Technology Sets The Pace


T
echnological innovations continue to enhance and streamline the hosiery manufacturing
process. These enhancements come in the form of new machines and in refinements to individual
components and subsystems.

The hosiery segment has seen many recent developments. Advances in automatic toe-closing
units are allowing knitting machines to increase production capability. Seamless machines also are
speeding up. Body-size machines are still in high demand. Electronic yarn control systems can
reduce waste and lower production costs.

“The process of putting electronics on knitting machines has been completed,” said Miroslav
Novy, chairman and general director, Investa International Co. Ltd. “The same applies to other
components, [such as yarn detectors, pneumatic valves and actuators]. The machines are in many
aspects similar because all manufacturers are buying from the same sub-suppliers. And this is what
the customers want.”

Hosiery remains very much a fashion business, so knitters need styling versatility just as
much as they need machine efficiency to stay viable.

“Besides in-machine toe-closing, customers can also use the latest innovations of fully
electronic machines to their benefit when designing product styles,” said Otto Curda, vice
president, Trustfin USA Inc., which represents Uniplet.

“The ability to quickly change styles and switch between reciprocated and pouch heel is very
critical to our customers’ ability to compete in the marketplace. It is this demand for new
high-tech hosiery products and the need to cut costs that is the driving force behind designing
knitting machines with ever higher speeds, efficiency and features, such as in-machine
toe-closing,” said Curda.

The International Hosiery Exposition (IHE) and Conference, to be held May 3-6 in Charlotte,
will give knitters, hosiery and intimate apparel producers, and retailers a chance to see the
latest developments
(See ”
Tight
Connections
,”  April 2003)
.

santoni
L.G.L. Electronic’s Smart Knit Feeder shown on a Santoni SM8 Top 2 knitting
machine


Yarn And Tension Controllers

Italy-based BTSR International (PAF Sales LLC, Greensboro, N.C.) produces electronic yarn
and tension control systems that let knitters fine-tune the knitting process. The company’s latest
technical advances include the Smart 64H electronic production control system and the Smart KTF
feeder system unit.

The Smart 64H can reduce machine waste by 50 to 75 percent on hosiery and seamless knitting
machines. The Smart KTF feeder system utilizes constant tension feeders in conjunction with a smart
controller interface to monitor and control total yarn consumption per garment.

At IHE, BTSR will show for the first time its KTF25MF micro-feeder system for elastic and
critical yarns on hosiery and seamless knitting machines.

The company also will show the Smart 64H; the Smart KTF 2000 feeder system interfacing with
the KTF 100HP yarn feeder; and the IS3N/TS thread-break detection system, as well as accessories
for pantyhose knitting and automatic sewing machines.

sock8
Heliot’s Sock 8 compact boarding and pressing machine can board socks of all
types.


Loop Control® Reduces Streaks

Germany-based Groz-Beckert’s latest innovations include a line of Loop Control® needles for
seamless and body-size machines to satisfy even the highest quality demands of knitted products,
and various needles with floating hooks for body-size machines, sock machines and seamless machines
to allow for more secure floating. Groz-Beckert also is offering more and more system parts, for
example, components needed for toe-closing machines.

“Our Loop Control needle allows our customers to reduce the risk of panel streaks even when
knitting critical styles,” said Henry Tio, president, Groz-Beckert USA Inc., Fort Mill, S.C. “All
Loop Control needles are manufactured in G 00 execution to minimize the risk of needle streaks due
to spread hooks.”

Hofa-Spec Loop Control needles are made by Groz-Beckert with such precision that the spread
of the production variations – which determine the uniformity of the loop formation – is less than
the thickness of a human hair.

lintoe
Sangiacomo’s Fantasia is a single-cylinder machine capable of producing high-quality
patterned socks in multiple colors.


Sock And Seamless Finishing Solutions

Heliot International S.A., France, reports great success with its Rollset thermosetting
machine. It is designed to thermoset all man-made fabrics, either pure or mixed, in tubular form.
This eliminates the need to slit the fabric so it can be processed through a tenter frame. The
machine also can be used for body-size products.

At IHE, Heliot will show its Sockmodule type 28 T3B and Sock.8 boarding machine. Sockmodule
is a modular system for boarding of socks and half-hose made of natural fibers, man-made fibers or
blends. The automated machine is composed of a drying tunnel or heating press and pressurized
steaming shells. An automatic stripper with conveyor can be added.

