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INTERCOM No. 203 - MAY 1979
Editor: Nicole Gauthier Assistant Editor: Marie Simoes Technical Assistant: Liliane Chérière
Intercom is published for better liaison between field engineers and management of Schlumberger Overseas. Société de Prospection Electrique Schlumberger, Schlum-berger Surenco and their subsidiaries, 42, rue Saint-Dominique, Paris VII®, France. Tél.: 555.91.23.
1 BACK IN THE USSR
9 BOOKSHELF
11 BANGKOK
19 BTC 08 BAR-B-Q
24 GOOD OLD DAYS IN IJMUIDEN
29 DATELINE; DUBAI
35 MAS IS THE MOST
39 PLANE HOPPING IN COLOMBIA
40 SLANT RIGS IN CONGO
43 FRENCH KAI-KAI
Personnel News: FEA p. 8, EUR p. 28, MEA p. 33, SAM p. 34, AFR p. 42 and HOP p. 51.
Contributors to this issue:
Denis Apéry, Pierre Bismuth, Tony Gorrara, David Hawkins, René Heyte, J o Kerhervé, Gérard Léger, Etienne Penot, Yves Maria-Sube, J i m Reinders, Uwe Pforter, Rodolphe Von Buren.
Front Cover: Three different pairs of eyes spied Bangkok at different times of different years, so starting on page 11 you'll see René Heyte's version, Denis Apéry's version and Yves Maria-Sube's version—one aspect of which we used
for our cover.
Back Cover: Any more of your insolence, Etienne Penot, and we'll send you out, to the back cover!
Personnel Situation as of May 1st, 1979
FULL NAME iÜNiT|RBs)Div||pc ^ T I A D L E C L A U D E
I ADMwi E D I R I N i A B B O T T H A y O M A S L C W H I T E PETER
AÜEKUMLE n o i i N i c
AOEOVt THOMJS AOIß R IFA iT
A E S C H 8 A C H R O L F A F A N O E R I V E R A G I U S t P P F
A F L E C H T C H R I S T O P r i S R "
J ^ y ^ T S S O N H A F S T E I N N Ahmed m u n i p
A I ' ^ k I M D O U G L A S A I T K E I M J O H N
I ' ' T K E N H E A O D A V I D I A K A H O N Y E C H I
a k s a r m u h a m m a o AKHTAR MOHAMMAD MASOOf) I 'F INDOL IRE KEH,NOE'OLU,AS|
ALAROO DOMINIQUE I F äLBERS GEORGE ' ALEXANDER IAN ALI RUSSfL MUMTAZ ALLEGRI ADOLFO LOIS
A L L E N B A B A J I O F A L L E N D O M I N I C A L L E N P H I L I P a u i n s o n S T E P H E N John
ALLOWAY m a r k AMUNDSON ST IG ANDERS ANRFI" ' ^ ' * ' •A«<EYASU a n c e l j a c u u e s
A N O A L C I O C Y R R T H O M A S
S T E P H E N R I ^ n d r e a n i MARC
f J I C H O L A S
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A R A O N 4 ° P H A ? P P £ F I SÙRI
A L A I N ANORE a s a k u r a s h i g f a k i I
GERALo DESrOEPrn r l A T ^ W E L L N O E L H E N R Y W
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A U G E R ' ^ P ^ R R I C K ' ^ G A S T H N ' " ' " I ^ " " 1 AW KEONG SENG ^ '^'"'*"1 '=^'>1 AYESTARAN JORGE C AVRE DAVID NEIL
SEORGEK B A B F y A L A I N I Birr?n"-" '-'^'"ano B i s a g g i o j e a n m a r c
B A I R D B R U C E W 9 A I R D D U G A L O
b a k e r S T U A R T T H O M A S
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BARB.5?IN'''^A?r®?C'E^
8 A P N E L G E O R G E S
B A R T H E L E M Y M I C H E L
FULL NAME B A R T S C H D I E T E »
8 A S C U R J U A N R A F A E L " A U D O T A N D R E BAUTHEAS M I C H E L A N T O I M
0 A Y A N R A M I B E A S L E Y R I C H A R D
B E L I N M I C H E L
B E L L R O B E R T S 6 L L A V I A J E A N P I E R R F W L 7 F T ? ° " - "»CQUES B E L Z I T I JOSE L U I S
jSENARD D I D I E R B E N O E L EDUARDO G .
E C K H A R D T S E N N E T A L A S T A I R J A M F ^
I b e r g e r M I C H E L "
b e r g e r p i e r r e B E R K E L E Y C O L I N
B c R N A L M I G U E L A N T n w i n
JEAN LOUIS ß_RNARO JEAiM
J W H A U T GERARD » C R T I N P A T R I C K VRCTNT R ' termier p h i l i p p " " ' B^TT m a r t i n
S E Y L I S R O D O L F O
B H A G A N N I G E L ANSTEY I B H A T N A G A R A S H O K
B I A N A JOSE
| B I E L I N S K 1 F R E D E R I C O L U I S
Ö I L I EN ÖERNARD
B I S C A Y J A C Q U E S I B I S H O P G L E N
b i s m u t h P I E R R E
~ |UNIT|RBS|DIV|LOC[ FULL NAME
S G R
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PE'I I I FEA b i v e n m i c h a f l b l a c k G A R Y B L A C K H O Ü D D A V I D b l a d e s T H O M A ^
B L A I R JOHN h I " ? ' ^ ° ^ ' - L D A V I D B L A K E C A R L J O H N
B L E N K I N S O P M I C H A F r 8 L U N 0 E N H 0 W A R 0 " : ^ T ' H 0 N Y
B I H I L L I E R P A T R I C K I B O E T E L M A N F R E D I I V A s I B n i s D E M E Y R I G N A C B F R T C A M I S G R SGR
8 0 I T E L A L A I N F R A N c f ^ ^ H A ? ^ G R A R D k A B S 3 N A M Y L I O N E L ^ ^ ^ A , J
' HDP ^ 1 I I H O P
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B R O P H Y T H O M A S B = ! 0 W N G E O R G E A L B E R T
b r o w n R I C H A R D T b r o w n S T E P H E N G E O R G E aROWN-KERR W I L L I A M
B « U N E T A D A M P A U L B R U N O J E A N - F R A N C O I S B R U N T H A R V E Y J A M B S
B J F r « ? ' ^ ' ' " ^ ' • " O O I R O N O B J E C H I W A L T E R B U I S T T E R R Y A N D R E W B W E A U j e a n P A U L
B U R K E M I C H A E L J A M E S B U R N S M A R C E L L U S
B J R R M A R C E L B U R T T A N D R E W N A T H A N
o J S S J O H N
C A B 4 N A A L V A R Q
c Î m « a c H E C T O R M C A M D E N D A V I D J O H N
C A H P A G N A R I C H A R D V I N C E N T
c a m p a g n e J E A N M I C H E I C A M P B E L L A N I C H O L A S
C H R I S T I A N C A N E L Y V E S V I C T O R " Ü M I N H C H A N H
G E R A R D O C A R A Y O N R O B E R T
C A R D E N A S R U B E N ^ J J ' - S O N L E N N A P T C A R L S S O N M A T S
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B - C H S L % ^ ^ ^ N ^ « - " B U R O I N I G I O R G l n BOROOGNA R I N O
B O R L A N D W I L L I A M H O U L T Ü N
B ' ^ T H E A L A N Ö JUCAU J E A N
8 0 U C L I N D E N I S
f l O U O A L l M I L J U O J ^ C Y U E S
B G U R I N J E A N - P I P P D C
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Qoyeldieu Claude
HOP I P f J R
S A M e u r
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1 ^AM ' A P R
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A Rj I I sju I H c e J h o t
m p a C C O L " PA SGR MTC
J C E D J Û F T L
M E A I F E A I HOO
I - u r I f e a e u r |
C A R R E R E F R A N C I S Carter p e t e r CASABURI ROGER CASAGRANDE S i L V i n CASCO RENE 0 .
I C A S S D A V I D JOHN ^ ^ ^ ^ A N F R A N C O I S C A S T E L I J N S H C H S m p i t c
1 C A S T E L L A N ü S J U L I A N CATALA GERARD
R A Y M O N D R
C F L E Y R O N H U B E R T J E A N
CENS D E N I S
ruÂI'r^ « A R W I C K c h a l c d a n d r e s C H A M A A G A B R i g L CHAMBERS M I C H A E L J O H N
CHAMBERS S T E V E N H R l / r c C H A M P A L B E R T MARC
CHA-4PERIER P H I L I P P E
C H A P E L L I E R O L I V I E R I Chapman Steve
CNAPPE J E A N - L O U I S
CHARDAC J E A N - L O U I S I C H A R L E R O I S R O B E R T
INIT|rbs|div1ip' FULL NAME
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ICH4RM0V JACJUES CHAROT JEAN
CHARPENTIER GUY CHARRON ALAIN rHATRl MOHAMEO CHATTERJEE B A R I N O R A CHATTLE GLENN
CHAUVEL YVES CHAUVET CLAUDE CHEAH CHOW SENG CHEESEMAN KEITH
CHEHALI ROLAND
CHIRUVIEK'ETIENNE JEAN CHEW SIE MCNG CHIASSON JAMES
CHISHOL« C40n CHENG HOCK CHOO FOQK CHIEW CHOPIN PIERRE
IcHOTAI ASHVIN
T H R ' S T F N L E ^ L E J R ^ 1 C I T E L L I LUI S JAVIE
CITERNE ALAIN CLAES WILL ' '
CLAIR JEAN-L tWIS CLAMPITT ARTHUR CLARK ROBERT ERASER CLARKE DONALD ALLIN ^ U v I E R CHRISTIAN
= ) I ^^^RNFDFER GEORGES
CQOESAL NARCISO r O L l N HERVE COLLET ERNEST JEAN
C ILL INS MICHAEL CIMBARIEU WICHEL OE CHMBRET JFAN MARC CONNELLY PETER
^ C ^ ? ^ I E - T C H E L JEAN G
^CrRTirE''NÎÔ^ro\uC.ANa C S S A O C H A R L E S D U D L E Y
COSTA ROLANDO ANTONIO COUCHOURON PIERRE G. COULON JEAN , COULON JEAN-FRANCOIS COURBIN JEAN-PAUL
'CRAW'EORI " l a " G O R D O N CRAWFORD BRIAN RÜäER CRAWFORD HAROLD CRESPO LUIS
CRISP W V I Ö EDWARD JOHN CROSSOUARD PATRICK CROUCH STEVEN CROWTHER JOHN CUDDY STEVEN
CUMMING JOHN CURETTI OMAR CURRAN DAVID CURRIE THOMAS CURTIS JONATHAN
CEO HOT
M E D S E G C E o l H O T
NF S I
w i d I k o a
S N D W V S N O | S N D
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M E A S G R CED OFT NED I R O
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d i f c r e 1 mcaI SGRI A'RD C'JTTAT VVES j e a n PIER E 0 ONOFR10 MIGUEL U | 5 4 M I • »BAGHIAN P DADRIAN CHRISTIAN
S : = S -
l ; : r , s . " Ä , s r 1 n&ViS L A N C E
GE MIRANDA THIERRY
S i r o S ^ E r f R I C L E O N C .
