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PLANT EXPANSION BY NIPRO, INC. WILL CREATE AN ADDITIONAL 70 jobs in the Augusta
area, officials announced.
Nipro Expansion Will
Create 70 New Jobs
AUGUSTA (PRN) - The
expansion of Nipro Inc.’s
chemical plant here will create
some 70 new jobs in the
Augusta area, company
officials announced.
Applications are being
taken now for trainees to learn
the highly technical jobs
available, said William
Hatcher, head of the Industrial
Relations Division of
Columbia Nitrogen
Corporation, which is doing
the hiring for Nipro Inc.
Hatcher explained that
because the work of
laboratory analysts and
production operators is so
technical the company does
not expect to find people who
can step right into the jobs.
Hqq®eller>t Ideas
GEORGIA EGG COMMISSION
MISS MILDRED HUFF, HOME ECONOMIST :
ATLANTA (PRN) lt’s Cookie Baking Time -or at least the
season to start clipping out recipes for starting a good Christmas
cooking collection!
One sort of cookie that’s a little different from the ordinary
sugar type is made with (of course) egg whites! It’s called a
meringue cookie since it begins much like a pie meringue.
Any recipe that sounds like pie sounds good to me. But alas
my figure usually takes on a pie shape at Christmastime. My
traditional New Year’s resolution is -- “I hereby resolve to lose
my just acquired 5-10 Christmas pounds.”
Well, if you too are a cookie taster baker like me, meringue
cookies are your salvation. Since egg whites have almost no
calories (only about 15), and they expand when beaten, you can
make a lot of cookies without counting many calories. Os
course they do have sugar, but not nearly as much as the average
cookie.
Considering the price of eggs these days, they’re cheap too.
What more can you ask? One more thing, they contain no
cholesterol. So they’re a good present for friends who have to
be on special diets.
Are meringue cookies easy? Sure. Just don’t overbeat the egg
whites. Overbeating makes dry, coarse cookies. The egg whites
should be beaten just stiff enough to hold their shape on the
cookie sheet.
STARLIGHT KISSES
3 egg whites
1 cup white or brown sugar
1 teaspoon vanHla extract
1 cup chopped dates
1/2 cup diced roasted almonds and/or coconut
PROCEDURE:
1. Separate eggs and allow whites to become room
temperature; they beat best that way.
2. Preheat oven to 250 degrees F. Cut two pieces of brown
paper to fit two large cookie sheets (approximately 15” x 9”).
You may use paper bags from the supermarket.
3. In small bowl or electric mixer, beat egg whites on high
speed until soft peaks form. Gradually add sugar and continue
beating on high speed. Add vanilla; move bowl control
occasionally to thoroughly blend ingredients.
4. Stir in dates and diced almonds.
5. Drop by teaspoonfuls onto ungreased brown paper.
6. Bake 18 to 20 minutes or until slightly crisp and dry.
Remove from paper and cook on wire rack. Yield: About 50
kisses.
VARIATIONS:
Use the same procedure above substituting 1 cup shredded
coconut for dates and almonds; 1 teaspoon lemon extract for
vanilla extract.
If you have any questions or recipes you would like to share,
please write to me: Georgia Egg Commission, 1687 Tullie Circle,
N.E., Suite 118, Atlanta, Georgia 30329.
USRY’S SEAFOOD MARKET
“^ at tod *y
that was sleeping in the Gulf last night I
IvUlk OLD SAVANNAH ROAD j
I (North)
I “AUGUSTA’S FRESHEST FISH”
I Open Thurs., Fri., & Sat 9 A.M. to 6:30 P.M I
“We are rather proud of the
fact that we are contributing
not only to the industrializa
tion of Georgia, but to the
skill levels of industry in the
state,” Hatcher said.
“The vast majority of the
employes in both Columbia
Nitrogen and Nipro Inc. came
to us with no background in
the industry and we have been
able to train them for good
jobs,” he added.
Nipro Inc. owned by
DSM-Netherlands, is operated
by Columbia Nitrogen
Corporation. The nipro plant
is highly specialized and
involves such complex
equipment that there are only
three such plants in the
country. Skills learned at the
Augusta plant can be used in
other plants, however.
Classes are being held to
instruct the trainees in
chemical production
processes, Hatcher said.
He pointed out that
Columbia Nitrogen first
employed trainees in 1963 and
today most of the supervisors
in operations are former
trainees who started with no
industrial background.
“On the average, most
trainees move into a
permanent operator’s job after
six months,” he added.
The expanded nipro plant,
which will use a unique Hyam
Phosphate process, is
scheduled to be completed
next year.
America's
Special
Holiday
It may or may not have
occurred to you that the
United States observes a
holiday that is celebrated by
no other country in the world:
Thanksgiving. Other countries
have their versions of
Independence Day, Memorial
Day and the like, but we are
the only Nation which has set
aside a special day to give
thanks for our blessings. Don’t
you agree that this would be a
perfect occasion to introduce
strangers in our land to the
warmth, friendliness and
hospitality of our citizens?