Sock.8 is a compact boarding and pressing machine with automatic stripper. It can board
socks of all fiber types and uses Heliot’s standard forms.

ange
At IHE, Uniplet will introduce the Ange 15, the latest edition to its successful Ange
line.


New Toe-Closing Sock Machine

The big draw at the Czech Republic-based Investa International booth this time around will
be its model NG.plus, a single-cylinder, six-feed, sock-knitting machine. What makes this machine
unique is its ability to close the toe during the knitting process.

Investa describes it as a new and unique patented solution based on an original invention,
which makes the knitting machine very simple, does not require any complicated mechanisms in the
knitting head and achieves a high-quality closed toe. The machine can close the toe either on the
top side of the sock or the opposite bottom side. In addition, the NG.plus can make a reciprocated
heel in two feeds, according to the company.

“Our machine can produce practically any kind of sock – sport, terry, sandwich, plain,
5-color designs, 3-D designs and more,” said Novy.

The NG.plus design is based on an interactive configuration of needles, sliders and cams.
The high-quality reciprocated heel is knitted without pickers and droppers. The unique concept of
the cam system represents a new generation of accident-proof sock-knitting machines featuring
remarkable simplicity, reliability and easy maintenance, according to Investa.


Seamless Tension Control

L.G.L. Electronics S.p.A., Italy (Lang Ligon & Co. Inc., Greenville), entered the
knitting market a few years ago, and started supplying yarn feeders to the leading companies in
seamless machinery.

“Since then, the developments in automation have been enormous,” said Enrico Zenoni,
technical marketing manager, L.G.L. Electronics. “The demand for seamless underwear on the market
has been growing incessantly. The product quality has been substantially increased through the use
of machines for feeding yarns that have by now become [standard] choices for every producer of
seamless machinery.”

The company’s Smart Knit feeder supplies yarn to the knitting machine at an extremely
constant tension. This is a key point, especially with elastic yarns. The insertion of these yarns
is critical, and – if not done correctly – can jeopardize the final result. The feeder can supply
yarn at an extremely uniform tension to the seamless machine through the introduction of a new
tension modulator, T.W.M. type K, which produces an active braking action on the yarn.


A Range Of Sophisticated Machines

Italy-based Lonati S.p.A. will have several new developments on display at IHE. The company
will show its Bravo RL1C model 4-inch x 168-needle and 4-inch x 132-needle double-cylinder sock
knitter with closed toe. The big news here is that the toe-closing operation does not slow the
machine’s operating cycle time.

Various single-cylinder closed-toe models – including the FL462 6C six-color, two-feed
featuring higher speeds – will be shown. It produces sandwich terry and select terry (raised
effect) in various needle counts.

The model 813 TC, 3.25-inch x 84-needle, one-feed, single-cylinder, closed-toe sock knitter
for infants and children’s goods also will be exhibited.

The model FL54J, 4-inch x 108-needle, four-feed, pouch heel and toe, single-cylinder sock
knitter with four-feed, high splice, will round out Lonati’s presentation in Charlotte.


Toe-Closing For Double-Cylinder Machines

Sangiacomo S.p.A., Italy, is well-known for technical breakthroughs such as its Jumbo
seamless knitwear machine and patented Lin-Toe® automatic toe-closing device for single-cylinder
machines. At IHE, the company will show its DC Lin-Toe automatic toe-closing device for
double-cylinder machines for the first time at a US exhibition.

The company will show the following models in its 5,600-square-foot booth: the Fantasia line
of single-cylinder sock machines with multiple color capability; the 4100 fully electronic
single-cylinder machine for patterns in three colors; the Star LT single-cylinder, two-feed,
dial-needle machine for making true two-color jacquard socks; the Ines line of double-cylinder
machines for socks in rib-structured fabrics; and the line of Mach 4 fully electronic
single-cylinder four-feed machines for pantyhose, which includes the 42RF, the Complet 42C and the
Complet 44C.

Sangiacomo also will show several versions of its Jumbo seamless knitting machines for
underwear, sportswear, swimwear and lingerie. These will include a new four-feed Jumbo and the
company’s new Terry Kit.