NCHAIL JEAN-LOUIS ^ .LAFERTE FERNAND D E L A i J R f M I C H E L
FULL NAME
O E M I R B I L E K T A Y F U N OMER O E N I A U V I N C E N T
OENJEAN D E N Y E R M I C H A E L P ^ J E R O E O U E S N E S J E A N - M A R I E O E R O P B R U N O OeSCHAMPS BERNARD
ggSlDERATG ALAIN ALBERT DESLANDES JEAN DESMEDT RAYMOND OESPIERRE JEAN-LUC
DHALLUIN -
TorJ S M qi LGOIRE DIMANCHE MARCEL OINGLCY STEVEN
OINWIDDIE ' ^ L ' ^ T A I R 1 ntTCHAM STEVEN IDOBBING
DODDS KEVIN JOSEPH DOMPNIER RENE
OÛNEGAN JAMES donnez PIERRE
1 DONOVAN GLENN 1 NNRAN THOMAS
OTS-SANTOS S I D N E Y
ODUCET BERNARD 1 DOUENAT GUY
d o w d s p e t e r ORAXLER iipTE» ORUMMOND ALEXANDER
DUBOIS JE '^ l ; ! „ „ , DUBOSCU PIERRE OUCANDIS DUCHEMIN PIERRE DUCOUP JEAN CLAUDE
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A N N O U N C E M E N T S
Î R C R O R C — MANAGER DUDLEY R. IS THE
» s s e : , „ . v i = P A R I S SOON AS
QUE/MECHANICAL WILL LEAVE , U . U « BEEN PUT IN CHARGE OF SAUDI ARA
P^A S « R K L D E « C T WILL BE I N AL-KHOBAR.
| , . . 'YP | VFRTON WHOM HE REPLACES WILL NO
RESPONSIBILITIES^THO E
T . ?;nuTH T E X A S D I V I S I O N W I T H ^ : ^ ^
l o U M O N T H E N R I M A R C D U N C A L E P A U L
( D U N C A N G E O R G E O U N C Q M B E G R A E M E O U N M O R E W I L L I A M J O H N
]UNIT|RBS1DIV1LÖC1 M R U W R T
HgDl TUK SND TRD
SSD CMO
M E A S G R M E A S G R
MEAI SGR M E A S G R A R D K A H
S N D T R D N E D K U W CED FSP
S N D T R D C E D O F T PCDl LGÛ
H E A S G R I A R D K A O BRA AM«
BRA VIT S N D W V D
CED NEJ
M E A ! S G R BRA VI
W A D A C MEA SGR
WAD GAB
W A D W A D
F L L I S P A U L E L L I S R A Y M O N D R F N A O H W O G A B R I E L E M G W A I L S T E P H E N J A M E S
E-iSELME PIERRE C:I>STELN RF-MY P S A N A D E Y E M I 0 L A Y Ê M 1 c c m R l H U E L A F R A M C I S E V A N S Christopher John
P V A M S O O U G L A S G O R ' ^ O ' ^ c v A N S I A N Ç V A N S M I C H A E L çiENWA O b l O l C M V R E O L L I V I E R
P 4 U ADEL
HOP S A M M E A E U R E U R
M E A F E A F E A A F R F E A
I S A M
S G R
N R D W K 1 S E H
N R D W R T -C E D O S P
H O P S A M V A 6
N S D A B T N S O N S O
A R D Ä R D f a o E M Y F A r B N T N P r P H T E A ) S E M
S N D E D V
Seniority Pins SAM
5 Years
reorqe-ALBERS (BRA/NTL)
S a n - M a r c COMBBET ( S « D / ™ D ,
Catlos KNUDSEN ( SSD/CTR)
10 Years
N a r c i s o CODESAL (SSD/PHU)
J e a n - C l a u d e J ^ F F E U X (SSD)
G i l b e r t MORINIAUX (VTC)
H e r b e r t WALD (BRA/CAT)
15 Years
Jan LEONI (BRA/VIT)
FAUCHER BERNARD FAUVEL ALAIN GABRITL FAYIGA ADEDOYIN FELDBACHER HELMUT
1 FELDER BENJAMIN A FELDER MICHAEL FEUILLADE MARC F IELD P-ETER FINOLEY WILLIAM E
FINNEGAN PATRICK. FIQUET MICHEL FITZGERALD PETER FLANDERS STFPHEN FLEMING TERENCE
FLENOER t^LAUS FLEURIEU ROBERT CLARE FLEURY ALAIN FONCHA MATHIAS
PONELL BENGT FOO JOO WAI FORNE OVE FORTE RODRIGO POSSET CHRISTIAN
1 EUR A F R
1 AFR 1 A^R
I SAM 1 FPA
A F R 1 PEA
S A M
I M E A M E A f e a
1 M E A A'^Rl
I NED IND
1 NED WAD
O E
INO OJV RAN/
N E O S E G MEA SGR ARO KAB
M S O l S G B
C E O G E T
S G R l A R O l • ^ ^ B IND » AT
NSO VJAL CEO OPA
RRW SOR
OYP&L LUDVIK DUPONT ' L A I N OURAND J E A N Y V E S nURAND M I C H E L DURBEC C H A R L E S
n W Y E R J O H N A R T H U R c f t D i P Y M A P T 1 M I O M U D S G I L E S A N O R E W E D M U N D S R O B I N C H A - ^ L E b E I W A R D S D A V I D P .
C O W A R D S J O H N E R N E S T E I W A R D S M I L T O N G R A I T E G E Y J U L I O _ C K E Z I E R A P H A E L E K d P U M O A K P A N
e l - b a d r e y MUHAMED
E L B E R T J O H N c - L H A B A C H I M O H S E N c L L I Q T T P H I L I P c L L I S I A N
f o s t e r f r a n k FUA » CI*, R- , - " « FOUCAULT PIERRE F O U R C A D E L A FUURNIERE PIERRE DE f r a n g e r J E A N P I E R R E
f r a n k l i n P H I L I P FR&NSE PAUL f r a s e r J O H N R H I N D ^-Kft5C•^ FREDRIC MALCOL»« F R E E T I M O T H Y
CHEEMAN DONALD S f r e e m a n P H I L I P „ i l T A S DE MICHAEL FRICKE ROBERT FUJISHITA MASAAKl
• J L L E K F R A N K A L F R E O PP& P U S I E R F R A N C I S GALW&Y RICHARD G4RÄT J E A N - B A P T I S T g a r f i f l d w c h a r l f s
MEA MEA FEA AFRI
I SAML PEA
I EUR SAM A^R
SAM APR
I AFR I PEA , FEA
m e a I s & R | SAM AFR
1 EUR
CEO ^AV AT 3
NRD PHT NRO NRO
SAM INO KAT
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MEA MEA VA8 CT A
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VA7 PAJ N^L SE8
NOl I JV
S E A | A R O l B A H B R A I V l T l
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GARRARD DAVID GARTNtR EüGt-NE GÀSKELL JOHN PETFK GATtR MAX»jFLL C
1 FEAL CEAI
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EURl ' EUR
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MEAI SGRl
I MEAl I HOP
MEA *AEA
f a d I e m y | A S C D U B l
PCOl TÄL E A D l S E M
CEQ OPT CEO RAV
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NrOl IRy HOPj VAÖ MEAl
[ FULL NAME |UNIT|RES|DIV|LOC} GATTQ HDRST
GAVOSÜ CESAR ALBERTO GEHU O L I V I E R
GENDRIN MARC E T I E N N E GENDRON P A U L - E R I C
GEORGIN MICHEL GERKE JOHN A L L A N GHAI DEEPAK G I B A N O JACQUES G I B 6 S K E I T H
G I B 9 S MICHAEL ALBAN G I B S O N MARIO HELMUT GIGGAHER JOHN MANFRET W I L L ROGER STEPHEN C O L I N GILMORE ROWAN JOHN
GIMENEZ AURIEN G I N E L L I TERRY G I R A R D C H R I S T I A N G I R A U O E L MICHEL GIRONDE MICHEL
G L E O H I L L MARTIN D A V I D G L I M O I S HENRI
GODET BERNARD CHARLES GOETZ JOSEPH F R A N C I S GOKTEN LEMI
GOMEZ J U L I O
GOHEZ-ANGULO J A V I E R GORRARA ANDREW JOHN J . GOURLAY ERIC J E A N - M A R I E
GOUT JACQUES GOY JOSE DARIO GOYEAU GUY
GRAGNANI UMBERTO GRAHAM MARK A L A S T A I R
G R A N I E R JEAN-CLAUOE GRANIER ROGER L . G R A N I E R X A V I E R M . GRAS FRANCIS
GRAS G A B R I E L GEORGES
GREAU GERARD
" " F . G R E G O R Y MCCALLUM
R P L I N " C H R I S T I A N G R E M I L L E T BERNARD GRIGUERE HENH!
