news March 1982 Fibers & Textiles Company Gastonia, North Carolina • Bennettsville, South Carolina Bowling Green, Kentucky • Hopewell, Virginia • Woodstock, Ontario, Canada JAMES B. CALL An era of change • “The last 12 of James B. Call’s 35 years Firestone service were spent in Gastonia as president of the fibers & textiles division. His work with the company, closed in February, was during an era of major chginge for the division, including the passing of the remaining cotton to cdl-synthetlc production, new fabric-treating facilities, construction of a $2.3-million warehouse, and consolidation of the Woodstock, Ontario, Canada, and Hopewell, Va., operations with the division. Mr. Call graduated from Clarion rubber and metal products divisions. President Noble James B.Call peft) and Ronald E. Noble, President of the fibers/textiles division, with a pen & ink drawing of the Firestone-Gastonla plant tower. The drawing, a gift to Mr. Call upon his retirement, was done by freelance artist Keith Hart of Roanoke Rapids, N.C. Keith’s father, Lewis Hart, is a lead frame mechanic in TC Twisting. Mr. Call, holding a “Best Wishes in Retirement” message prepared by the Gastonia Data Processing and Persoimel and bearing the names of himdreds of employees. It, along with his 35-years service award, w£is presented at a retire ment dinner in February. Other plants of the division sent similar greetings. With Mr. Call (from left): Jay H. Rosenson, Group Vice President, Firestone Corporate Development; George W. Aucott, Vice President, Group Vice President, North Ameri can Tire Group; Ronald E. Noble, President, Firestone Fibers & Tex tiles Company; Leon R. Brodeur, Group Vice President, North Ameri can Tire; Ralph L. King, General Factory Manager, Firestone Fibers & Textiles. SP&S Plan Improvements A revised Stock Purchase & Sav ings Plan, effective March 1, has such improvements as: •Liberalizing the withdrawal pro visions •Shortening the vesting period from 5 to 2 years •Changing employee contribution rate in relation to service, to allow 6% of earnings for those with less than 20 years service, and 8% for employees with 20 or more years. DETTAILS of changes and improve ments are In the new SP&S booklet, dated March 1. Through the SP&S Plan, the company add:^ $1 to every S2 an employee Invests. Personnel dep>artments at all plants have the enrollment packet 55977. It contains an enrollment blank, £ind for those already participating, a form for changing contribution amounts. As of the latest report (January), Firestone common stock for employ ees in SP&S was bought at an average $12.48. At that time. 6,293 employ ees were participating in the Plan. (Pa.) State Teachers College in 1939 and considered a teaching career. In stead, he was a depeirtment store clothing salesman 2 years. Then he went to Penn State University to study engineering, took 2‘/2 years out for military service In WWll; returned and finished his studies. That was the year he joined Firestone. HE CAME to Gastonia in 1969 from an assignment as coordinator of manufacturing for the company’s $44.5 m. energy savings All Firestone operating groups improved^their energy sav ings in fiscal 1981, making a 3.8% gain over the previous year. The North American Tire group and its raw materials opera tions improved savings by 6.37% and 3.57% respectively. These savings had a major Impact, since North American Tire and Raw Materials use 73% of the total cor porate energy, said Donald Kline, manager of energy-utlllzatlon engineering. Both of these operations had an Increase in production last year. (The Gastonia plant — in the tex tiles division and belonging to North American Tire group — had an energy savings of almost $60,000. This came about mostly from saving in water-use, refinements in pro- Hls earlier positions were In time study, as industrial engineer, pro duction manager, administrative assistant to the general sales man ager of Firestone Steel Products Com pany, director of manufacturing of non-tire divisions, and administrative assistant to the vice president of diver sified products. Mr. and Mrs. (Marian) Call con tinue living in Gastonia. She teaches commercl£il subjects at Ashbrook High School. He will pursue his special Interests in music (playing piano), growing flowers, reading; teaching Sunday School at First Presbyterian Church, and active as a member of the board of directors of Schiele Museum of Natural History (he will become chairman in 1984). The Calls have a daughter, Marina (Mrs. James) Stockdale, Tampa, Fla.; and a son, Jeimes B. Call III, Athens, Ga. There are three grandchildren. Ronald E. Noble, new presi dent of the Fibers/Textiles division, heis been with the Gastonia (headquarters) plant since last September. He was president of the Synthetic Fibers operation at Hopewell, Va., from late 1974 until his present assignment. Mr. Noble, from Erie, Pa., Joined Firestone’s plastics division in 1953 as a process engineer. Four years later he was made group leader in vinyl resins and in 1959 beceime manager of the chemical pilot plant. He was appointed technical man ager of the chemical plant in 1964 and in 1967 made factory manager of that plant. A year later, he was named manager of the polyvinyl chloride resins plant at PerryvUle, MD. He became assistant to the vice president of the chemicals and raw materials division in 1974, a few months be fore being advanced to president at Hopewell. Mr. Noble has a B.S. degree In chemical engineering from Case Institute of Technology. He Is a mem ber of the Society of Plastics Engi neers. He is married to the former Joan- elle Waters of Aberdeen, MD. ductlon processes, heat recovery in fabric-treating, and changes in light ing.) Firestone’s worldwide energy- conservation program saved the company $44.5 million in opera ting costs during fiscal 1981. That’s an annual savings of about 2.4 mil lion beurels of oil. Savings were realized despite a 16% annual inflation rate in energy prices. Ffrestone’s total fuel bUl for ’81 was $139.4 million. The ’81 savings, together with OUR PRODUCTS Steelex RTH Firestone is supplying a radial tire for the fast-growing market of pickup trucks. The Steelex Radial Transfwrt Highway (RTH) tire. Introduced in late 1981, equips 3/4-ton and 1-ton pickups. First available in one metric size (LT 235/85R16), It will be produced Mercer UW Award Charles D. Massey, retiring presi dent of United Way of Gaston County, NC (1981), received the Harold Mer cer Memorial Award at an annual UW awards luncheon earlier this year. The Award commemorates the longtime Firestone/Gastonia general manager, who was a foimder and once president of United Fund, later United Way. The Firestone manager, a native of Seymour, Ind., came to Gastonia in 1935 from Akron, Ohio, head quarters. Associated with the com pany’s textiles for more than 35 years, he retired as president of the Division. The Award is presented each year to the outgoing president of the county United Way. It weis estab lished after Mr. Mercer's death in 1969. those for the 1976-80 period brings the savings for the 6 years the pro gram has been in effect to $162.5 million. in other sizes by June 1982, when the RTH will be offered in the re placement meirket. The company's general product planning dejjartment says the de mand for radial light-truck tires is expected to increase steadily during the next 5 years. While the tire in dustry shlpp)ed some 3 million tires to this market last year, shipments are expected to reach 12 million units by 1986. Firestone Fibers & Textile Company EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY Representatives Gastonia S. E. Crawford Bennettsville Clifton O. Logsdon Bowling Green Sal Costanza