Seamless Pioneer

Santoni S.p.A., Italy, probably the best-known seamless knitting machine builder, has helped
lead the way to the ever-widening range of seamless garments on the market today. The company
currently produces no fewer than 15 models of seamless machines.

At IHE, Santoni will exhibit a complete range of seamless single-jersey and double-jersey
equipment.

These include the SM8 Top 2 single-jersey 16-gauge machine for wool; the SM9 double-jersey
14-gauge machine for wool, silk and viscose; the SM8 Top 2 single-jersey 24-gauge for microfiber
plus cotton, viscose, polypropylene or elastomeric; the SM8 Top 3 20-gauge single-bed electronic
circular knitting machine for viscose, polypropylene, polyester and elastomeric; the SM4 Plus 3
single-jersey 28-gauge for microfiber and elastomeric; and the HF 80, 90, and 100 single-jersey
machines for children’s garments in cotton, viscose, microfiber and elastomeric.


Ange Line Extended

Uniplet A.S., Czech Republic (Trustfin USA Inc., Charlotte), has several cutting-edge
products currently on the market.

For 2003, Uniplet has released a completely new model, the Ange 15, based on the company’s
highly successful Ange 12.3, that features in-machine toe-closing. This and other upcoming models
will be introduced at IHE.

The company’s Ange 12.3 model is a unique conventional 4+1-feed machine, which features high
production speeds, extremely high efficiency, excellent flexibility and ease of use. Many different
configurations are available for the production of sport and casual socks.

In 2002, Uniplet started to deliver the Ange 14W, a 4-feed, heavy coarse machine in 5-inch
and 4.5-inch diameters. This model features a newly designed sinker cap that allows for a wide
range of new features in designing styles.

Editor’s Note: Alfred Dockery is editor of The HunTex Report, a newsletter for industrial
textiles. A graduate of North Carolina State University’s College of Textiles, he has been writing
about the textile industry for 15 years. Dockery is based in Clemmons, N.C.



April 2003

Tight Connections


M
aking connections will be the focus of the 2003 edition of the International Hosiery
Exposition (IHE) and Conference when it convenes next month in Charlotte. Sponsored by The Hosiery
Association (THA), Charlotte, the annual event, to be held May 3-6 at the Charlotte Convention
Center, has as its theme “Team Up For Tomorrow.”

“The more connected we are, the shorter the time to success, and time is money,” states
Kevin Toomey, THA chairman, and president and CEO of Golden Lady/ Kayser-Roth S.p.A., in his
invitation to the hosiery industry to participate in IHE 2003. “The strategies that each of our
companies employ for success include tightening the circle of stakeholders in our business
(suppliers, customers and machine manufacturers) so we are able to connect with each of them faster
and more frequently.”

“IHE is the premier trade show dedicated exclusively to hosiery,” said Sally Kay, THA’s
president. “Our 2000 show, with more than 10,000 visitors from 73 countries, was our largest ever.”
THA expects fewer attendees this year – between 6,000 and 8,000 – because of consolidation in the
hosiery industry over the last three years, in addition to the current global uncertainties, “but,
as  always, the decision makers will be coming,” Kay added. According to THA, 92 percent of
the IHE 2000 attendees made purchase decisions or recommendations, and 21 percent were business
owners.

socks
An array of patterned socks knitted using machinery from IHE exhibitor Sangiacomo S.p.A.,
Italy


Schedule Of Events

Included in the schedule of events is Hosiery World, a day-long international conference on
Saturday, May 3, followed by a three-day exposition, as well as a gala dinner and fashion show. The
exposition will comprise approximately 200 exhibiting companies offering fibers; yarn; machinery
and equipment, including principal Italian machinery manufacturers; packaging; computer services;
and other products and services.

Amenities at the exposition include: a cyber café on the exhibit floor, where exhibitors and
attendees can conduct business via the Internet; language interpretation services; and assistance
in arranging meetings between exhibitors and foreign customers; among others.

IHE visitors are invited to stop by Booth 1521 to meet representatives from

Textile World
and
Textiles Panamericanos and pick up complimentary copies of the magazines.


International Conference

Hosiery World is expected to attract industry executives from around the world and will
offer simultaneous multilingual translation for non-English speakers. The conference is sponsored
by Duraspun®, St. Louis, and Charlotte-based Acordis Acrylic Fibres.