G R I J A L V 4 V ICTOR
G R I N H A H STEPHEN ROBERT GRISWOLO SCOTT GROOOS JEAN CLAUDE GROVER RAJEEV
GRUNER JEAN-CLAUOE I GUERLE J E A N - P A U L F GUERRA ROORIGO
F R 4 N C I S C 0 G U I N D Y ADEL FAHMY
G U T I E R R E Z ALVARO G U T I E R R E Z N I L O
G U T T E R I D G E ALAN JAMES GUYOMARD ROBERT
GYMER K E I T H FRANCIS H A B I B 4 L L A H BACHIR L HACHE JOEL • HAOOAD PAUL G H A I L E PETER
GRAHAM JOHN HALFORD FKANK HALPER MANFRED H A M I L T O N ROBERT
HAMPOTN S M I T H GEOFFRËV
H A N N I N G T O N ARTHUR HARBONN MICHEL HARGREAVES JOHN H A R I C H A N E MOHAMED HARK I N S RAYMOND
HARQ CARLOS
HARRY JACQUES GASTON C H A R T S T E E N G I D D A L T I HARVEY NORMAN GRAHAM HASELBACHER ERNST
j HASSOUNA AHMED H A S T I N G S ASTLEY F . HATHWÄY GORDON HAWKINS D A V I D HAWLEY NOEL
HEAD E L T O N . HEATHCOTE BERNARD HCDGES M I C H A E L
I HEENAN R I C H A R D
FUU iv/wit FJWMPIVLKCL I FULL N A M F -
SEA NFL
FAO| SBN AFR S U
NSOI AST SNO| EDV
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B I N
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, VAC CED AUS SRA ARU
H E I N T Z C MÄNFRFO HEMMING G . BRENDAN HFNORA HARYANTO HENDRATA LEONARD HENG S I Y A U TECK
HÇNRY D A N I E L HFP8ÜRN I A I N
H^RKENOELL HELMUT
EUR NSN EUR CFO H T I IND MEA SGR MEA NEÜ
MEA SGR
F £ A FAO 1 AFR 1
A F R Seniority Pins
5 Years
Georgek AZIZIAN (WAD/OSA)
15 Years
Jean-Paul MENANTEAU (NFL)
Thomas PARKINSON (PAJ)
20 Years
Helmut H E R K E N D E L L ( A F R / H A S )
HERKNCSS WAYNE HEYTE RENE
H I G G I N S TERENCE | CIIOL H I L D E S R A N O PETER RUDOLF SGR H I L L ANDREW
GEOFFREY MEA SGR H I L L E R GUNTER | M E " |
HINDE LARRY WAYNE HIRAGA T A K E S H I H I R I A R T F R A N C O I S HOANG K I M HUNG
HOCKEY C H R I S T O P H E R RYDER | FEA |
HOLLINGWORTH JAMES M . HOLMAN ROGER H O L S T E I N VAGN HORNBY B R I A N HOTVEOT K E V I N
HOULDING S T E P H E N K I R B Y HOUSEHAM M I C H A E L HRABIE MANFRED HSU M I N - C H I H
HUBER KLAUS HUERTAS ROBERTO HULL CLAYTON HUMPHREY D A V I D JOHN HUMPHRIES B R I A N
HUND RAYMOND HUNT JOHN
HUOT J E A N C L A U D F HURRELL T I M O T H Y JOHN HUSSON J E A N MARC
IBENECHE C H I M A O B I ' B I S H I A N M I S S A K IGE GBOLAHAN
IKPOKU MATTHEW OSONUWE I L A H I ATA
IM8ERT CLAUDE INGRAM JOHN ISH IYAMA TAKAO I T Ô L I A N O A D J L F Q I T A N I ROBERTO
NSD
NSD
I J H N N E V I N C H R I S T I A N AIME J T N N I N G S MARK
J P N I N G S R I C H A R D JAMES JESKE K R Z Y S Z T O F EDWARD JOANNES J E A N
JOHANSSON J A M E R I K JOHNS C H R I S T O P H E R
JOHNS R I C H A R D
JOHNSTON D A V I O ANTHONY JOHNSTON J O S E P H J O L L Y YVES
JONCKERS H E N R I C U S
JONES P A T R I C K JONES RUSSELL JONG JAN OE JTJUSSB BFRJ\JI\RN
JUL IOT JEAN MARC
I J U S T I C E JEROME L KAASJAGER PETER
I KADARUSMAN SUNARTG KAMPMANN CLAUS
K A N T A R J I A N J O S E P H KAPUR BHARAT BHUSHAN K A R L I N ALESSANORO K A S A E I A N H A M I D ETEMAN KAUFFMAN EOWARD
KAUSCHKA JEAN M A R I E K E L L Y ROBERT JOHN KENNOU FARHAT KERAVAL GERARD KERHERVE J O S E P H
KERS HANS GUNNAR KERVELLA MICHEL KHAN MOHAMMED
K H A T C H I K I A N A L B E R T O K H E T T A B MOHAMEO
K I D D DONALD A L E X A N D E R K I E B U R T Z GEOFFREY K I L L I P D A V I D K I N G ROGER K I R B Y STEPHEN
K I R T L E Y N E I L K I T S O N DAVID
K L E I N RICHARD KURT K L E I N O D E R GUNTHER K L I N S E N JAN
K L Ü A S FRANK M I C H A E L K L O P F WERNER
K N I G H T STEPHEN RONALD KNUDSEN CARLOS
KNY KARL H E I N Z K O C A C I K NEVZAT
KOESTOER R A L D I A R T O T . KOSSMAN DON KRAUS LEE
K R E T P A T R I C K K R I E F MICHEL
KRUEGER LARRY D E N N I S KUMAR R A N J I T KUMAR S A T I S H
KUSNANTO JOHANNES KUTZ ANTHONY W
K Y I KO KO KENNETH L
BERNARD N I L A B R I E T ANDRE
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IWUNZE UCHECHUKWU GODWIN JACKSON CHARLES
JACKSON THOMAS STANLEY JAFFEUX J E A N CLAUDE J A M t S ANDP.Ek^
JAMES MARK SCOTT JAQUES D A V I D JARRETT D A V I O JARKOUX JEAN P I E R R E G .
JAUGUST V L A D I M I R JAUREGUI PEDRO M J A V c D K H A L I O AHMAD JEANBLANC C L A U D E JEANJEAN JACQUES
JEANSON P H I L I P P t " J?PPS l A N MALCOLM J E F F S PAUL
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FULL NAME |UNir|RES
L&CQTE J t f t N - P ' T R I C K L»FARGUE PIERRE I a g i e r e j e a n yVES P R LAGRANGE CHARLES-HENRI L&IGNEL HERVE MICHEL A .
I l a n a t a j e a n - b e r n a r o LANGLOIS P H I L I P P E L ä n g u s c h R u s s e l
1 LAPOTRE JEAN PIERRE LARCHET JOHN PAUL
^ r s f ^ N U s l o JAV IER
tAUCHENAUER- GASTON RENE
LAUGHLIN CHARLES CURTIS LAURENS PIERRE LAVENDER IAN PAUL LAW MARK LAY HUNG ALFREDO
D I V L L O C L
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LAYAN BERNARD LE BRIS JACQUES MARCEL LE BRUN DOMINIQUE
LE PAGE'^DOMINIQUE PHIL IPPJFEA
LEANO RUSTICO BENEDETTO LEBARON ANDRE L PCAPELAIN BERTRAND . LECOURT A L A I N ALBERT GUY MES LRFEBVRE LOUIS 1
L6FÜLL PIERRE L=GAZA LOUIS LEGER GERARD ALBERT LEGRIS HERVE PIERRE YVON LE IGH P H I L I P
LELIEVRE JEAN YVES LE«IANCZYK RICHARD L -LEMOINE JEAN P H I L I P P E LENAERT DOMINIQUE LENQIR SEKGE
LEON RONALD LEOI'JARO JEAN MICH6L LEONI JAN ERNST LEROUX MICHEL
t l ^ O R A ^ M A ^ T I N IS IDORH
L ^ N R C H E R H ^ N G MI TOUNG LEWIS PETER JOHN
LHEUREUX PASCAL H C I T R A GIUSEPPE LIEVENSE STEFANUS L I M K.OK CHEN L I M SEE ZUAN
LIPSON JOHN MAXWELL LLARYORA ENRIQUE LOCAL EDWARD LOFFLER WERNER
ILÜGAN ALBERT STEWART
LOGAR JAMES F LOISY FRANCOIS LOKON HOWARD LQLLEY RICHARD LDPARD MICHEL
LOPEZ JORGE LUCAS GERARO L U C I A N I JEAN PAUL LUCKENBACH L O U I S LUOENA JUAN
LUDENA MIGUEL LUDIROJA HERNANTO LUDOLF ROLF LUNAN W I L L I A M
FEA
I EUR EUR
FEA
EUR
Newcomers in MEA
6.8.9.10
15.16
Seniority Pins - MEA
5 Years
Michel BAUTHEAS (SGR/MTC)
Brian THOMPSON (SGR/ARD)
15 Years
Louis MORIN (SGR/DUB)
1 - Stephen BALLARD from Twickenham, Middx.,
2*^: c h H s t o p h e ° r ' Ä ' s ^ ^ Lynto". S- Austra-
W Î — H a n t s , UK.
CocKermouth, Cumbria, UK.
r Ä ^ H Ä r Ä o n , surrey, UK.
r ! " M i ä a \ ? B ! l H Ä m Cairo, Egypt. Ain Shams
^ ' i T h t  n ^ i ' î k ^ R A N G E from Paris, France.
