IN JANUARY Jet ‘Shoes’ Successful lab and flight tests have been completed on Fire stone aircraft tires to be used on many of the new Boeing 727 jets. Here is one of them, equip ped with Firestone tires, during pre-certification tests. Firestone labs, simulating flight condi tions, tested the tires at 225 mph speeds with top loads of 39,600 pounds on the main landing-gear tires. Flight runs gave tires punishing takeoff and emer- gency-braking tests at high speeds. Hundreds of the nylon tubeless tires have been deliver ed to commercial airlines for use on short-to-medium-range jets. Record Tire Shipments, Rubber Use For UK PRODUCTS THAT MAKE OUR JOBS Record shipments of passenger tires and consumption of rubber in the United Kingdom are pre dicted this year by M. A. Di- Federico, president of Firestone International Company. His forecast came as Firestone climaxed observance recently of the 35th anniversary of the opening of its first overseas tire plant at Brentford, England. DiFederico said the United Kingdom will ship some 15 mil lion passenger tires in 1964, com pared with an estimated 14,- 682,000 last year. The forecast ments of passenger tires in the represents an increase of nearly 325 per cent in annual ship- United Kingdom since 1952. INCREASED tire shipments this year will be accompanied by increase in rubber consump tion from 305,000 long tons last year to 315 long tons in 1964, according to DiFederico. The Brentford pant, opened in 1928, was expanded the follow ing year and three times in later years. More recently, moderniza tion programs have been com pleted. During World War II produc tion at Brentford turned to mili tary tires and other defense products. After the war, facili ties were further expanded for peacetime operation. The plant turns out more than 1,000 sizes and types of tires from small scooter tires to huge off-highway tires. It also pro duces large quantities of tread and repair materials, rubber-to- metal bonded parts and ship fenders. Savings Bonds Director Honored Walter P. Johnson of Greens boro, state director of the U. S. Savings Bonds program, has re ceived a citation for his service in planning and coordinating na tionwide payroll savings drives in industries including textiles. Mr. Johnson is known to many employees of the Firestone Gas tonia plant through his visits here during the past several years. FONEEBS N TEXT LES Like other inventions of the time, opposition to its adoption was violent and his "machine" was destroyed by a mob. Little by little, however, Jacquard looms were put into operation. The loom established Lyons, France, as an art center of the textile industry. Today, they are used throughout the American textile industry for the weaving of names, monograms, scenic de signs and intricate patterns in modern fabrics. JOSEPH MARIE CHARLES JACQUARD A Frenchman, Joseph Marie Charles Jacquard, was the in ventor of the loom that bears his name. His loom is still consider ed one of the most significant of the pioneering textile inventions. Jacquard's loom made it pos sible to weave unusual and beau tiful designs into fabrics of all kinds—wool, cotton, silk, linen. Financed by the French Gov ernment, then under Napoleon Bonaparte, Jacquard designed his loom using weighted strings, a pulley and perforated cards. This same principle was later used in the player piano and also gave birth to the punch-card system used in modern day busi ness machines. Many Things Worth A Trip RECREATION TRAVEL NOTES Winter is here but spring is hardly more than a stone’s throw away from playgrounds in the Carolinas and other parts of the Mid-South. Soon after the Christmas season is a memory, touches of warmer weather appear on the Southeastern Coast, in the Sandhills and the Thermal Belt at the foothills of the Carolinas’ high mountain ranges. Every month in the year brings festivals, sports events and other special travel attrac tions. The Firestone travelers can choose from a list of sports events, garden tours, visits to his toric shrines. Plant recreation offers its usual monthly sug gestions for your on-the-go pleasure and profit during January. Space Probes and Satellites • At Morehead Planetarium, Chapel Hill, the program “Space Probes and Satellites” begins Jan. 7 and con tinues through Feb. 3. The North Carolina mountain country now has a major tourist season extender in the form of winter-sports facilities. A combination of manmade snow and skiing as a popular pastime have provided this state two main slopes with other facilities—at Cataloochee Ranch in the Great Smokies and at Blowing Rock in the Blue Ridge. Of others being provided, one at Shulls Mills near Boone is scheduled for limited opera tion early this year. All of them offer an Alpine flavor. Variety in the Thermal Belt • In the Try on, Polk county, area on the southern slopes of the Blue Ridge is the unusual Thermal Belt noted for its mild winters. The town of Tryon attracts many visitors year-round, with its native handi crafts, varied activities and natural resources. Points of interest: Lake Adger, Lake Lanier, Melrose Falls, Old Blockhouse — a pre-Revolutionary structure built as