Toomey will open the conference with a welcome and opening remarks. He will then introduce
Neil Hightower, vice president; and Gian Mario Borney, director, international marketing; Werner
International Inc., a Belgium-based management consulting firm that specializes in fibers, textiles
and apparel. Hightower and Borney will present a global overview of the hosiery industry, including
trend projections over the next five years.

David Spooner, US chief textile negotiator, will follow with a discussion of trade issues,
including the effect of President Bush’s Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) on US trade policy; free
trade negotiations with Singapore, Central America, Chile, Morocco, Australia and South Africa; the
Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA); the new World Trade Organization (WTO) round of trade
negotiations; and textile agreement negotiations with Vietnam.

Morning sessions will conclude with presentations on automation and logistics. Barry
Mademann, a Harmony, N.C.-based partner in The Context Group, Atlanta, will discuss seamless
people-free manufacturing and its competitive advantages. Bill Sheely, executive vice president of
operations, Gold Toe Brands Inc., Burlington, N.C., will talk about domestic and international
sourcing and supply chain issues.

Following a reception and luncheon sponsored by Pittsburgh-based Bayer Polymers LLC, Marshal
Cohen, co-president, NPD Fashionworld, Port Washington, N.Y., will offer a brief look at the global
market from a retail perspective. The rest of the afternoon will be given over to a panel
discussion by industry executives looking at the world hosiery industry, followed by a question and
answer period.

Panelists for the Executives’ View of the Hosiery World include Ken Wong, president, Ken
Shing Hosiery Co. of China; Fritz Schulte, vice president, sales and marketing, Acme-McCrary Corp.,
Asheboro, N.C.; Jesus Garcia, president, Promotora Textil, Mexico; Nerino Grassi, president, Golden
Lady, Italy; W.C. Cheong, president, Shin Myoung International, Korea; and John Moretz, president
and CEO, Moretz Inc., Newton, N.C. Bob Yoe, CEO, Crescent Hosiery Mills, Niota, Tenn., will
facilitate the discussion. Wong will present information about Chinese knitting machinery
purchases, hosiery production for the domestic Chinese market and projected business to European
and US markets. Other discussions will center on conducting business in China, Mexico, Korea,
Turkey, Pakistan and Europe.

feet
The IHE fashion show gives THA members an opportunity to show off their products.


Fashion Show

The evening of Sunday, May 4, will be devoted to a gala event in celebration of the American
hosiery industry. Charlotte jazz singer Daryl Rice will entertain guests during a cocktail
reception, which will be followed by a dinner, during which the current THA leadership will be
recognized and new officers and directors introduced.

The evening activities also will include a “signature event” fashion show presenting the
full range of hosiery from socks, sheers and pantyhose to body-size apparel for men, women and
children. “We’re very excited about this unique opportunity to show hosiery for the entire family,”
said Kay. “This will be a high-energy show with a global audience and a unique twist, presenting
vignettes playing off the IHE theme of ‘Team Up For Tomorrow.’ We are encouraging all THA member
companies to show their products.”

Evening sponsors include Duraspun and Wilmington, Del.-based DuPont, among others.

April 2003

UGA, CARE Compile Carpet Recovery Report

The Textile Department at the University of Georgia (UGA), Athens, Ga., collaborated with the
Carpet America Recovery Effort (CARE), Dalton, Ga., to compile statistics on the total amount of
carpet waste currently diverted from landfills as part of recycling efforts.

carpetroll

The report covers methods for dealing with recovered carpet such as reuse, recycling or
energy purposes. The report also looks at problems encountered in reuse and recycling efforts, as
well as successes. In addition, market opportunities for products made using recycled carpet
content are discussed.

The report is to be released at CARE’s first annual meeting this month. A copy of the report
can be obtained at CARE’s website,
www.carpetrecovery.com.

April 2003

April 2003

Tom Smith has been appointed chairman of
Amcot, Lubbock, Texas. Smith replaces C.L. Boggs, who is retiring.

Sandra G. Parrillo and
Sheldon Whitehouse have been named to the Board of Directors of
Cranston Print Works Co., Cranston, R.I.

