Page 33: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (July 15, 1974)
Read this page in Pdf, Flash or Html5 edition of July 15, 1974 Maritime Reporter Magazine
Expanded Duties To
Richard A. Kienitz
Richard A. Kienitz, Southern region manager in New Orleans,
La., for American Commercial
Barge Line Company, has been given expanded duties that in- clude responsibility for the company's distribution services department operations in the
Southern region.
The announcement of Mr.
Kienitz's new responsibility was made jointly by L.H. Meece, sales vice president for American Com- mercial Barge Line Company (ACBL), and D. Ray Miller, dis- tribution services vice president, at the company's general offices in Jeffersonville, Ind.
Gene Darnell
At the same time, Mr. Meece announced that Gene Darnell has joined ACBL as sales representa- tive in its New Orleans offices.
Mr. Kienitz has been ACBL's
Southern region manager since
July 1972, and was formerly as- sistant manager in the Great
Lakes region. He is a graduate of Ferris State College, and the
College of Advanced Traffic,
Chicago.
Mr. Darnell has been a student of transportation at Houston
Community College and, prior to joining American Commercial
Barge Line Company, had been a traffic representative with Ten- nessee Gas Pipeline Company for seven years.
American Commercial Barge
Line Company is a part of the
Inland Waterways Services Divi- sion of Texas Gas Transmission
Corporation.
Atlantic Richfield
Moves To New
Philadelphia Location
Atlantic Richfield Company be- gan moving its Philadelphia, Pa., business offices to the city's new ultramodern office complex at
Centre Square, 1500 Market
Street, on June 24. The company has been located at 260 South
Broad Street since 1923.
Some 1.400 company employees will occupy 23 floors in the Atlan- tic Richfield Tower at Centre
Square. Approximately 500 em- ployees are scheduled for the initial move.
Among those organizations re- locating to Atlantic Richfield
Tower will be the headquarters of the ARCO Chemical Company division of Atlantic Richfield, and
ARCO Polymers, Inc., a Pitts- burgh-based subsidiary of the company.
Installation of Bell System Cen- trex telephone equipment will permit direct dialing of calls to company employees at the new
Centre Square location, a spokes- man said. The telephone number is (215) 557-2000.
The 21-story landmark build- ing at 260 South Broad Street will be acquired by the Philadel- phia College of Art through a gift-sale arrangement. It will be converted into classrooms and studios.
You've got the ways. We've got the means.
When your end product is a ship, you've got to put together the right means to that end. You need good designs, the right materials, expert supervision and skilled workmen.
And you need one more thing—muscle. That's where Clyde comes in. We've been building the finest material handling equipment for 76 years.
Our shipbuilding cranes are specially designed for the shipbuilder's needs and are proving their worth in shipyards throughout the world. If you need a crane that can fit the big pieces into place, like this 200-ton capacity Clyde Whirley used by
FMC Corporation, you can get it from Clyde, with the capacities and features that give greater productivity than any other equipment.
You've got the ways. Clyde's got the means.
To find out about putting them together, contact:
CLYDE IRON a unit of Equipment Systems
Division of AMCA International Corporation
P. O. Box 95
Port Deposit, Maryland 21904
CLYDE IRON
July 15, 1974 35