Page 29: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (March 15, 1981)
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Ports to call for York 24-hour service.
Factory-trained air condition- ing and refrigeration experts for 24-hour marine service. A full stock of York parts for anything you have on board. A complete range of York units to order without weeks of waiting. You can expect it all around the free world from York — from these York marine experts. 1. AA REFRIGERATION 4721 Broadway, Galveston, TX 77550 (713) 744-0957 2. ADRICK COOLING CORP. 30 B. Remington Blvd.,
Ronkonkoma, NY 11779 . .(516) 585-4231
Branch: Adrick Marine Corp. 77 River St., Hoboken, NJ 07030 (201) 420-1339 3. RAILEY REFRIGERATION CO.,
INC. 74 Sullivan St.,
Brooklyn, NY 11231 (212) 855-3958
Branches: 2323 Randolph Ave.
Avenel, NJ 07001 (201) 382-1225 524 N.E. 190th St.
North Miami, FL 33179 . . .(305) 651-4160 4. BAILEY CORPORATION 632 Alvar St., New Orleans, LA 70117 (504) 943-2461 5. GENERAL MARINE
REFRIGERATION 1100 N. Front St., Philadelphia, PA 19123 (215) 922-6293
Branches: Chesapeake Marine
Refrigeration Corp. 2626 Cromwell Rd.,
Norfolk, VA 23509 (804) 853-6856
Key Marine Refrigeration, Inc. 1625 Fleet St., Baltimore, MD 21231 (301) 563-2880 6. JW MECHANICAL SERVICE CO. 6540 Federal Blvd., Lemon Grove, CA 92045 (714) 582-6320 7. PSER, INC. 3441 17th Ave., West, Seattle, WA 98119 (206) 283-3200 8. QUALITY REFRIGERATION 533 North Fries Ave.,
Wilmington, CA 90744 . . .(213) 549-1532
Los Angeles, CA (213) 775-2735 9. TOMLINSON REFRIGERATION
AND SUPPLY CO. 324 Broadway, Elizabeth, NJ 07206 (201) 351-1350
For any kind of marine air con- ditioning or refrigeration service, call the experts in every port.
Write 375 on Reader Service Card
YORK DIVISION OF BORGWARNER CORPORATION
JETFOIL FOR BELGIUM—The first of two
Boeing Jetfoil hydrofoils for Regie voor
Maritiem Transport (RMT), the state-owned ferry company of Belgium, was launched recently by Boeing Marine Systems in Se- attle, Wash. The 316-seat hydrofoil, Prin- cesse Clementine, will enter commercial serv- ice on May 31 between Dover, England, and
Ostend, Belgium. Operating under the name "Sealink," RMT will provide up to six trips a day on the 62-nautical-mile route when the second Jetfoil, Prinses Stafanie, is added to the service this summer. Direct train con- nections will enable travelers to make the trip between Ostend and London in just three and one-half hours at approximately $43 one-way fare. RMT presently operates regular car-carrying vessels between Ostend and Dover/Folkestone.
Three Executive Promotions
Made By Tidewater Marine—
Allgood Named President
Sam S. Allgood William E. Bright Sr.
Tidewater Inc. has announced a major re- alignment in the executive staff of Tide- water Marine Service, Inc., the oldest and largest of the company's enterprises serv- ing the energy industry. Sam S. Allgood has been elected president of Tidewater Marine, with responsibility for worldwide marine operations. He replaces William E. Bright
Sr., who is retiring following the completion of 20 years' service.
Ray J. Hope William R. Croyle responsibility for all foreign Marine oper- ations, except Canada, and marine joint ven- ture activities. He will also continue super- vision of Indonesian oil operations.
William R. Croyle has also been elected a senior executive vice president of Tidewater
Marine and president of Tidewater Contrac- tor Services, Inc. He will be responsible for the company's domestic marine and Cana- dian operations, in addition to the special- ized domestic contracting services and dem- olition operations.
Announcement of the election of the three new officers was made by John P. Laborde,
Tidewater Inc. chairman, president, and chief executive officer, who said that additional or- ganization changes in the sales, engineering, and maintenance departments of Tidewater
Marine will be announced as part of a re- organization plan.
Mr. Allgood joined Tidewater Marine as a vice president in 1968, following extensive service as vice president and manager of sales and operations with Twenty Grand
Marine Service, Inc., which merged with
Tidewater in 1968. Mr. Hope joined Tide- water in 1969 as manager of joint ventures following 22 years' service as marine man- ager with Ray Geophysical Co., Houston.
He was elected vice president in charge of joint ventures for Tidewater in 1971, and later served as vice president in charge of
Far East and Middle East operation. He was promoted to the position of senior vice pres- ident in 1976.
Mr. Croyle served first with Tidewater
Marine's Pacific Coast operations, and later was transferred to Morgan City, La., where he was named president of Tidex, Inc., a domestic vessel operating affiliate of Tide- water Marine, and served as area manager for the U.S. Gulf and East Coasts. He later was named president of Tidex International,
Inc., with responsibility for Europe and Af- rica marine operations in addition to do- mestic operations.
Bayou Black Shipyard
Delivers 'Bengal Aggie'
To Sundance Marine
Ray J. Hope has been named a senior ex- ecutive vice president of Tidewater Marine and president of Tidex International, a for- eign vessel operating affiliate. He will have
Bayou Black Shipyard, Inc. of Gibson, La. (15 miles east of Morgan City), recently de- livered the pushboat Bengal Aggie (shown above) to Sundance Marine of Houston.
Turned over to her owners at Morgan City, the 60-foot vessel has a 25-foot beam and a depth of 9 feet. The hull is of steel con- struction, while the main cabin and pilot- house are of aluminum.
Main propulsion is provided by two Cum- mins KTA 1150 diesel engines, each rated 470 bhp at 1,800 rpm, driving through Twin
Disc model 520 reverse/reduction gears.
Electric power is supplied by two GM De- troit Diesel 30-kw generator sets. Electronic equipment includes an Epsco model 504 ra- dar, two Drake MR-155 VHF radios, and one
Raytheon Ray 350 loudhailer system.
March 15, 1981 31