T w i ' Ä N A N f^om Glasgow SCO,iand, UK. University of Strathciyde, G l^gow, UK^ 10 - James MALOT from Omaha, Nebraska, USA.
r . ° l M " B 0 Ï S u S . i » L o u p / S ^ o » - . .
12®"''petefsAÎiLTR'°f"om Cambridge, UK. Oxford
SLAMET from Doncaster, Australia^ Swin-
15^- John^THORNBER from Norwood, Sheffield, UK.
V e ' ^ w Ä ' f r o - Wellington, Somerset,
UK. University of Bristol, UK.
SAVINGS
March 8, 1979 $ 16,89
April 8, 1979 ^ 17,48
May 8, 1979 $ 17,37
FULL NAME ŒSDIVLOC FULL NAME TUÜNL LU IS ALBERTO MAC AULAY PETER | \ / MACDONALD DUNCAN JOSEPH MACDONALO W I L L I A M PAUL MACKENZIE ROSS
MAODOCK ALAN M A D J I D I AHMAD MAOSON EDWARD A . MAESTRATI ROBERT MAHU CLAUDE
MAINGOURD MICHEL MAINSTONE ROBERT ROWLAND MAIZONNASSE GERARD GUV MALA GERARD NOEL GEORGES MALANKAR HIREN GANGAOHAR
MALCOLM-BONNY BRUCE L . MALE LOUIS MALLET LUC MALOT JAMES MALPAS PETER
MANUHAR-MAHARAJ VESHPATI MANTEL JEAN BENOIT MANTYKIVI MATTI MARATIER JACQUES MARCHETTE BUDWICK
MARETT PETER GRAHAM MARGOT FRANCOIS L O U I S MARGUERY MICHEL GEORGES MARIA-SUBE YVES
MARION REGIS I MARMISOLLEDAGUERRE DO
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FEA EUR EUR FEA
NSD NSD EAO
S I J ONY WAL EMY
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Seniority Pins - FEA
5 Years
Pierre BISMUTH (FEA)
Helmut SCHMID (EAD/EMY)
10 Years
Jean-Paul TREGUER (SIJ)
MARRAFFA LIONEL MARRE J U L I O R MARS JEAN PIERRE
FEI SAF FEI
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D IQU SEA
MARSHALL ANGUS MARSTRANOER MORTEN MARTIN BRIAN MARTIN JEAN-PIERRE MARTINEAU JACOUES
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MEA HOP MEA AFR FEA
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MCCUSKER JOHN MCDOWELL P H I L I P NORMAN MCINTYRE STUART MCKAY RAYMOND ARTHUR MCLAUGHLIN PATRICK
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MEIBOHM JOHN MEJNERTSEN TORBEN MENANTEAU JEAN-PAUL MENDIS HARISH LOMENGRIN
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MENGEL FRANK MENIÊR MICHEL MENNEGLIER P H I L I P P E MENNY MICHEL
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MPRLE JACQUES »1ERÛUR JACQUES METCALFE IAN MICHAEL METENIER GERARD MEUNIER DENIS
MEUNIER GERAPO MEUNIER MICHEL MEYER HANS JÜRGEN MSYNIER PATRICK MIDGLEY IAN JOHN
MILBOURNE MICHAEL MILLER GUY MILLER JAMES GEORGE MILLER ROGER
MILLER-JONES DONALD MILLET HERVE MILL OY GORDON H I L L S DAVID EDWARD C . MINNE JEAN-CLAUDE
MINOGUE GOLM MIR2WINSKI ROMAN MITCHELL L E S L I E MIT ING RGMBE MOFFATT EDWARD MURRAY
MOHAMMED FEISAL 0 . MOHAZAB HOSSAINIAN A L I MQINARD LAURENT MOK JOSEPH MQLIN JEAN-PIERRE
MÛLINARI DANTE MONROY E D W N MÖNS FRANCIS MQNSH0UW6R GERRIT A , MONTELLANO JAVIER
MONTI ROBERTO LUIS MOORE JOHN MOORE-MORRIS JOHN MOREAU JEAN-CLAUDE MORIN JEAN BAPTISTE
MGRIN L O U I S MORINIAUX GILBERT MORRIS CRAIG TIMOTHY MORVAN MICHEL
MORVANCARADEC MICHEL HOSTELLER DAVID WALTER MOUCHIROUD GERARD ROBERT MOWAT GORDON R MOYLE KYLE TRELOAR
MULLER BERNHARD MULLER GERHARD MULL INS MICHAEL MURRAY ALAN ROBERT HUSSARED MARK
MUTEL5T MICHEL MARTIAL MUTTON I RICCARDO NABEEH ALAA ELDIN NAGEL ARVO NAGUIB MOHSEN
NAHAMA GERARD PIERRE NANTY JEAN MICHEL MAOUM ESAM RAZOOK NARDELLA ONOFRIO NAUDIN PIERRE
NAWFAL JOSEPH NEDELEC JEAN-JACQUES NEGRE JACQUES NEGREL YVES NELSON SIMON
NELSON STUART NERAY P H I L I P P E NEUVE-EGLISE ETIENNE NEVILLE NORMAN
NICHOLSON BARRY NICHOLSON GRAHAM JOHN N ICOLETT I ALBERTO NIETO ALVARADO LUIS NIETO CHARLES
NIETO FERNANDO N INO-V ILLEGAS JUAN NOBLE CHRISTOPHER NOIK SIMON NDVELLI JEAN JACQUES
NHVOMESKY EDUAROO NWOKOYE GODWIN D I L I B E NWUME CHRISTOPHER ^ 0 * LEARY SHANE PARKER O
FEA EUR FEA FEA HOP
EUR A F R
MEA EUR FE
MEA FEA FEA SAM
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FULL NAME
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RBSDIVLOC
ME & SG R AR D KA B FE A EA D EM Y EU R CE D OF A SA SA A FE A I N 0 I T
AF WA ) GAE ME^ SG % AR 3 KA i EUF NS } AB1 r-SA^ I PCI ) COL EUF ( NS ) SGE i
ME/ SGF DUË SA^ BR/ V I T MEA SGP ADH FEA INC MSU MEA VA6
SAW SAN FFA INQ SSS MEA NED IRQ HOP HOF AFR NRD WRT
MEA MEA AFR HAS AFR ...TC FEA SEN AFR SLY AFR NFL
MEA SGR ARD KAB SAM SND WVD AFR NRD WRT SAM SAM
MEA SGR DUB FEA IND ITC AFR NRD WRT SAM PCD COL EUR NSD SGB
SAM PCD LGA SAM PCD COL SAM SND EDV APR AFR AFR VA4
SAM VA7 AFR NRD PHT AFR NRD PHT MEA SGR DUB
O'ROURKE THOMAS
OBERHOFER HELMUT ODDIE SIMON OG SERAFETTIN OGHENEJOßO MASON OHARA SHINOBU
OHEGARTY MICHAEL OHGA K IMITO OHLSON TUWE ÖLESEN JEAN PEMY OLLIER BERTRAND JEAN L
OLLIER CARLOS E . OLLIKKALA HANNU QLNEY ANDREW OLOFIN DAVID
ONEILL NIEL ONG CHER TIOK ONODUGO CYRIL ONUGHA CHRIST IAN -ONYEKWERE DUNSTAN
ORDISH CHRISTOPHER ORLANDI YVES ORTIZ LUIS ORTOLA JEAN YVES OSBORNE GORDON
OULD-AMROUCHE HAMID OVERTON MICHAEL ANTHONY OYENIYI JOHN AFOLABI PABGN MIGUEL N PACEY KEITH ALFRED R
PAGES GILLES PALOPOLI NORBERTO PANSERA CLAUDIO PAOLINI E. CESAR A . PARASKEVAIDIS JORGE
PARKER GRAHAM PARKINSON THOMAS MICHAEL PARNET LUCIEN PARRELLA I L A R I A DOMINIC PASS NICHOLAS
PATEL HASMUKH CHUNICAL PATERAK NORBERT PATERNOTTE SERGE PATT/IPEILOHY GERALD EMILE
PATZ I JUAN PAUL ALAIN
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" A P WHEN YOU'RE FINISHED WITH THOSE-n i s s NELSON, YOU CAN XEROX YOURSELF
FOR M E . "
PAYNE KILLIAM PEACOCK STEPHEN ROSS PEARCE «IAYNE ROBERT
PEARSON RICHARD PEASE JOHN M. PECQUET ALAIN PELISSIER JACaUES PELISSIERCOMBESCURE JACQ.