Switzerland-based
Rieter Holding Ltd.’s Board of Directors has elected
Urs Leinhäuser a member of its Group Executive Committee, with responsibility
within the Corporate Center for Group Controlling.

leinhauser
Leinhäuser

Outlast Technologies Inc., Boulder, Colo., has made the following appointments:
Danielle Borden, marketing;
Floyd FitzGerald, inside sales manager;
Christopher Leyes, accountant;
Heather Listoe, marketing and legal assistant; and
Gordon Roe, marketing and business development director.
Duncan Edwards, vice president, corporate counsel, now also serves as vice
president, Asian operations.
Tom Mandula, CFO, now also serves as vice president, European operations. In
addition,
Bernard Perry has been named head of Outlast Ventures. Reporting to Perry are
Monte McGill, technical director; and
Renee Boyda, marketing research assistant.

Eric Hequet, associate director at the
International Textile Center at Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas, has been
named chairman of the Cotton Quality Measurement Conference, part of the Beltwide Cotton
Conference.

hequet
Hequet

Jane Dombrosky has joined
Waverly Lifestyle Group, New York City, as design director, home fashions.

Jason Premo has been named executive vice president of
Cernotec LLC, Greenville.

BYK-Gardner USA, Columbia, Md., has appointed
Mike Burns director of sales; and
Elaine Becker product manager, color systems.

St. Louis-based
Kellwood Co. has made the following appointments:
Bea Myerson, president, Halmode; and
John R. Henderson, president, Sag Harbor.

Magnum Systems Inc., Kansas City, Kan., has appointed
Gary Saunders vice president, sales and marketing.

saunders
Saunders

Robert Brooks has joined the sales force of
Louis P. Batson Co., Greenville.

West Conshohocken, Pa.-based
ASTM International’s Committee E02 on Terminology has awarded the 2002 Frank E.
Reinhart Award to
Vincent Diaz, president of the Atlantic Thread and Supply Co.

Larry R. Potvin has joined Poway, Calif.-based
Trespa North America Ltd. as Western regional manager.

Memphis, Tenn.-based
Cotton Council International (CCI) recently elected
Robert A. Carson Jr. president for 2003. Carson succeeds
William B. Dunavant III, who is now CCI board chairman. The following officers
also were elected:
David Stanford, first vice president;
Gary W. Taylor, second vice president;
David L. Burns, treasurer; and Mark D. Lange, secretary. New directors elected for
2003 are
Owen J. “Trey” Hodges III,
Gerald C. Marshall,
Lawrence E. Starrh,
James L. Webb and
Lonnie D. Winters.

Dana Darley has been appointed president of Lawrenceville, Ga.-based
Kreyenborg Industries, the North American subsidiary of Kreyenborg GmbH, Germany.
Darley replaces
Jan-Udo Kreyenborg, who will continue as chairman of Kreyenborg Industries, and
managing director of the Kreyenborg Group.

Switzerland-based
Sanitized AG has appointed
Dominik Zimmermann product manager of its Textiles Division.

zimmermann
Zimmermann

Switzerland-based
Global Textile Partner (GTP) has made the following appointments:
James C. Thomas, president, GTP Greenville;
Thomas A. Korbutt, manager, research and development;
Richard Button, manager, manufacturing, Heddle/ Frame Division; and
Andrew Butenhoff, worldwide manager, business line training and consulting.



April 2003

Wellstone Acquires TNS Assets

Wellstone Investors LLC, Greenville, recently acquired all real estate and operating assets of TNS
Mills Inc., also based in Greenville. The acquisition included 17 TNS plants. Wellstone has sold
off 11 plants that had been shut down and continues under its own name to operate six plants
located in Gaffney, S.C., Lavonia, Ga., and Eufaula, Ala., with the expectation of restoring them
to a full operating schedule as quickly as possible, according to Joshua Hamilton, COO. These six
plants manufacture 100-percent cotton and blended yarns for apparel, home furnishings and
industrial uses, and employ approximately 1,000 people.

“Although it is well known that the textile industry has suffered difficult economic
reversals during the last decade, the new owners and management of these six manufacturing
operations are optimistic that each of them will return to profitability,” Hamilton said. “It is
anticipated that substantially all of the employees of these six plants will be offered the
opportunity to retain similar jobs.

“TNS customers may be assured that all plants will continue operations without interruption,
and pending orders will be delivered on schedule and new orders will be welcome,” he said.
“Wellstone expects to continue to purchase goods and services from its suppliers and make prompt
payment on all Wellstone orders. In spite of the war and an uncertain economy, Wellstone is
confident about its future.”

