Fez- GASTONIA • NORTH CAROLINA ^ ^ f O M ft Your Symbol VOIUME Xm-NUMBER 4 W W WW of Quality MARCH . 1964 W Jg W g and Service NJ s# VJr ^ive, Ten-Year ^departmental f^ecords Safety Four framed commendation certificates acknowledging five and ten-year records in departments free of a lost-time injury were awarded at a February luncheon in the Recrea tion Center. Certificates were accepted by department heads Carl Rape, carding, 5-year record; W. G, Henson, shop, 5; O. K, Forrester, warp preparation, 10; Pete McArver, cloth room, 5. In photo from left: Mr. Rape, Raymond Mack, plant safety manager; Mr. Henson, R. M. Sawyer, textiles division president; Mr. Forrester and Mr. McArver. Stereo’ Rubber Promising ^ is ifcr ^^Sfeoregulated types of synthet- rubber which show great I’omlse as either partial or com- 6te replacements for natural ,^bber. B. H. Larabee, vice pres- in charge of Firestone’s ^ Dber operations, predicts that ^estic consumption of the Sfeoregulated types of rubber Polybutadiene and polyiso- —will climb to about 150,- ^ long tons this year. said free - world use of ese new types of rubber will ■grease more than 50 per cent year to some 235,000 long Their domestic use will expected record consumption of all types of synthetic rubber in 1964, he said. Ratio throughout the free world will be almost 10 per cent. Stereoregulated types of rub ber are expected to account for 20 to 25 per cent of domestic synthetic-rubber consumption in a few years. MUCH of the polybutadiene rubber used this year in the U.S. and elsewhere will be produced by Firestone as Diene rubber in plants at Orange, Texas and Port Jerome, France. Firestone can produce either Diene or Coral rubber (polyisoprene) in its plants, but has concentrated on the Diene types. Consumption of all types of S''^r)thetic rubber this year v/ill increase by about 6,000 long tons to 1,316,000 long tons. But use of polybutadiene and polyi soprene will increase by 40,000 long tons, indicating stereo rub ber types are finding outlets in a variety of products. Mr. Larabee sees synthetic rubber increasing its share of domestic and foreign markets again in 1964, that synthetic rubber will account for about 75 per cent of the total rubber consumption in the United States this year, and almost 59 per cent of the rubber used in the free world. ^01 Donors At February Bloodmobile Stop the Red Cross bloodmo- stop at Firestone Recrea- Center in February, 201 |.^Peaters and many first- among employees and tv of the plant communi- r 'made their gift from the ^eart” th ■ e bloodmobile visit here • s the first of two made dur- ^ each year. Donors, with last *^es in alphabetical order; . ^nnabelle Adams, David * ^ms, Dr. Simeon Adams, Aderholt Jr., Frede- ^ Anderson, Ernest Bagwell, j^obie Baldwin, James Barker q'’ J- C. Barnes, Betty Barton, Beach, Nell Rose Beach, ^ *^68 Beddingfield, Arthur ^^chanan, Clemmer Bell, ^^lenn Henry Bell, Jennie Opal Bradley, Coy ^^^dshaw, Dillard Bradshaw, Briggs, Vernon Brockman, ^^rley Brooks, Luther Brown, ^ins Brunnemer, John Bry- ^nt Sam Bunton, Sammy O. Bunton, James Burr, Gladys Butler, Ida Byers, William By- rum, Raybon Calhoun, Mimmy Cantrell, Frank Capps. Gene Carson, Dena Champion, Paul Chastain, Bob Chavis, Hen ry Church, Virgil Collette, Ro land Conrad, Jack Cook, Wil liam Cosey, Guy Crain, Lloyd Crain, Eva Nell Crawford, Sam uel Crawford, Ralph Dalton, Jennie Davidson, Coy Davis, Fred Davis, Fred J. Davis, Grady Davis, Lydia Davis. Archie Deal, Harold Denton, James Dixon Jr., Clarence Don aldson, Johnny Ellis, Lottie J. Ethridge, William Ethridge, Jack Faile, C. H. Falls, John Fletcher, George Floyd, Edgar Foy, Ralph Franklin, Clarence Free, Dolores Fritton, Francis Galligan, Robert Garrett, Jackie Gates, Evelyn Gibson, Thomas Gibson, Don Gillespie, Joe