Page 31: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (December 15, 1983)

Read this page in Pdf, Flash or Html5 edition of December 15, 1983 Maritime Reporter Magazine

1/8-inch-thick vinyl strapping. All chairs stack for convenient storage.

Comfort-Mate sells exclusively to the maritime trade, and does not have any distributors on the retail level. For further informa- tion and a free copy of the com- pany's color brochure,

Write 98 on Reader Service Card

John Batten Retires As

CEO Of Twin Disc, Inc.

John H. Batten, chairman and chief executive officer of Twin Disc,

Incorporated of Racine, Wise., has retired as CEO but will continue in his capacity as chairman of the board of directors. Roger D. De-

Long, formerly president and chief operating officer, has been ap- pointed to the new position of vice chairman of the board and chair- man of the Management Execu- tive Committee. Succeeding him as president and also named chief executive officer is Michael E.

Batten, formerly executive vice president. Leroy J. Burlingame, previously senior vice president- manufacturing, was elected exec- utive vice president.

Michael Batten

Other officer changes include

Donald D. James, vice president- domestic manufacturing, who will handle all manufacturing opera- tions at the company's Racine and

Rockford facilities. James Mc-

Indoe, formerly director-interna- tional marketing, was elected to the additional post of assistant secretary. $5-Million Funding Awarded

To Raytheon For R&D On

Navy's Satcom Program

Raytheon Company, Sudbury,

Mass., has been awarded a $5-mil- lion modification for incremental funding under a previously awarded cost-plus-fixed-fee re- search and development contract for the Navy's EHF satellite com- munication program. The Naval

Electronic Systems Command,

Washington, D.C., is the contract- ing activity.

American-Standard Opens

New Jersey Repair Plant —Literature Available

American-Standard's Heat Trans- fer Division, headquartered in

December 15,1983

Buffalo, N.Y., recently announced the opening of a full-capability, re- gional repair facility in Elizabeth,

N.J. The announcement was made by Peter D. Roome, vice presi- dent and general manager of the

Division.

The new heat exchanger repair plant is fully equipped to retube, repair, or rebundle shell-and-tube heat exchangers up to 42 inches in diameter, 20 feet long, and 20,000- pounds. The facility can handle any heat exchanger within these parameters regardless of original manufacturer. National Board "U" and "R" stamping is available. The plant handles retubing with fer- rous, non-ferrous, stainless steel, or exotic materials, with bare or low-fin tubes. Most alloys are available from stock.

Regionally located for quick re- sponse to customer needs, the new facility's service capability—in- cluding unit pick-up and delivery— is available seven days a week, 24 hours a day.

In addition to providing quick- response repair or rebundling for heat exchangers, the Elizabeth fa- cility offers technical diagnosis and problem evaluation services based on American-Standard's more than 60 years of experience in heat ex- changer design and construction.

For full information and free lit- erature on this new facility,

Write 73 on Reader Service Card

THE BEST KEPT

SECRET

IN SHIPBUILDING

BAY SHIPBUILDING CORP.

Subsidiary of THE MANITOWOC COMPANY, INC. 605 North 3rd Avenue, Sturgeon Bay, Wl 54235

Phone: 414-743-5524/Telex: 263448 MTWC ENG MATC

Twx: 910-260-3500 MTWOC ENGR

Write 675 Reader Service Card

BAY SHIPBUILDING CORP. 1983

Maritime Reporter

First published in 1881 Maritime Reporter is the world's largest audited circulation publication serving the global maritime industry.