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Show COPPER FIRM HONORS 282 JMPLOYEES A banquet honoring 282 employees em-ployees with thirty -years or more service was held Thursday, June 7, at 6:30 p.m. at Newhouse Hotel by Utah Copper Division of Kennecott Copper Corporation. Charles R. Cox, president of Kennecott, addressed the veteran veter-an employees and presentation of Thirty-Year Service Awards were made by Louis Buchman, general manager of western mining min-ing divisions, and E. W. Engel-mann, Engel-mann, assistant general manager, Utah Copper Division. There are 231 of the veteran employees still on the job, while 51 are retired. D. C. Jackling, founder of Utah Copper company and as such the oldest employee, was not able to attend the banquet. ban-quet. Mr. Jackling retired from active service with Utah Copper in 1942, and now resides in San Francisco. Mrs. Myrtle Bredemeyer, an employee in the company's medical me-dical department, is the only woman in the group. Since each of the 282 employes have worked with the company for a minimum of thirty years, these typical Americans have spent a total cumulative time of more than 8,460 years in the service of Utah Copper. O |