an Indian trading post and fort, Pear son’s Falls, Skunkawaken Falls and famed Toy House just off US 176 where you find unusual handmade toys. New Bern—Antiquity and More • “You ma)' think you’ve been everywhere and seen every' thing, but have you seen New Bern?” asks recreation. This history-clad city near the cen tral NC coast is most famed for its restored Tryon Place, home of the last Royal Governor of the state. Completed in 1770, Tryon Palace was the fixed colonial capitol and the first state capita of North Carolina. It is elaborately furnished with period pieces. New Bern abounds with other historic housed including the John Wright Stanly House buil^ in the 1770s and now the public library, the more-Oliver House from the late 18th century and now headquarters of the New Bern KiS' torical Association, First Presbyterian Churd^ dating to a century and a half ago, and Paul’s Roman Catholic Church (1841) oldest ° that faith in the state. Mapped tours guide guests to points of int®r' est, including those already listed, and Louis^ ana House, Haslen House—site of the first printing office, and New Bern Academy. of interest is Firemen’s Museum, with its hibit of antique fire-fighting relics, murals an pictures. NC Museum of Art • Highlighting scheduled events in the state for January is the A war Winners Exhibition at the NC Museum of in Raleigh, Jan. 18. A sampling of sports events are Mid-Wint^^ Skeet Championship at Pinehurst, Jan. 9th annual Southeastern Brittany Club Trials at Pinehurst, 27-30; and major-colle^^ basketball at Durham, Jan. 11, 30; Winsto>^' Salem, 13; Raleigh, 18, 25; Greensboro, 25. James Barker—Shop SERVICE RECORDS FOR DECEMBER As December 1938 began, James C. Barker of the shop put in his first day of em ployment here. Before 1964 arrived, he was well into his 26th year on the job. While he was marking his quarter-century anniversary, 11 others here joined the long list of those who stay on their jobs a long time. The list: Twenty Years Roy Bruce Bagwell and Tom McClure, twisting (synthetics); Jasper McCollum, warehouse; Edna M. Smith, quality control; Era Gribble, weaving (synthet ics). Fitfeen Years Violet R. Painter and Hillard E. Terry, twisting (synthetics). Ten Years Dewey L. Smith and Virginia Mae Wilson, twisting (synthet ics). Five Years Wiley Hardin, twisting (syn thetics); Judson Bert Looper, weaving (cotton). Barker received the standard appreciation gift of $100 and 25- New Classes At Textile School A new series of classes in five major subjects began Jan. 2 at North Carolina Vocational Tex tile School, Belmont. Courses are in yarn manufacturing, weaving and designing, knitting, mill maintenance, and tailoring. It takes two years to com plete a course at NCVTS—one year of foundation study and one year of advanced. A di- Southern Division Has New Manager William F. Smith, 44, is new manager of the company’s South ern Division. Before this ap pointment, he was manager of Firestone’s Memphis (Tenn.) sales district. The Southern Division in cludes South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, Louisiana, and parts of Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri, and North Carolina. Smith joined the company at Memphis in 1938. He served in World War II, then rejoined Firestone. In 1947 he became vice president and general man ager of The Great Southern Fire- year service pin. The 20-year record-holders were awarded a gold watch and service pin, while others marking annivers aries received service pins. ploma is awarded upon cbr^P^® tion of each course. Any resident of North lina who attends the school as^^ non-veteran (military) is ^ charged tuition. “It has been our experie^* that the person who attends t ^ school upon suggestion of his ] supervisor, makes the best dent,” said Chris E. Folk, pal, in announcing the classes. “In all cases the traini^^ gained here is bound to impr° the student’s work perforrnan and skills on the job,” hea^^^ stone Stores, returned to stone in 1960. He became rr>a^^ ager of the Memphis district i 1961. As Southern Division ager, he is headquartered Akron, Ohio. ‘F Highways Save Lives The Bureau of Public credits the nation’s inters highway system with savinS^^^ 000 lives per year, mostly cause of limited intersections the superroads. ^ When the 41,000-mile of superhighways is finish® should prevent the deaths some 8,000 motorists a year, the Bureau of Public Roads- January, 1964 Volume XIII Page 2 Number 1 ☆ ☆ ☆ Published by The Firestone Tire & Rubber Company, Firestone Textiles Division, Gastonia, North Carolina. Claude C. Callaway, Editor O South Allantic Council of Indus trial Editors PLANT REPORTERS Carding—Payton Lewis Cloth Room—Margie Waldrep Industrial Relations—Flora Pence Main Office—Bea McCarter Mechanical Department—Rosie Fran- cum Quality Control — Sallie Louella Queen, Leila Rape Bradsb®^ Twisting (cotton)—Elmina Twisting (synthetics)—Vera Elease Cole, Annie Cosey Elkins, Catherine Fletcher 0 Warehouse—Nancy Cloninger gv®** Robinson, Israel Good, ^ Rainey Weaving (cotton)—Ruth Veitch Weaving (synthetics)—Mary E. ^ son, Irene O'Dell, Mayzelie Ophelia Wallace Winding—Nell Bolick, Ruth