7ire$tone Textiles Company Gastonia North Carolina Bennettsville Bowling Green South Carolina Kentucky Our Gifts Help UW-UF-UGF United Way of Gaston County (NC) is reaching for $888,000 in its 1977-78 funding drive toward support of 3 community services—“People Helping People.” The goal was increased 10% over last year’s, the extra to allow for ex panded programs for some of the agencies, Gaston United Way has come from all departments of plant, short only twice in its 25 years of operation. It was honored re cently for greatly exceeding its 1976 goal—out front among agencies of similar size in North Carolina. For the sixth time in 13 years the Gaston UW finished first in its category. Last year, the $805,437 raised went beyond the campaign goal by $42,000 and was $51,000 more than the total reached in 1975. Of this amount. Firestone Tex tiles people pledged $46,553. This year, the UW Firestone in-plant campaign is being con ducted in September. Ralph Reep, shift foreman in TC Weav ing; and James G. Burr, engi neer in Industrial Engineering, are chairmen of the drive. Help ing also are many volunteers Back Home Mr. and Mrs. Pedro DeZarlo are back in Argentina after a summer visit to Gastonia. He, the manager of Firestone’s tex tile plant in Buenos Aires, spent a week observing the latest tech niques in production of tire fabric. The DeZarlos are native Ar gentines. In Gastonia, they had a reunion with the Bemie Farmer family. Farmer, division man ager of technical services, was manager of the Buenos Aires plant in the 1960s. Before re turning to the States, he picked DeZarlo from a production job to become plant production man ager. From that promotion, he moved up to manager. DeZarlo has been with the company in South America for 25 years. offices and warehouse. Factory Manager P. R. Wil liams is a volunteer chairman among industries of the county- w i d e UW campaign. Helping him are Thomas A. Grant, man ager of Industrial Engineering; S. E. Crawford, manager of In dustrial Relations; E. H. Pass- more, plant safety engineer. ☆ ☆ ☆ SAL COSTANZA Bowling Green At the other two U.S. plants of Firestone Textiles Company, community-service programs have funding drives in Septem- ber-October. The United Fund of Marlboro County (SC) is seeking $57,050 for its 23 agen cies. Leaders of the in-plant campaign at Firestone, Bennetts ville, are Frances Fletcher, per sonnel services representative; and M.D. Coleman, safety super visor. United Givers Fund of Bowl ing Green and Warren County (Ky.) has 13 community services. This year’s goal is $190,000. Plant manager Thomas Yelton is UGF chairman of the county campaign. Chairpersons for the Firestone plant drive are Brenda Hale, controller’s office secretary; Clifton Logsdon, employee in terviewer and counselor; and Don Davis, supervisor in Re claiming. SEPTEMBER 1977 Summer moves on in the "Caravan of Seasons." Sights and fragrances of September's maturity are here. And the sounds all around are surely the voices of early Autumn. Ss 16% Of Goal Firestone Textiles Company moved from its earliest goal of 13% reduction of energy usage in 1975, to 20% savings as of summer 1977. From the 13%, it moved to 14, then 16 by late 1976. The current goal is 23% savings. Division energy coordinator cy during summer drops well Sal Costanza, personnel man ager at Firestone, Bowling Green, has been in his present assignment since June 15. He succeeds Jeff Claypool who was transferred to Gastonia as divi sion personnel manager. Costanza came to Bowling Green from the company’s Nash ville, Tenn., tire plant, where he was personnel representative. Originally from Crystal Lake, 111., Costanza was graduated from Eastern Illinois University. He and his wife Kay have four children—Kim, 15; Cindy, 13; Trevor, 9 and Mathew, 3. Costanza joined Firestone in May of 1964 at the Decatur, 111., plant. He was at Firestone’s Akron headquarters in Plant Employment Development be fore his transfer to Nashville. Two Firestone employees at Bowling Green moved in to their sixth year of service in August. Receiving a serv ice pin for five years com pleted were Zettie Wingfield, backwinder; and Johnny Johnson, doffer. Both are in the Twisting department. Noted: A tailless squirrel up and down a large hickory tree at east end of Firestone mill, Gastonia. Brian Schroeder expects a 1% improvement in savings per year into 1980, closing year of the current energy-savings program. Included in the textiles divi sion grouping are Firestone Tex tiles Company units at Gastonia, N.C. (headquarters); Bowling Green, Ky.; Bennettsville, S.C.; Woodstock, Canada, and the fabric-treating unit at the Mem phis, Tenn., tire plant. THE CURRENT Gastonia plant rate is 14% savings. Of Gastonia, Schroeder noted that further savings will be costly at first, but in the long run will pay for themselves—and more. For example, the boiler efficien- V below 50%. A smaller boiler in operation could effect a signifi cant saving, a recent study shows. As an area of possible major savings, he mentioned heat re covery from exhaust of fabric- treating operations, adding: "But this is very complicated, and will require a great deal of investigation and study to see if it would work out to good ad vantage.” Firestone’s current worldwide Energy Conservation program aims at reducing energy con sumption in every way possible, and saving the equivalent of 125-plus millions gallons of oil annually by 1980. The program began in 1975. Rate of savings is measured against the company’s usage levels of 1972. —more on page 4 Warehouse • Checking plans for the new $3 million warehouse at Gas tonia. John Walters, project en gineer from Akron corporate headquarters, will be in Gas tonia during the construction, expected to be completed within a year. Denise (Dee Dee) Lynch of Gastonia is employed as project office secretary. Project engineering mobile of fice and another one for Hard away Construction Company are on Vance Street truck lot near warehouse site. Demolition of old warehouse row along Third Avenue began in late August. Portion of this unit (left) built in 1903, a few days before it "went into history." A second row of the old warehouses will be cleared away in a later phase of the new construction.