PELLEGRINI ENZO PELTIER XAVIER PENA GUILLESMO PENA HERRERO RAUL L . PENOT ETIENNE
PEPPER MICHAEL JONATHAN PERIERS BERNARD PERNOT JEAN CLAUDE PERON JEAN-LUC PERON JEAN-YVES
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PERRET DOMINIQUE, PERRETT DU CRAY R6NAU0 PERRETTA HENRY A PERRIER CLAUDE PERRIN ANDRE
MEA EUR MEA MEA APR
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PETR6 CHAUFFOUR FRANCOIS SAM PETRE MICHEL ANTOINE M» FEA PETRICOLA MARIO FEA PETT6NATI CHRISTOPHE EUR PETTY STEPHEN GAOD FEA
PEYRAT JEAN DANIEL HOP PEYRONNET XAVIER DE AFR P.EZZULLO JOSEPH EUR PFORTER UWE SAM PHILO MARTYN ROSS AFR
PIERRE JOEL PIGER JEAN PROSPER SAM PIGGIN RICHARD ®EA P ILLA JACQUES MEA SGR PINCON FREDERIC MEA SGR
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PLÜMB JEAN-PHILIPPE SAM PLUMMER BRIAN NOEL FEA PQGGESI ROBERTO AFR POGGIOLI MARin EUR POHL KARL-HEINZ FEA
POIRSON BERNARD DIDIER A . MEA POIZAT ALAIN CHARLES 4FR POL ANTHONY SAM POLLAK PHILIPPE GUSTAVE EUR
POLLOCK DON BRUCE EUR POLTIER ALEXANDRE EUR POON ANDREW SAM POPPINGA ROLF HERO EUR PQPULUS JACQUES ANDRE SAM
POTIER DELAVARDE FRANCOIS MEA PÜUS JEAN LUC MEA POWELL MICHAEL ANTHONY AFR PRANOlO MAULANA SUHARSAMA FEA PRATI ENRIQUE JOSE SAM
PRAYITNO IRAWAN PRIYO FEA 3RETEL RODOLFO SAM PRIDHAM GERALD ALLEN FEA PRIEST HUGH RICHARD FEA PRINS WILLIAM FEA
PROTHERO CLIVE AFR PUGA JOSE-LUIS SAM PUMPHREY JONATHAN MEA PURVIS ROBERT JACKSON SAM PUYÜ PIERRE SAM
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RAOENAC GILDAS AF RAGAIN ROBERT SAM RAGOZIN CYRILLE SAM RAMIREZ JUAN-CARLOS SAM RAMOS FERNANDO JOSE SAM
RAMSBQTTOM ROBERT AF RANDE JEAN CLAUDE SA RANDÜN YVES SAM RAWICZ SZCZFRBO ADAM EUR RAYMAN JOHN FRANCIS HOP
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RcID BRUCE REID P H I L I P P E REID ROBERT REINDtRS JAMES W. RFINHAKDT PETFR
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Seniority Pins - EUR
15 Years
Jean-Baptiste GARAT (NSD/NRT)
Eric ROBINSON (CED)
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ENAUD BERNARD JACQUES RENAUD PHIL IPPE A.M. REPELLIN REGIS MARIE REVEROITO GABRIELE
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RICHARDS STEPHEN RICHELLE GUY RICHELME PATRICK
RICHEUX YVES RICHTER HANS RIDDELL EWAN RIGATTIERI CARLOS DANTE RISSLER-AKESSON GORAN
RITZENTHALER JACQUES JOSE ROBBINS DAVID MCLAREN ROBERTS ANTHONY J . ROBERTS DAVID EDWARD ROBERTS HENRY
ROBERTS IAN DONALD ROBERTS NICHOLAS ROBIN CHRIST IAN ROBINSON ERIC JOHN R08INSUN GEORGE THOMAS
ROCHE JEAN-LOUIS ROCHE JEAN-LUC MAURICE ROCHE PIERRE ROCHETTE PIERRE ROCK ULF
RODGERS J KOLA^40 RQDITI F I L I P P O RODRIGUEZ ELISEO L ROEMER OANIFL JOHN JüSuP
ROGERS GEOFFREY ROHNER HANSPETER ROJAS CARLOS ROJAS MARIO J ROLAND MICHEL
RONZONI HFRMES ROQUES JEAN ROSPARS JOSEPH ROSS ROBERT JAMES ROSSIGNOL CHRISTIAN
ROSSO BARTOLOMEO ROUAULT GILLES FRANCOIS ROUELLE PIERRE ROUILLAC DIDIER ROULEAU ELOI
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On Monday, June 12, 1978, four people boarded a flight from Paris to Moscow: Jean-Claude PICARD (Vice President, Engineer-ing), head of the delegation, Bernard VIVET (Manager of Opera-tions, SL), Uwe PFORTER (then Manager Technique/Electrical EHS and now Technical Manager - South America) Vladimir MACHTALERE (Head, Marketing Strategy, Flopetrol).
We had been invited by the USSR Ministry of Geology to come to Russia, following a visit of Russian specialists to EPS-E, EHS, during November 1977, to see wireline techniques in the USSR. The trip was organized in Paris by Boris SCHNEERSOHN, now retired.
The Institutes and Bureaux visited-VNII geophysika, VNIIAGG (both Moscow), VNIIGIS (Oktyabrskiy) VNIIEFTE (Ufa) and SKTB (Grozny)-employ together approximately 1600-2000 employees, 50% of them engineers. Most of the engineers are geophysicists. We did not have a chance to visit factories producing standard tools (the equivalents forourES, GR, GNT, Caliper, LL-3, Sonic) and logging units in large series, but visited engineering production
facilities for prototype tools only in Oktyabrskiy and production of temperature upgraded tools in small series in Grozny.
All institutes are not uniquely involved in the development and research for tools to help the search for oil, gas and limit-ed coal or storage reservoirs but also in general geology evaluation, mineral detection, water detection and water evaluation.
On Monday and Tuesday we visited the Institute of Geophysics in Moscow but a new adventure lay in store for us on Wednesday when, joined by OLGA, our charming interpreter and VLADIMIR, a research scientist, we flew from Moscow to Ufa, the capital of the Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic in western Russia near the Urals. Upon arrival at the Ufa airport we
1
were offered a speciality of the region: öasft/c/(approximate spelling), which was described as horse milk and was very tasty. We next hopped on a bus headed for Oktyabrskiy, 250 kms southeast of Ufa. The road seemed to have quite a few potholes, but we came supplied with some soothing, raspberry liqueur, and soon the bumps became mere figments of the imagination. We reached Oktyabrskiy where we were met by a number of officials from
the Ministry of Geology of the USSR, the All-Union Geophysical Research Institute for Well Logging, headquartered in this city: Prof. Anatoly A. MOLCHANOV, The Chief Director Prof. Petr A. BRODSKY, Science Problems Director Dr. Alexey I. FIONOV, Geology
Problems Director We were given a "Cook's tour" of the area, attended a production logging job on Saturday and returned by car to Ufa later the same day. •
BACK IN THE USSR 1. Getting comfortable in a rather uncomfortabie bus going from Ufa to OI<tyabisl<iy, helped by some sooth-ing spirits, a smiling driver (see rear view mirror): Bernard VIVET with glass and Jean-Claude PICARD. 2. Vladimir MACHTALERE, on the way to see an oil field in southwest Russia. 3. The Oktyabrskiy Town Hall. The city was founded in 1946. It is an oil town with approximately 400
shallow pumping oilwells and several water injection wells. 4. This plaque identifies the All Union Geophysical Research Institute for Well Logging in Oktyabrskiy. 5. Dr Aiexey I. FiONOV, Geology Problems Director, All Union Geophysical Research Institute for Well Logging, one member of the welcoming committee. 6 . Typical wooden houses, wooden fences and boy
trying to scale it in Oktyabrskiy. 7. Prof PetrA. BRODSKY, Science Problems Director, Institute for Well Logging, in front of plaque commemorating the 100th well drill-ed in an Oktyabrsky field.
BACK IN THE USSR 1. One of the wells in the Oktyabrskiy fields. 2. Wfe asked to see what's inside of the container and much to the delight of all concerned, especially Prof BRODSKY, there was NOTHING! 3. Well head set up for production logging in a pumping well. Sheave in foreground, depth drive system: second wheel is upper sheave Tool and cable are running
t , anulus inbetween the tubing and casing. 4. One of the posters that can be seen all over the countryside,
11 this one of Leonid BREZHNEV, Soviet President and Communist Party Chief.
1
BACK IN THE USSR 1. Oktyabrskiy market place. The surrounding woods: from left, back most common vegetables seen in row: unidentified, Prof. Petr A. this part of Russia are onions, BRODSKY, Prof Anatoly A. tomatoes and every different kind of MOLCHANOV, Vladimir cucumber/pickle imaginable. 2. All IvtACHTALERE, Jean-Claude roads lead to Ufa (providedyou can PICARD, Bernard VIVET, read Russian). 3. How many trees in unidentified Dr Alexey I. FIONOV Russia? A. After a typical Russian and Uwe PFORTER; foreground, lunch, exercize and photos in the Olga and Vladimir
Continued in N'204
PARTY
i
When Carl W. BUCHOLZ (VP Director of
Personnel SL) and D.E. BAIRD (VP Operations EHS) arrived In Singapore a few months ago,
they had a two-fold purpose in mind: Award a
20-year pin to Jean-Bernard UVNATA (Division Manager, EAD) and a 5-year pin to Les
MITCHELL. They also managed to get In a bit of celebrating at the same time. Pierre BISMUTH
(Personnel Manager, FEA) sent us the accompanying photographs.
1. Jean-Bernard LANATA shovifing off the Audemars Piguet watch he received in addition to his 20-y8ar pin from D.E. BAIRD. 2. D E
P'" Las MITCHELL. 3. Carl BUCHOLZ, D.E. BAIRD, Victor GRIJALVA (VP/General Manager, FEA) and Dave KiTSON waiting for things to get started. 4. ITC-15 class' reunion, from left: Lionel MARRAFFA, Michael EVANS, Rama WARRIER, Mario PETRICOLA Tetsuo WATANABE and Gerald ATTECK 5 Dominique WENGER and Car! BUCHOLZ. 6. Bill PRINS, Jeannette GOETZ and Ferdinande JUON (EPS Clamart). 7. Dick PIGGIN (Manager Indonesia), Shirley DHALLUIN, Dick WEBBER Ranjit KUMAR. 8. Christian CLAVIER (Manager Data Processing, HOP), Jacqueline LANATA and Joe GOETZ. 9. Eva GRIJALVA and Joyce VEREY. 10. Jack BOWLER, Gérard METENIER Angus MARSHALL and Pierre CORCESSIN. 1l! Jeanne MARTINEAU, Anne-Claire DUPAL and Barbara BISMUTH. 12. Jean-Marc DUFLON Jacques MARTINEAU, Annette HEPBURN and James CHIASSON. 13. Robert THIEN and Ludvik DUPAL. 14. AM CHAMPALBERT plus Dina
Flopetroi. 15. Anna MARETT, Liliane METENIER and Barindra CHATTER JEE. 16. Noel ATWELL, Joyce VEREY, lain HEPBURN and José PINER. 17. Bozina CHATTERJEE and Françoise and Yves MARIA-SUBE. 18. Maria PINER and Graham MARETT.