Givens, John Goff, Thomas Grant, Clinton Guffey. William Guffey, Robert Hager, Charles Hamrick, Belon Hanna, Gwynn Hardin, John Harris, Frank Harrison, Keith Haygood, James Hicks, George High, George Hill, Theodore Hoff man, William Hogan, Worth Honeycutt, James Hord, Theron Houser, Jack Howard, Jerry Howie, Horace Hughes, Ernest Hubbard, Warren Jackson, Ralph Johnson. Clarence Jolly, Frank Jolly, Bobby Jones, Jesse Jones, Len- nel Keenum, William Kendrick, William Kennedy, Alfred Kes- sell, James King, Melvin Knox, Louise Lankford, Mary Lank ford, J. M. Lasater, Glenn Leath- erwood, Alvin Ledford, Jesse Liles, Pearl Lindsay, Cramer Little, Vernon Lovingood, Ger trude Lowe, Gary Lyles. Benjamin Massey, Margaret Matthews, Ernest Mauney, Fran ces McArver, A. D. McCarter, Beatrice McCarter, Howard Mc Carter, Gary McCaslin, Marvin More on page 2 BiEDAY Textile Industry Offers New Opportunities Textiles—one of the world’s oldest industries—today of fers our newest opportunity, especially for able and imagina tive youth. It is a warmly-human industry, making products that serve man’s basic and artistic needs. As such, it offers promise to the young person with ambition and skill. This was the core of what plant general manager Harold Mercer told 30 students of Hunt er Huss High School, when they were special guests of the Fire stone Textiles plant one day in February. The students’ visit was part of Business-Industry Day activities sponsored in Gastonia by the In dustrial Management Club in cooperation with the Chamber of Commerce. BEFORE coming to the two- hour session in the plant con ference room, the students had been invited to send in ques tions related to opportunities, jobs, products and processes in the textile industry and at the Gastonia Firestone plant in par ticular. At the meeting Mr. Mercer dealt with the compiled ques tions. He was assisted by Brice T. Dickson Sr., retired executive secretary of the local Chamber of Commerce. “The textile industry is no ex ception when we say that it looks more and more to educa tion and increased technical skills in the people it employs,” the general manager said. He pointed out that such fac tors as America’s growing sys tem of free enterprise, moderni zation of production facilities and development of new prod ucts have brought almost un limited opportunities to the tex tile and allied industries, such as the rubber industry, in the case of the Firestone company. The students got this added reminder: Even with great op portunities it doesn’t mean that you can enter a textile mill and move from bottom to top in a job without effort. Business suc cess is not usually simple and easy. There’s room at the top, but there’s competition every step of the way in getting there. Company’s 21st Foreign Tire Plant Thailand’s first tire plant and the Firestone company’s 21st foreign tire-producing facility began operation in January at Bangkok, capital and chief com mercial center of the country. Opening of this plant is anoth er milestone in Firestone’s plan of increased foreign production to meet growing demands of foreign markets. And added tire plants natural ly increase demand for tire fab ric. President Raymond C. Fire stone said Thailand presently has some 125,000 vehicles reg istered, and the figure will climb to 240,000 by 1970, a 92- per cent increase. The new plant is producing —More on page 3 Juries 5T TIME 195 jDM M. R. Batche, manager of safety in Fire stone’s manufacturing plants, displays the number of days without a lost-time injury at the Gastonia plant as of mid-February. Mr, Batche, visiting from Akron, stands before a portion of the new safety board at the main entrance to the mill. The rebuilt board, com pleted last month, is done in the company colors of red and white. ■■ Latest Safety Board