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Raymond International Announces Move To Houston, Texas Henry C. Boschen, chairman of the hoard of Raymond Internation- al, Inc., has announced that the company's corporate headquarters will be moved to Houston, Texas during the summer of 1972. Ray- mond International, a heavy con- struction, engineering and manu- facturing company with worldwide operations, now has its headquar- ters at Two Pennsylvania Plaza, New York City. Mr. Boschen said that the pri- mary reason for the move is to ef- fectively reduce the escalating costs of operating corporate headquar- ters. Houston, he said, was selected as the best of a number of possible locations where operating costs would be substantially lower than those projected for the existing lo- cation. Also, he said, Houston is a strategic site from which to admin- ister the company's domestic and international activities. Mr. Boschen pointed out that Raymond International will main- tain a large organization in the New York area that will be respon- sible for continuing engineering and construction work in the East. A district office of the Raymond Concrete Pile Division is presently located in Houston. Arctic Engi- neers and Constructors, a joint venture of Raymond and Global Marine Inc., has its headquarters in the city. Arctic Engineers and Constructors is pioneering in the use of air cushion vehicles to per- form engineering, drilling and con- struction work in Alaska and the Canadian Arctic. Electric Boat Division Forms New Department —Henry Hvman Named Z. Henry Flyman A new department, construction engineering, has been established at Electric Boat Division of Gen- eral Dynamics, Groton, Conn., con- solidating engineering and research activities in support of submarine construction. Z. Henry Hyman of Groton has been named construction engineer- ing manager according to an an- nouncement by John R. Hunter, engineering director. Mr. Hunter said the new group would "cen- tralize shipyard support activities, resolve shipyard technical prob- lems, and perform laboratory and test services essential to submarine construction." A native of Brooklyn, N.Y., Mr. Hyman holds a 1951 bachelor's de- gree in structural engineering from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University and has done graduate work in civil engi- neering at Columbia University. After teaching at the North Caro- lina institution, he became a de- signer for Curtiss-Wright Corp. Since joining Electric Boat Di- vision in 1956, Mr. Hyman has held supervisory positions in marine en- gineering and, from 1968 until his present appointment, was chief of planning and estimating for engi- neering and research administra- tion. He is a licensed professional engineer in the state of Connecticut and is listed in "Who's Who in American 'Colleges and Universi- ties." Appointed to assist Mr. Hyman are: David O. Higley, of Noank, manager of product assurance en- gineering; Howard C. Schink of Quaker Hill, manager of product support engineering; Arthur H. Pritchard of Waterford, manager of product support design, and Francis A. Fanelli of Old Lyme, manager of construction services. EQUITABLE SETS MARINE STANDARDS BY BUILDING THEM. . . . and they best serve you because of their unfailing dependability year after year after year. This is possible only because EQUITY STANDARDS assure you economical first cost, proven products, standardized equip- ment, simple operation, low maintenance and worldwide acceptance- Tugs 45'-SS'-65'-85'-95' Water taxis 32'-40'-59'-65'-100' EQUITABLE EQUIPMENT Company, Inc. P. O. BOX 8001 NEW ORLEANS, LA. 70122 504 947-0631 TELEX: 058-354 CABLE: EQUITY 38' Dredge tenders-workboats Shallow draft 42'6" towboat Y BBI^i Drilling vessels & tenders Offshore unitized quarters Self-contained packaged ice plants Decompression chambers 5,000 lb. and 10,000 lb. utility derricks 55' shuttle towboat Quick release towing hook Barges-deck and liquid cargo Packaged compressor units 22 Maritime Reporter/Engineering News