THE TALENTED MR. RIPLEY by Pat r i c ia H ighsmi th
Patricia Highsmith is American but her subject matter is not as American as apple pie. Although she was born in Texas she has spent rnany years in Europe, especially France and Italy. Her distinction is being a successful mystery v riter whose characters are different types of killers, as smooth as silk-worms and just as sleekly repulsive. After having come from a no-life, Tom Ripley spins a fine one for himself and after much deviousness, he s got it made, Highsmith's first book Stran-gers on a Tram, was turned into one of the classic Hitchcock tilms. Her plots are in quite a different vein than those of the Piasters Hammett and Chandler. They're not as flat out and although an awful lot of violence is going on, it seems to be happening under water (some of it is taking place under vvater). This however doesn't prevent an icy shiver from s ithering up or down your back and that's what we're here for after all. Since Ripley is a very complicated sort beneath his veneer, we follow him through a string of intricate machina-trans in Italy before getting to the perfect ending and once there, we wonder how the guy managed to bring it off. But Tom Ripley doesn't wonder how he's such a successful murderer, impostor, escape artist and forger. He planned it triât wây.
FALCONER by J o h n Cheever
John Cheever is American too, also of the not as American as apple pie vanety. He won this year's Pulitzer Prize for his short stones written since 1945, but he's more likely to be remembered for what went on in the Falconer Correctional Facility (formerly Falconer Jail 1871, Falconer Reformatory Falconer Federal Penitentiary, Falconer State Prison and one nanne that never stuck. Daybreak House) and an inmate called
or Farragut (fratricde, zip to ten, No 734-D U B - D ^ F ) . H I S wife, in one of her sweetest moods takes a stab at summing up her most unusual husband: "What have you ever Q^en me? [>udgery. A superficial and meaningless life D M : Cobwebs. Cars and cigarette lighters that don't work. Bathtub rings, unflushed toilets, and international renown for sexual depravity, clinical alcoholism and drug addicition broken arms, legs, brain concussions and now a massive attack of heart failure. That's what you've given me to live with and now you expect kindness." But Farragut is much more
th " cw '® Cheever's rendering of how people live and think in the States today -no t just the ones behind bars. It's very rough and tough; some of the scenes make you squirm and lots make you laugh. Falconer is elegant when describing the crudest of prison practices and Farragut comes through at the finish practically a saint. The last words we have from him are. Rejoice, rejoice."
Mar ie S i m o e s
.6.7.8.9.10 5 11 4 12 3 13 2 14 1 15
/_
F r o m FTC 30 1 - Mats CARLSSON from Nybro, Sweden. Chalmers Institute of Tectinology Göteborg, Sweden. 2 - John E. EDWARDS from Auckland, New Zea-land. University of Auckland. 3 - Ian EVANS from Black Rock, Australia, University of Melbourne, Australia. 4 - Guy MILLER from Upminster, Essex, UK. Univer-sity of Durtiam, UK. 5 - ONG CHER TIOK from Singapore. University of
Singapore. 6 - Johannes WITT-DOERRING from Vienna, Aus-tria. Technische Hochschule in Wien, Austria.
From ITC 16 7 - Joo Wai FOO from Ipoh, Malaysia. Standford Jr.
University. 8 - Thomas JACKSON from Maghull, NR. Liverpool, UK, Hull University, UK. 9 - Richard JENNINGS from malvern, Sth Australia. University of Adelaide, Australia. 10 - Kyle Treloar MOYLE from St Peters, Sth Austra-lia. University of Adelaide, Australia. 11 - Graham NICHOLSON from Atherton, Queens-land, Australia, Queensland University, Australia. 12 - Wayne PËARCE from Marden, Sth Australia. University of Adelaide, Australia. 13 - Arslan Yusuf QASMI from Islamabad, Pakistan. Lahore E & T University, Pakistan. 14 - Stephen SKINNER from Ukarumpa, Papua, New Guinea. University of New South Wales, UK. 15 - Yoshinori TAKAGl from Toyama Pref. Japan. University of Kyoto, Japan.
Simon BRISCOe not only sent us a photo of himself and his bride, the former Sara Elizabeth Davies (married at Lichfield in Staffordshire on Inarch 17 1979, St. PBtrick's Dây), but he also sent us 3 small package containing a portion of his delicious wedd-ing cake, which unfortunately we would be hard put
to print here.
MOVES • Michel HARBONN (photo) has left his position as Manaqer Aracaju, Brazil, to tai(e over that of Manager Java, located in Jai^arta He replaces Ken MARTIN ivfto rtas frans-ferred to Schiumberger of Canada Charles A. MARTIN^ places Jean-Pierre DHALLUIN as Technical Manager FEA Charles was previously with SklS. Jean-Pierre has transferred to Paris (see page 51.)
Jacelyn and Harvey BRUNT had a daughter, Hayley Glair, on February 27,1979, in Singapore.
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia was the birthplace of Roland Monzon on January 29, 1979, to Nieves and Ray-mond CATHCART.
Sheila and Steven CROUCH had a son, Christopher Glen on February 23,1979, in Singapore.
Stephen James came into the world on October 25, 1978, in Subiaco, W. Australia, to Morag and Edward LOCAL.
WWFi
M.G. EDWARDS, a new Sumatra mechanic, sent us this photo of his daughter Fiona, stirring things up at 2 years old.
January 22, 1979 in Göteborg, Sweden, was the time and the place for Tig and Uirika AMUNDSON s
wedding.
Benlida and Prudencio SERVIANO (OPH) were marri-ed in Makati Metro, Manila, Philippines.
NEWS 1 0
BANGKOK according to René Hey te
Three hundred temples, saffron-robed monks, klongs and
beautiful people. Bangkok, capital of Thailand since 1782,
contains some of the most interesting relics of the Buddhist
faith, the Royal Palace with its complex of temples and
museums and colourful floating markets on its Venetian
waterways. Thai silk is abundant and star sapphires and semi-
precious stones abound.
One of the celebrated Bangkok Buddhas.
Monkey business
Going bananas
11
BANGKOK
according to Denis Apery Bangkok, which to many peoples evokes the lush canal (klongs) scenes, among other lush scenes of quite a different nature) of the box office hit, Emannuelle, has other, equally important and cultural ele-ments. It is a city of close to two million people next to the Gulf of and Thai farm
\ ' s *?" !
Ferocious Thai warrior
Thai countryside Selling fruit on the klongs.
1 2
Another of the innumerable Thai temples
Coal boat on the klongs
BANGKOK The Royal palace
Siam with hundreds and hundreds of impressive 19th century Buddhist temples scattered everywhere and it boasts the famous floating market of Thonburi. Bangkok, capital of the Kingdom of Thailand, is the cultural center of the country as well as being headquarters for numerous interna-tional organizations. It assumes a primordial economic role; almost all of Thailand's industry is concentrat-ed here (rice, lumber yards, light industry). Bangkok is the only major port of Thailand, accounting for 95% of the imports and 75% of the exports.
The best-laid schemes of mice and men...
Haggling in the market
14
according to Yves Maria-Sube
There is another city, many other cities, of course in Thailand, but Chiang Mai could be called Thai-land's "second city." It was found-ed in 1296 and constructed in a square like shape surrounded by walls and a wide moat. Its main industries today are teakwood and silk.
A human grace note
One more temple tower
In addition to traditional dances, Thailand is also well known for its ferocious boxing which Yves des-cribes as "being somewhat similar to savate, or French boxing, but with quite a few fewer rules." Which means it's pretty rough, to put it mildly. Yves also related the story of a statue of Buddha in gold which was covered over with plaster in antici-pation of an invasion by Burma. One day, much later, the same Buddha was abruptly and accident-ally given a shove by a monk, toppling it and revealing the gold underneath.
Sword battles, one in each hand Traditional dancers
BANGKOK
Calling on the gods before battle
Holding up the temple
Modem day Thailand
BANGKOK Elephant logging
Klongs, with land in sight
BTC-8 BAR-B-Q by Andy GORRARA
ï i As the author put it so succinctly: "As one of the survivors from BTC-8, I feei it is about time a few memoirs were put into print." (Your wish is our command, Andy.) "Let's start with Tim ("The
Prof"), FREE, inviting aii to a Bar-B-Que."
19
The continuing battle between WHE and the Air Winch (the WHE eventually won by pulling the Air Winch out of the
ground).
Marie-Rose COULON setting the exam pie.
Feeding Time at the Zoo, from ieft: Umar QUERESKi, Jean-iVlarc MORIS-SEAU; Kevin SNOOK, John THRO-
WER.
Michel MARY, ieft and Franif ("1 don't understand") MENGAL sitting down on
the job. Jo BEASLEY obviously quite shocked
by Andrew SHARP.
Richard BEASLEY, foreground, with thoughts of the future as i\âanager of BTC.
Bob WALKER, thinidng oniy of the present and once again showing how it shouid be done.
• BTC-8 Kevin SNOOK and Andy GORRARA were looking for Hadrian's Wali-and they found It, It's called "Bantus East Turret. "
1
2 3
!
Photos and text by Gérard Léger Gérard wrote f rom Ravenna about the good old days he had in Ijmuiden: "OFT was a good assignment for me and I do regret the place, but RAV is also great and I hope to have some pictures soon of this Middle Ages town and of our brand new shop here," Here are the photos he sent about the days spent in Holland, way back when.
/ - Arriving on Transocean / at sunrise (after a night on a supply boat) tor Jean-Marie KAUSHKA 's well site logging test. We are ready to disembark with all the logging tools 2 - Patrick reminding Jean-Marie that he's GOT to wear a safety hat; it's the law. 3 - Patrick MEYNIER (right) who we were to relieve on that day and Jean-Marie busy changing cable on the OSU-C (left).
