Page 43: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (July 1970)
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John O'Leary Elected
President Transmarine
Navigation Corporation
Transmarine Navigation Corpor- ation has announced that its board of directors has made two major changes in the top corporate struc- ture of the company.
Max J. Linder, president and chairman of the board for the past 15 years, is stepping down from the presidency and will continue in the capacity of chairman and chief ex- ecutive officer. John F. O'Leary, executive vice-president, has been elected president and general man- ager. Mr. O'Leary will be head- quartered in the firm's new execu- tive offices to be located in the
Bank of America Center, 555 Cali- fornia Street, San Francisco, Calif.
Other important changes in man- agement in the Los Angeles area are: Lloyd A. Linn, vice-president of operations, will transfer from the Long Beach office to the Los
Angeles office where he will assume the duties of vice-president of ad- ministration ; Joseph J. Berru, gen- eral traffic manager, will be promo- ted to assistant vice-president of traffic, and will be in overall charge of traffic and container services for the southern California area; James
J. Anzai, traffic supervisor, will be- come manager of outward freight,
NYK/Showa Lines department;
Gerd Rachut, manager of ItalPaci- fic Line department, will transfer to the San Francisco office and maintain the agency management and control of the ItalPacific Line;
Miki Moriwaki, container opera- tions manager, has been elected vice-president of traffic, and will be responsible for the management of the NYK and Showa Lines;
Paul S. Flood, general traffic man- ager, will be promoted to assistant vice-president of traffic. Mr. Flood will assist Mr. Moriwaki in the management of NYK/Showa Lines. lews gives your marine advertising nake the decisions, specify and buyl
Let's face the facts ... any marine sales manager will tell you, from years of experience, that the men who make the decisions, specify, order and pur- chase all marine equipment and services are shoreside.
With all due respect, men aboard ship, regardless of rank, do not specify or buy.
Product performance is the only thing that counts at sea, not advertising, and you can't get a product aboard ship until after you sell it shoreside.
Maximum coverage of shoreside buyers is vital to the success of any marine advertising program ... and only MARITIME REPORTER/Engineering News provides it. (The second magazine is missing half the shoreside men who are currently specifying and buying.)
And... these all important shoreside decision makers want MARITIME REPORTER/Engineering
News ... total circulation over 98% Reader Request ... in Writing.
MARITIME REPORTER/Engineering News is also first choice of marine industry advertisers...carried more advertising space in 1969 than the second magazine.
Your 1970-71 advertising is bound to produce greater results...in
MARITIME REPORTER/Engineering News ... the only marine magazine reaching your entire shoreside market.
MARITIME
REPORTER
ENGINEERING NEWS 107 EAST 31st STREET
NEW YORK, N. Y. 10016
MUrray Hill 9-3266 • 7 • 8 - 9
General Dynamics
Quincy Shipbuilding
Names Paul Schofield
Paul Schofield
Paul Schofield, a former news- man, has been named manager of public relations at the Quincy Ship- building division of General Dy- namics, Quincy, Mass. The appoint- ment was announced by Lloyd Ber- geson, vice-president of General
Dynamics and general manager of the shipyard.
Mr. Schofield succeeds Frank C.
Kerr, who left General Dynamics to establish his own public rela- tions agency.
Since joining General Dynamics in 1966, Mr. Schofield has been a public relations representative at the Quincy Shipbuilding division.
Earlier, he was a reporter for the
Brockton Daily Enterprise, and a news copy editor of the Boston
Globe. He is a member of the Bos- ton Press Club, Navy League of the United States, Propeller Club of Boston, and the American News- paper Guild. He is a graduate of the State College of Bridgewater,
Mass., and also has studied at
Northeastern University.
Alpine Geophysical
Opens London Office
Alpine Geophysical Associates, (U.K.) Ltd., a subsidiary of Alpine
Geophysical Associates, Inc. of
Norwood, N.J., has announced the opening of a new office at 64 Lin- coln's Inn Fields, London W.C. 2,
England. Alpine Geophysical, a world leader in applied oceano- graphy, has taken this action in order to give better service to its clients in the United Kingdom and northern Europe.
William T. McGuinness, former director of Alpine's Oceanographic
Projects Division, will be in charge of the London office. The company also maintains a European office in
Rome, headed by Dr. Gino Meca- rini.
July 1, 1970 45