BOWLING GREEN 11 With ‘Years’ Eleven persons at Bowling Green marked service anni versaries in August. Those completing 10 years: Thomas D. Allen Jr., unit operator, Treating; Linda T. Atwell, back- winder operator, Backwinding; Jimmy G. Brooks, unifil mechanic, Weaving; Samuel L. Cassidy, Unifil mechanic. Weaving; James L. Gillentine, style-change specialist, Weav ing; Gene Harvey, plant nurse. Medical; Paula Johnson, laboratory supervisor. Quality Control; Richard B. Miller, special projects. Weaving. Also Carlie D. Sherfey, warehouse supervisor. Warehouse/ Shipping; James Wills, storekeeper, General Stores. And with 5 years: Robert W. Crain, tender. Ply Twisting. Service (lefl) and Bradley i • • William J. Bradley be gan his retirement on Sept. 1, having worked at Firestone, Gastonia, 38 years, 1 month and 27 days. He was last a twister operator in TC Twisting. Also ‘finishing out’ a ser vice record at Gastonia at the end of August: Bonnie L. Service. She has 10 years and 19 days with the company, some of it in Chafer Weav ing. Her last job was as reclaimer in TC Twisting. Retired Nurse Lois Taylor Lois Moore Taylor, 72, retired from Firestone Textiles at Gas tonia in 1968, where she was in industrial nursing. She died Aug. 13 and was buried in Gas ton Memorial Park. Surviving are her husband Fred Taylor, daughters Eleanor Furr and Janel Thomas; stepson Ben Tay lor; brother Fairley Moore; sis ters Mrs. A. M. Wilson and Mrs. Nell Unts and 2 grandchildren. Tire Pressure Cheek it Right Just as you check oil in the engine and coolant in the radi ator, it’s a must that you regu larly check air pressure in the tires. And especially before go ing on a trip. Underpressure can increase fuel consumption, cause tires to wear out faster and even make for tire failure. Tire pressure is difficult (ac tually almost impossible) to check accurately by just look ing at tires, particularly if they’re radials. The only way: use your own air pressure gauge. Do the checking before starting out, so you can get a “cold” pressure reading. As tires roll, they get hotter and their pressure increases. That’s norm al. For correct air-pressure listing on your tires, look in the car Can you tell which radial tire has correct air pressure? The one at left. It's hard to tell be cause the sidewall bulge of each is very similar to the other. Firestone issued these photos to show how hard it is to trust your eye for correct air pres- owner’s manual or on a sticker on the door jamb or dashboard drawer. These are “cold” in flation readings and take into account pressure build-up as tires get hotter. If you’ll be doing lots of high- sure in radial tires. Left tire here is inflated to 24 pounds per square inch, and the other one has 16 psi—that's underin- flated by 33 percent. Not enough pressure can add fuel use, cause tires to wear faster—even lead to tire failure. speed (turnpike) travel, increase air pressure 4 pounds over the recommended pressure, but not over the maximum pressure marked on the tire sidewall. That’s 32 pounds per square inch on most passenger-car tires. You may have a free copy of A FAMILY DOCTOR LOOKS AT ARTHRITIS, by William W. Levis III, M.D. Write American Arthritis Association, Inc., P. O. Box 666, Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514—attention Clifton Jones. Arthritis afflicts 50 million Americans, some 250,000 of these in North Carolina. A Job Forum Display • Firestone Textiles and 29 other industries had displays at Gastonia’s Eastridge Mall for a Job Forum—a kind of adult-careers day, Aug. 3. Its purpose was to inform citizens of employment and career opportunities in the area. Sponsoring the exhibits/information exchange were Gas ton Community Action, a federal economic-betterment agency; Gaston Mall and North Carolina Federation of Senior Citizens. Several people at the Firestone plant contributed to the company display. D.N. Lewis and Bill Calhoun of Process & Product Development designed the display and obtained ma terials for it, and several of the Shop maintenance crew con structed the layout. Downtown Firestone Stores manager Mike Blackburn helped with company products for display. Firestone display. It featured the 721 Steel Belled Radial and • J. C. Claypool (lefl). Fire stone Textiles division Person nel manager, and Tim McClure of Gaston Community Action at other Firestone tires, and Gas tonia plant materials for tire fabric. NE TEXTILEEi Volume VXIV September, 1978 Number 9 Page 2 • GASTONIA Claude C. Callaway, Editor Plant Offices Warehouses REPORTERS Monthly publicallon oi the Gastonia, N. C., plant of Firetlone TextilM ■ . ■ ‘ — Akron, Ohio. preildent. Mem- Company, a division oi The Firestone Tire tc Rubber Company, Akron, Ohio. Division Headquarters, Gastonia, N. C. 28052. James B. Call, • ■ *' ber CaroUnas Association of Business Communicators. Industrial Relations—Bobbie Baldwin Main Office—Freida Price Mechanical Dept.—Carol Payne Twisting Tire Cord—Elease Cole, Katie Elkins Warp Preparation— Nell Bolick Warehouse—Harold Robinson BENNETTSVILLE PLANT Frances Fletcher, Redona David, Mar garet McCaskiU, Jimmy McCaskill BOWLING GREEN Clifton O. Logsdon Pageant Honor For Linda For the second consecutive year, Linda Cheryl Owens was named “Miss Congeniality” in the Miss Gastonia Pageant. The 1978 pageant was held Aug. 12 in Ashbrook High School audi torium. Linda is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Owens. He is junior buyer for the Gas tonia Firestone plant. In her senior year at Ash brook High School, Linda was a Merit winner in the Fire stone Scholarship program. Linda, 19, is a sophomore at University of North Carolina- Greensboro where she is major ing in English and journalism and minoring in physics. At school she works on the annual staff, is a member of the Masqueraders theatrical group, and is an advisor in a girl’s freshman dormitory. Safety 13 Years In "Our Towns'' • Bennetts- ville, S. C. has not a pedestrian fatality in 13 years. So the town has been honored by Carolina Motor Club and the American Automobile Association for Pedestrian Safety Achievement. Latest recognition was for the year 1977. Bennettsville is among the 17 South Carolina cities honored. The other 32 are in North Caro lina. Only 1 city has a longer pedestrian safety record than Bennettsville: Oxford, N. C., with no pedestrian fatality for 20 years.