April 2003

Interface Introduces InterfaceFLOR™

Atlanta-based Interface Inc. has started a new company, InterfaceFLOR Inc., to offer high-style
modular tile carpets to residential customers. Consumers can now purchase tile products from
InterfaceFLOR by catalog or by logging on to
www.interfaceflor.com.

InterfaceFLOR tiles may be installed on most surfaces, allow multiple design solutions with
quick and easy rearrangement, and can be cleaned by washing in the sink if necessary. Pre-packaged
area rug and wall-to-wall solutions also are available to simplify the decision-making process for
customers.

“With the successful launch of InterfaceFLOR, we hope to create not only a new design option
for consumers, but also a new residential floorcovering category,” said Greg Colando, president,
InterfaceFLOR.

April 2003

KoSa’s Shelby Plant Receives Carolina Star Award

The North Carolina Department of Labor’s (NCDL) Division of Occupational Safety and Health (OSH-NC)
presented KoSa’s Shelby, N.C., plant with the Carolina Star Award. The award marks the plants sixth
consecutive year as a Carolina Star site and represents its second recertification. In order to
become a Star site, the Shelby plant had to work with OSH-NC in the voluntary protection program
(VPP) to meet the state’s criteria of excellence.

“According to the latest statistics published by the North Carolina Department of Labor, the
average index rate for on-the-job injuries and illnesses for organic fiber manufacturing plants in
North Carolina, excluding cellulosics, is 5.3 cases per 100 full-time employees,” said Larry
Williams, business director, non-rubber technical filament and sewing thread, KoSa. “During the
certification period, [the Shelby plant] achieved a 0.3 rate.”

Left to right: Tommy Tessneer, Scott Greer, Lajuana Campbell, Judy Hicks, Joel Gosnell,
Tommy Jones, Nancy Smith, John R. Bogner Jr., Darrell Cole, Jim Graham and Gerald Potter

Lajuana Campbell, a Shelby Star Team member, accepted the award from John R.
Bogner Jr., bureau chief, NCDL. Joel Gosnell, Gerald Potter, Judy Hicks, Nancy Smith, Pat Collins,
Tommy Jones, Rhonda Kennedy, Tommy Tessneer, Scott Greer, Darrell Cole and Jim Graham are the other
Star Team members.



April 2003

NCC Projects Slight Increase In US Cotton Production

At its 2003 annual meeting held in February in Tampa, Fla., the National Cotton Council (NCC)
announced its projections for US cotton production for the 2003/04 crop year, and warned of
continuing challenges for the US raw cotton demand base.

In presenting NCC’s 2003 Economic Outlook, Gary Adams, Ph.D., vice president of economics and
policy analysis for the Memphis, Tenn.-based organization, said shifts in global supply and demand
will have significant effects on the US raw cotton sector. This sector has become increasingly
dependent on export markets, as domestic demand has declined in the face of increased textile
imports. At the same time, Adams said, maintaining US mill use is important to preserving the
demand base for US cotton.

According to a NCC survey, US cotton growers will plant 14.05 million acres of cotton this
spring, up 0.6 percent from 2002. Adams said the projected acreage reflects economic factors.
“While prices have improved over the previous year,” he said, “there is increased competition from
corn because of better corn prices.”

The projected 2003/04 harvest will generate 17.10 million bales, compared with an estimated
17.14 bales in 2002. Of this total, domestic mills will use 7.3 million bales, while exports could
reach as high as 10.7 million bales, depending on Chinese demand. “China remains the wild card in
world markets due to the sheer size of their market and unpredictability of their net trade
position,” Adams said. “Lower production and increased consumption have led to a draw down in their
stocks as well as increased imports during the current marketing year.” He added that these imports
do not reflect changes in Chinas willingness to comply with World Trade Organization (WTO)
accession agreements.

NCC projects 2003/04 world cotton production at 94 million bales, up from 87.4 million in
2002. Most of the increase will come from China and Australia.

April 2003

Shaw Honored With Flag

Army Reservist Jason Bowling, an employee of Shaw Industries Inc., Dalton, recently returned from
active military duty in Afghanistan. Upon his return, Bowling presented to Shaw’s senior management
team a US flag flown in the company’s honor over the US embassy in Kabul. Bowling made the gesture
as an expression of thanks to both the company and his coworkers for the support they gave him
during his time away.

