DECATUR — There is a golden yellow thread that stretches from the sunbaked cotton fields of Canton, Mississippi, and winds all the way around the sprawling Caterpillar Inc. factory parked on Decatur’s northeastern doorstep.
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Tyus is affectionately called “Miss Sherley” by her co-workers.
JOSEPH RESSLER, HERALD & REVIEW
Then-Assistant City Manager Billy Tyus chats with his mother Sherley Tyus and others at the head table during the Partners in Education luncheon at Richland Community College in March 2014.
Jim Bowling
Tyus poses for a portrait with her supervisor Joshua Fritz. “The knowledge she brings to her role is something, well, you just can’t put a price on it," Fritz said.
JOSEPH RESSLER, HERALD & REVIEW
Tyus logs in to her computer to keep track of the tools in the Torque Crib for the Caterpillar plant in Decatur. There are 22,000 such tools in circulation at any one time — some costing $32,000 each — and Tyus monitors them all, their purpose and location and history.
JOSEPH RESSLER, HERALD & REVIEW
Herald & Review, Jim Bowling From left, Braxton Woodland and Xavier Seals-Freemon observe work displayed on a monitor from Keith Byars while he operates a virtual welder as Eisenhower Operation Calculus students participate in externships at the Caterpillar Plant Thursday.
Herald & Review, Jim Bowling From left, Qwenton Gude and other students are shown a large mining truck frame by training specialist Janice West and facility talent development consultant Randy Tohill as Eisenhower Operation Calculus students participate in externships at the Caterpillar Plant Thursday.
PHOTOS: Eisenhower Student Externships at Caterpillar Plant
Herald & Review, Jim Bowling From left, Qwenton Gude and other students are shown a large mining truck frame by training specialist Janice West and facility talent development consultant Randy Tohill as Eisenhower Operation Calculus students participate in externships at the Caterpillar Plant Thursday.
Contact Tony Reid at (217) 421-7977. Follow him on Twitter: @TonyJReid
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