/ - Another day, back at the shop, Cees TESSELAAR (acting foreman) is supervising the loading of a CSU van ready to be shipped.. guess where? Right, offshore to fte Penrod 58. Andy GORRARA and OFT mechanics are giving a hand. 2 -\Ne made it The CSU van arrived safely on the P-58, thanks to the homemade lifting skid. 3 - All rigged up for the first job. The scene, as seen from the derrick floor of theP-58. Unusual, but it worked. 4 - Left to right: Tony BLUNDEN, Dave KENT and Gil CHRIST, geologists of Union Oil - both impressed -and myself following progress of a log on the OMU.
GOOD OLD DAYS IN IJMUIDEN
26
1-2-4 3
Soon after that I heard I was being transferred to Ravenna, and the event justified one of those great dinners with the OFT team.
äf mÊ
1 Around the table can be seen, it you look carefully enough that is, you might be able to detect, starling with the foreground at left, Jacques MEROUR and opposite him myself, then further on down the line, Philippe JEANSON, and Ida RIPPE Jean-Marie KAUSCHKA and his friend Maris, Jean-Luc BOURRY. His wife Claire is behind the flowers and Jacques RIPPE on her right. 2 - Ida RIPPE and Philippe JEANSON. I^usio maestro, please! 3 - Jean-Luc BOURRY, describing the one that got away. 4 - The laugh's on thee! Alain BABEY, Andy GORRARA and fvlarianne JEANSON. 5 - Ida RiPPE wishing me good luck and on the left Jacques RIPPE pretending not to notice.
27
7.8.9.10 11.12.13.14 15.16.17.18 Newcomers
1 - Thomas ADEOYE from Lagos, Nigeria. Bath University. 2 - Hafsteinn AGUSTSSON from Al<ureyri, Iceland. Loughborough University, UK. 3 - Paul AUDEMARD D'ALENÇON from Lyon, France. ESI, Marseille, France. 4 - John COOKE from Dorval, Québec, • Canada. Concordia Loyola Campus, Montréal, Canada. 5 - Michel GIRAUDEL from Toulouse, France. Mines, Alès, France. 6 - Peter HAILE from Northwich, Cheshire, UK. Uni-versity of Nottingham, UK. 7 - John INGRAM from Southampton, UK. Imperial College, London, UK. 8 - Geoffrey KIEBURTZ from Fair Haven, USA. Standford University, USA. 9 - Paul McCANN from Ballymena, N. Ireland. Queens University, Belfast, N. Ireland. 10 - Harish MENDIS from Colombo, Sri Lanka. Mas-sachussetts Institute of Technology, USA. 11 - Edward MOFFATT from Cambridge, UK. Cam-bridge University, UK. 12 - Pierre PETIT from Toulon, France. ETP, Paris, France. 13 - Joseph PEZZULLO from Wayne, New Jersey, USA. Princeton University, USA. 14 - Pierre PUYO from Saint Pryvé, France. ENSAM, Châlons, France. 15 - Bernard SZKARADEK from Bil ly-Montigny, France. HEI, Lille, France. 16 - Paul TYRRELL from Hornchurch, Essex, UK. Oxford University, UK. 17 - Peter Van Der WAL from Apeldoorn, The Netherlands. Technische Hogeschool te Delft, The Netherlands. 18 - Maher ZEINO SACGAL from Beyrouth, Leba-non. Centrale Paris, France.
i ( # i
WEDDING BELLS
M.S. JAMES in Islamabad sent us word (plus photo) of the wedding of Andrew STEVENS in Ijmuiden to Angela Chapman on January 10, 1979 in Orwell, Cambridgeshire, England. He adds "I was lucky enough to be included in the small but lively wedding group during my days off. "
M O V E S C . B . EVANS, Execu t i ve V.R. Sch lumberge r L i m i t e d
announces : Effective June 15, i979, John H.WINKLER is appoin-ted Assistant to the Vice President Operations-Eastern Hemisphere-South America, responsible for Marketing and Technique in Paris.
H. DENKL, currently Coordinator Wireline Operations in New York, is appointed Vice President and Gene-ral Manager Europe, replacing J.H. Winkler. Located in London, he also reports to D.E. Baird. T
Horst DENKL
28
In December 1971 a new state was born in the Gul f -The United Arab Emirates. Composed of the separate sheikdoms that had previously, under British control, been known as the Trucial States or the Trucial Coast, the U.A.E. was a Federal Union of six Emirates-Abu Dhabi, Dubai,
Sharjah, Ajman, Umm AI Quaiwain and Fujairah. A seventh. Ras A! Khaimah, joined the U.A.E a couple of months later. In the time since independence from Britain and the formation of the union, the U.A.E, has rapidly developed from being a backward collection of Emirates into a
DATELINE:
DUBAI United Arab Emirates
DUBAI modern and growing State, with spectacular improvements in the social services structure such as compulsory education for boys and girls alike and clinics and hospitals in all major towns and cities, such as the Rashid Hospital in Dubai. The services haven't been confined to urban areas either.
Special traveling clinics have been established to visit the nomadic Bedouin deep in the desert. The United Arab Emirates may have the lowest population density in the world (3 inhabitants for every kilometer), but on the economic level, the U.A.E. has, you might say, been blessed with
1 •J.
/
• î - ' . t
1 ! ï ' » » •
m
» '
1 1
the good fortune of having rather large quantities of oil and natural gas. But there are now cement factories, ship yards, tire plants in operation too and massive industrial cities are being built which will provide a whole new range of petrochemical and other industries.
At the same time a great deal of attention has been paid to agriculture. Archaeo-logists have discover-ed that five thousand years ago the country was home to settled maritime and agricultural communi-ties. Then the climate worsened, and agriculture became almost impossible. But
- i j? i
DUBAI today, using the benefits of modern technology, the farm-ing tradition is being revived while fishing, remains, as it always has been, a constant source of food from the rich waters of the Gulf and the Gulf of Oman. So long ago that it seems to defy memory, Mike WREN sent us some views of Dubai taken by Saleem Almas, a former Schlumberger film
splicer and part time photographer. The selection we're print-ing here shows the central Al-Nasr Square with fountain, a police station, mosque, watch tower and several views of boats and flora. This is the sum of our information about these photographs, but since they practically speak for themselves, one can get an idea of what Dubai looks like.
STORK NEWS
FIRST AND SECONDS FROM IRAQ Yemi ESAN passed through Paris recently and dropped off the following photos of a visit to Well N° 1 in KIrkuk and his son
Bimbo's second birthday party. •
Mary came into the world in Carlo to Abel and Nahed ADIB on January 29, 1979.
A second baby girl, Tobenna, was born to John and Jane ANETO in Dubai on January 8, 1979.
Jean and Marie TERGIMAN had their second child, Chioé-Jeanne, born in Khobar, Saudi Arabia, on Februarys, 1979.
< Tony and Caron gave us the following Information on the current status of the ROBERTS family: "Here Is our family with the latest addition, Timothy John. He came out of the troubled area of Ahwaz, Iran to be born In Wollongong, Australia, a very healthy boy on February 1, 1979. In the picture Timothy John is 3 days old, Jennifer Tara, who was born in Morgan City, USA on July 20, 1976.
WEDDING BELLS Bernard and Marie-José BILIEN got married on Septem-ber 1,1978 in Quimper.
Another French wedding, this one in Caen on July 8, 1978: Robert and Annie GUYOMARD,
A third wedding tool< place in France, this one in Le Yaudet, Brittany, between André and Catherine LE BARON. More in our next issue.
A change of scene: Aiaa NABEEH got married to El Roueny Nadira on December 7,1978 in Alexandria.
London was the town chosen for the wedding of Wondimu Asekale and Michael TINDELL on October 27, 1978.
Alfred WICKENS and Khatco Annal got married on March 3,1979 in Kamishly, Syha.
MOVES - Following the assignment of Robert de FLEURIEU as Technical Manager SOS -Gulf Coast located In New Orleans, Ferdinande JUON (photo) has been appointed in Athens to replace him.
Smiting his two-year old smile: Yemi and Kate ESAN, Iraq).
Bimbo ESAN ( from
NEWS FROM MEA
Manfred HALPER (District Manager, Iraq), Carl W. BUCHOLZ (VP Director of Personnel SL), André J. SALABER (Executive Vice President EHS), Michel PIQUET (District Manager NED) and Bernard VOISIN in front of Well N° 1, in Kirkuk, Iraq, built in 1927, an historical "monument" of the city.
Faiz QAZANJI, filed engineer, Babylon, Yemi's son BIMBO holding onto his mother Kate's hand, Faiz's mother and sister.
Bimbo making a big wish on his second birthday cake with Kate ESAN seconding in background.
3 3
SAM PERSONNEL NEWS Marie-Claire PERON, 8 years old, pin-upping on the "Jacqueline" in Rio.
STORK Julio and Edith EGEY liad a baby girl in Buenos Aires one day after Christmas, 1978 and called her Marcela. Frances and Jan LEONI named their new boy Paulo on July 26, 1978inVitoria, Brazil. Mario and Carnnen ROJAS decid-ed upon the name Mario for their son in San Fernando, Trinidad when he was born on January 17, 1979 Robert and Kathryn SHEARER, from the Port of Spain, Trinidad picked out on January 3,1979 the name of Chelsea for their new daughter. Just starting out in life: Pierre Guillaume PERON, at 6 weeks, born in Rio on November 30, 1978. T
WEDDING BELLS J e a n a n d Mar i a -E lena D U B O I S t i ed the kno t in Vi tôr ia, Brazi l o n Februa ry 2 4 , 1979 Lu is Jav ier a n d Kat iusc ia C I T E L L I repea ted the i r w e d d i n g v o w s o n N o v e m b e r 1, 1978 in C i u d a d Ojeo la , Venezue la . M a n f r e d a n d Co le t te H R A B I E c h o s e w in te r in Innsbruck , Aus t r i a t o ge t nnarried on F e b r u a r y 9, 1979.