Jason Bowling (center) presents a flag that was flown in Afghanistan in honor of Shaw
Industries to Bob Shaw (left), chairman and CEO, and Julian Saul, president.

April 2003

April 2003

The recently released Tyco Medical Adhesives brochure from
Tyco Adhesives, Norwood, Mass., features specialty medical products — including
coated wovens and nonwovens, coated films and foams, transfer adhesives, and double- and
single-coated products — that use adhesives developed by Tyco.

medicalbrochure
Tyco Adhesives’ new brochure

The
British Textile Machinery Association has relocated to: Mount Pleasant, Glazebrook
Lane, Glazebrook, Warrington, Cheshire, WA3 5BN, England; 0161 775 5740; fax 0161 775 5485.

 

The
Screenprinting & Graphic Imaging Association (SGIA) International, Fairfax,
Va., is accepting entries for its annual Business Promotion Awards Competition, which recognizes
marketing, advertising and public relations efforts in the screen printing and graphic imaging
industry. Entries are due June 6. For more information, contact Bruce Joffe (703) 385-1335; fax
(703) 273-0456; bruce@pubpartners.com.

West Conshohocken, Pa.-based
ASTM International’s Subcommittee D13.21 on Pile Floor Coverings seeks
stakeholders to participate in the finalization of a Standard Practice for Operation of a Roller
Chair Tester for Secondary Backed Pile Yarn Floor. For more information, contact David Wilkinson
(706) 277-8143; dwilkinson@dow.com. Also, Subcommittee E12.11 on Visual Methods seeks manufacturers
and consumers of high-gloss coatings and paints to participate in the development of a Standard
Practice for the Measurement of Distinctiveness of Image of High Gloss Surfaces with
Visual-Instrumental Devices. To participate, contact Andrew Rutkiewic (505) 281-7820;
rutkieaf@spinn.net.

Downers Grove, Ill.-based
Lovejoy Inc. has released a 400-page catalog, also available as a CD-ROM,
showcasing new shaft-to-shaft power transmission coupling products and accessories. Selection
procedures, dimensional outlines and product photos are included for each of the catalog’s 11
categories.

Akron, Ohio-based
APV Engineered Coatings recently celebrated its 125th anniversary.

DuPont Packaging & Industrial Polymers, Wilmington, Del., has increased the
price of all grades of DuPont™ Elvanol® polyvinyl alcohol by 5 cents per pound for all US market
segments.

Smithfield, R.I.-based
Joraco Inc. now offers a CD-ROM catalog featuring its line of rotary indexing
machines, Toggle-Aire® pneumatic toggle presses and accessories for fabrication and assembly
tooling.

Charlotte-based
DAK Fibers LLC has increased the price of its staple fiber products by 6 cents per
pound.

Moeller FAZ Miniature Circuit Breakers from
Moeller Electric Corp., Franklin, Mass., can be used as alternatives to fuses in
industrial controls, machine tool panels and automation applications. The circuit breakers are IEC-
and UL-compliant, and are available in 0.5- to 63-Amp sizes with a uniform switching capacity of 10
kAmp.

miniatures
Moeller FAZ Miniature Circuit Breakers

Minneapolis-based
Donaldson Co. Inc.’s Downflo® Oval 1™ (DFO) series of cartridge dust collectors
received the Product of the Year Award from Filtration + Separation magazine at the Filtration 2002
conference.

“Labeling Systems & Solutions,” a new eight-page, color brochure from
Weber Marking Systems Inc., Arlington Heights, Ill., details Weber’s line of label
printer-applicators, pressure-sensitive label applicators, stand-alone printers, Legitronic®
Labeling Software, label manufacturing capabilities and custom systems.

Paper titles and abstracts are now being accepted for the England-based
Textile Institute’s 83rd World Conference, to be held May 23-27, 2004, in
Shanghai. Submissions are due May 30. For more information, fax 86 21 62193061;
ti04shanghai@dhu.edu.cn.

“VESTAMELT®: Copolyamides and Copolyesters Hotmelt Adhesives,” a new brochure series from
Degussa AG, Germany, covers products for melt print, powder scattering, powder
dot, paste dot and double dot applications.

April 2003

Sponsors