planes than the rest of the group. D. Tergent did not consider his life worth a plugged nickel in the gym, with model planes zooming around his head, so to bed to catch up on sleep. ' On a Saturday afternoon the sporting event of the season took place. The staff defeated the student team in a bowling match. Art Anderson proved to be the mainstay for the staff with his high game of 214, which also helped. The match ended with the staff leading by a slim margin of 31 pins. Everything went along fine in the student laundry with the exception of one event. It seems that a Mr. Gershkovitz, better known as O'Brien, tried a new method of classifi- cation. Green sweat shirts are now to be washed with the white work. Note: this leaves a slight greenish hue in white shirts. The movie, The Lost World, was shown So, if you control the temperature, mechanical action, and pH, there' will be no felting. Page Ten
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