This year, Fort Gordon
again has students from all over
the world in its Service Schools
who would appreciate spending
this uniquely American holiday
in an American home. They
come from such places as
Nicaragua, the Philippines,
Saudi Arabia, Korea, Turkey,
Thailand, Ethiopia, Lebanon,
Nigeria, Vietnam, Venezuela,
Iran, Indonesia, Jordan, Laos,
Liberia, Congo, Brazil, and
Greece.
Is there room in your home
for another place or two? The
benefits of offering your
hospitality are many. Over the
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Augusta Gets
Campus-Free College
The trustees of Campus-Free
College, America’s new
continent-wide learning service
have announced that the
college’s services are now
available in Augusta. Beginning
immediately, residents of the
area will be able to work
toward a college degree while
continuing their personal,
family, and vocational lives,
and without limiting
themselves to the educational
resources of any one college or
university.
Augusta is one of 93 towns
and cities throughout the U.S.
and Canada to have
Campus-Free College services.
Since CFC is a non-residential
institution, it will have no
campus or headquarters
building in the area. Instead,
students will work personally
with the college’s Program
Advisors, experienced
academic and professional
people who can advise
students, help them plan their
courses of study, and put them
in touch with the best learning
experiences available in the
region.
The first group of Program
Advisors for the Mid-Savanna
area are Eliot Glassheim of
North Augusta, Assistant
Professor of English at Augusta
College; and Bernard Solomon
of Statesboro. Additional
Program Advisors are expected
to be appointed in the near
future to serve area students.
The key to Campus-Free
College’s national operation is
the availability of educational
services in a large number of
towns and cities. Neither a
correspondence school nor a
media-controlled institution,
CFC relies on person-to-person
guidance and instruction
supervised by its own Program
Advisors. All work done by
CFC students is monitored and
credited by the college’s
administrative offices in
Arlington Mass., which also
provides a central information
service to all CFC members.
Degrees are awarded by the
college’s ten-member Board of
Trustees, after being approved
by an Academic Council of
experienced college educators
chosen from various fields of
study.
The major reason for the
development of Campus-Free
College was an attempt to ease
the problems of cost, access,
years we’ve received comments
ranging from “educational”,
“enlightening”, and
“enjoyable”, 'to just plain
“fun”!
If you and your family are
interested in offering
Thanksgiving home hospitality
to our foreign students, please
contact any of the people at
the Community Relations
Branch, Information Office;
telephone 791-2419 or
791-4923 for details and
coordination.
Happy holiday!
and flexibility which now face
higher education, according to
CFC Director Larry Lemmel,
former president of New
Hampshire’s experimental
Franconia College. CFC
students may enroll at the
beginning of any month in the
year, as full-time or part-time
students, and college services
are available to them on a
year-around basis so they can
arrange the most convenient
schedules for their own
interests and needs.
Campus-Free College is a
pay-as-you-go institution, and
its fee structure is a radical
departure from that of most
colleges and universities.
Students pay a fixed fee for
each 3-month quarter, which
covers Program Advisor and
administrative services;
instructional costs are paid
directly to the people,
programs, or institutions with
whom students study. College
officials estimate that about 75
per cent of the money each
student pays will remain in the
community where he lives.
To further ease the cost of a
CFC education, Program
Advisors will help students to
take advantage of inexpensive
or free instruction whenever
possible. Paid apprenticeships,
on-the-job learning,
independent study, and free
courses offered by local
institutions are all creditable
toward a CFC degree if the
quality and quantity of work
meet the college’s standards.
Initial student response
indicates widespread need for
the kind of person-to-person
education the college offers.
Those who have applied to
Campus-Free College so far
rapge from high school
students to 60-year-old
grandmothers; their academic
interests range from modern
literature to community
development to the uses of
solar energy. As expected, a
large number of student
inquiries have come from
black, American Indian, and
Spanish-speaking people, and
from others who usually find
the cost, access, and structure
of conventional higher
education not geared to their
needs and goals. But interest
among middle-class white
students is also strong,
especially among those who
feel ready for greater
independence in both living
and learning, college officials
point out.
One important service
already being provided by
Campus-Free College is
through its affiliation with
already-existing programs or
institutions which conduct
some college-level instruction
but are not degree-granting
institutions. CFC now has such
an affiliation with a large free
university, and is discussing
similar plans with an American
Indian community college, a
professional art school, and a
nationwide labor union.
Concerning the local uses of
Campus-Free College, Lemmel
points out that CFC, unlike
most colleges, is limited only
by the imagination of
individual people and the
availability of the proper
learning resources. CFC’s
reason for being, Lemmel says,
is to enable people with many
goals to achieve them
according to their own time
schedule, budget, and interests.
“CFC has not been designed to
compete with existing colleges
and universities, but to open
up new possibilities for
learning through its own
unique system. We hope to
work closely with institutions
throughout the country toward
our common goal of enabling
more people to learn what they
need to know, at a level of
competence which will give
them, not only a college
degree, but the confidence and
ability to reach their life goals
more easily.”
♦'■ME
| President of i
(JAMES BROWN,
I ENTERPRISES [
A which includes f
(WRDW Radio, Ltd. of Augusta, I
the home of the RAW SOUL D. J.’sA
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A 24 Hours a Day - 5,000 Watts f
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tTHE SOUL OF THE CITY - THE PULSE OF THE GHETTO I
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► —TF
The News-Review - November 18, 1971
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