STOP PRESS "Vladka Oriana sa radoscû javija da joj se je rodio brat ALEXANDER NORMA." In other words, Vladka Oriana is happy to announce the birth of her brother in Caracas on April 6,1979. From Vlatka and Norman NEVILLE.
NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SENIORITY AT SAM
Rodolphe VON BUREN awarding a 15 year pin to J. SURMI, secretary to VP, while Karin VILA looks on.
Heriberto PARRA, Personnel, 15 years.
M. AYUSO, 30 years.
Andrès PARRA, 30 years.
As a riew Tax Manager lor SAM, Rémy EPSTEIN, formerly Assistant Treasurer with SL in Paris, is now located in Caracas.
3 4
Niklta BOGOLJUKSLY - VEJ - 10 years.
MAS IS THE MOST! Tobago Area: 1 1 6 square miles
V/i miles Nor th to South
26 miles East to West
Man of War Bay Bloody Bay
y Tobago
Trinidad
Area: 1 ,864 square mi les 50 mi les N o r t h to Sou th
37 mi les East to West Grand Riviere
^ n $ Souci Toco
Mt. Irvine Plymouth Buccoo Reef
Pigeon Point
Crown Point
Macqueripe Bay
Las Cuevas
Maracas
Republic of
Trinidad &
Tobago
Blanchisseuse
Cerro
(3,085 teet)
O Ar ima Chaguaramas
>•; eSangre Grande
Manzanilia
Pointft-a-Pierre
San Fernando
Mayaro
La Brea Pitch Lake *«.''-' .oropouche
Guayaguayare Cedros Bay
Coiumbus Bay
Erin Point tcacos Pomt
The population of this two-island nation, just over a million people-more than half of whom are not yet 30-derives from a vibrant blending of Africans, Indians, Chinese, Europeans and other races, many historical and religious legacies. But all the citizens of Trinidad & Tobago share a rich and creative culture which could be summed up by the word mas, which is West Indian for masquerader. The practice goes back centuries, back to Africa when Maskers were sacred and revered, the keepers of the poisons and heads of secret societies. Mas could be the most important word in Trinidad & Tobago, perhaps even more important than oil. Every year the two-day Trinidad Carnival takes over the island, the hearts and minds of the people and thousands of tourists.
Queen of South Jaycees Carnival Show (Debbie Thomas)
Fountain of Life, Sl<inner Parl<, San Fer-nando, the industrial capital
3 5
King of Carnival, King Corbeau, (Tedder Eustace)
One of the most colorful bands on the Savannah Stage, in Port of Spain, the capital and metropolis
Trinidad, situated in the Carribean some 15 kms off the coast of Venezuela, was discovered by Columbus in 1498, occupied by the Spaniards in 1552 and conquered by the British in 1797, who brought in East Indians for their work force. In 1888 the smaller island of Tobago was annexed and after joining the Commonwealth, the Republic of Trinidad & Tobago came into being in 1976.
Oil, natural gas and other underground riches are flourishing here more than any other Caribbean Island. Sugar continues to be the largest export crop and most important agricultural resource, employing over 10,000 farmers and as many workers on the estates and factories, accounting for one quarter of the
ù V
%
•
< y-'- SMj
^ y * s . ' l a . '
*• t • - • ^
The Musketeers, Kiddies Carnival, Pointe-à-Pierre
Queen of Carnivai, Tiffany's Treasure, (Tessa John)
agricultural land. Apart from citrus, copra, coffee, rice, bananas, cocoa and a wide range of fruits and vegetables, farmers are also developing a variety of other projects-among them the growing and processing of soya beans, livestock breeding and rearing and economic and large scale crop rotation.
Especially since the start of the seventies, mas, calypso and steelband rhythms have been traveling far beyond the boundaries of Trinidad & Tobago's 5000 square kms and bringing tens of thousands of visitors to the yearly celebrations. We've pictured here only a glimpse of the 1977 free-wheeling, exotic Carnival and its mas men and women and children.
37
CHRISTMAS COULDN'T BE KINDER THAN IN CARACAS
From left: Mi lagros BROVO, Personnel; Cecilia TORO, Personnel; Rosar io ALCESTE, Accoun t ing
Gabriel and Michel KERVELLA
Thierry de Miranda, Tax Manager South America at the t ime Richard CAMPAGNA, Legal
From left: Heriberte PARRA, Per-sonnel ; Raymond ESSES, Person-nel, Andrès PARRA, Finance; Raul ALEMAN, Technical
From left: Gérard BERTHAUT, Con-troller; Gérard NAHAMA, Technical Assistant; José Miguel VALDIVIA, Accounting; José Luis ROMERO, Accounting
38
PLANE HOPPING IN COLOMBIA Rodolphe VON BUREN and friends plane hopped around Colombia not too long ago, touching down here and there to see how things were going In this northern Latin American country. Here are a few hints of what their whirlwind tour was like.
1 - Bogotà airport. Anne-Laure VON BUREN, Anne SMITH (Peter SMITH'S wife, now in HOF), and towering above the other passengers on the right Michel KERVELLA. 2 - Sabana de Torres airport connecting them to spots even deeper into the interior: Rodolphe, Anne-Laure and Michel. 3 - The threesome waiting around for their plane to fly in.
4 - Anne-Laure in the Santos shop, the most popular place in town. From Santos the group visited a rig two hour's car drive away, near the cities of Bucaramanga and Barancabermeja. 5 - A party rather than a plane for a change. Javier TOBAN, engineer maintenance in Bogota and his wife, Peter SMITH'S profile, Rodolphe; in left background, Luis VILLA and his wife. 6 - Michel KERVELLA, Rodolphe in foreground. Giro SOTTOMAYOR and rig worker.
3 9
Congo or Congo-Brazzaville, is a small country, but one of the most promising in Africa. It is a former French colony neighboring on the ex-Belgian Congo, now Zaire. Congo was discovered (along with Gabon) by Savorgnan de Brazza (hence Brazzaville) around 1875 and in1891 the French Congo colony was founded. In 1910, after the creation of French Equatorial Africa, the areas explored by Brazza were divid-ed into two territories: Gabon to the west and the Congo to the east. In 1944 a conference was held in Brazzaville initiated by General de Gaulle, bringing together the representatives of all the territories of the French empire to lay down guidelines for the French union. Congo Brazzaville acquired complete independence in 1960 and after two decades of political turmoil, is now ruled by a military council.
More than two-thirds of the population is concentrated in the area stretching along the Brazzaville-Pointe Noire railroad line (which is called the Congo-Océan). Before the construc-tion of this important linl< to landlocked central African countries, all transport stopped at Stanley Pool, that section of the Congo River where all navigational possibilities cease. The Congo-Océan, 511 kms long, was completed in 1934.
The Stanley Pool, a broadening in the Congo forming a 450 sq. km lake between the Congo and Zaire, features the two countries' capitals on either shore: Brazzaville on the right bank and Kinshasa on the left.
Brazzaville has about 150,000 inhabitants and boasts a bustling international class airport, which makes this capital the lungs of a country numbering some 3700 kms of navigable rivers, including the Oubangui which forms a natural border with Zaire.
The other important city in the Congo, 500 kms to the south, is Pointe Noire, a port city the same size as the capital, also with a busy international airport and last stop of the Congo-Océan railroad line which not only transports tons of Congolese goods daily but neighboring Gabon (see N° 202) also depends on a branch of this line to ship manganese to waiting ships in the Pointe Noire bay.
Congo's most important crop is manioc, but it is not a big export item. There is some mining of gold and diamonds but the production is very limited. River traffic is on the rise, especially in the northern port of Ouesso. Half of the country is covered by forests and this fact offers possibilities for exporting timber (especially mahogany and ebony), but transport problems still prevent the development of this lucrative economic tool.
So naturally the Congo turns to a surer way to make the economy work-oi l production. After the "Emeraude" oil field ran dry, the Loango started up. (Loango was the former capital of the native Kingdom of Loango with whom the first French explorers began negotiations.)
The Loango site is located in Congo's territorial waters, about 20 miles from the coast and approximately 40 miles northwest of Pointe Noire. So far it has three offshore platforms. Hervé LAIGNEL and Jacques NEGRE along with
SLANT RIGS
AT POINTE NOIRE
- CONGO Photos by Jo Kerhervé
a Schlumberger crew inspected the innards of DP N° 3, a slant rig. Twenty years ago no one would have looked twice at this type of reservoir because there was enough (cheap) oil to go around. But now with the price of oil sky-rocket-ing, every little drop counts and the slant rig was developed to exploit shallow reservoirs. Instead of deviating, as is the normal procedure, the derrick, can be manoeuvered into several different deviated positions. This makes the work of Schlumberger more challenging.
The slant rig is constructed entirely offshore. Schlumberger crew on slant rig DP N° 3.
On 5" Big Hole job: Herve LAIGNEL on left and Jac-
ques NEGRE on right
Slant rig DP N" 3. If the burner is extinguished, a sheet of water is ejected to prevent the gas from com-ing bact( over the rig. • •
4 0
Roasting monkey (skin still on...)
Local market at Pointe Noire: baby sharks, smoked Iguana, roasted monkeys, crocodiles and "gri-gri" for witches
.•_.r ii..
AFR NEWS Newcomers in AFR 1 - Gary BLACK from Sault Ste Marie, Ontario, Canada. Queen's University, Kingston, Canada. 2 - Obidi EZENWA from Enugu, Nigeria. University of Ife, Nigeria. 3 - Ch imaobi IBENECHE from Nigeria. University of Nigeria Nsul^ka. 4 - Jean-Michel LEONARD from Bordeaux, France. Centrale Paris, France. 5 - Mason J. OGHENEIOBO from Kkori, Nigeria. University of Ibadan, Nigeria. 6 - Luc MALLET from Echirolles, France. ENSAM, Paris, France. 7 - David WILSON from Whitehill, Nr Bordon, Hants., UK. University of. Southampton, UK.
'Row, row, row your boat gently down the stream..." This particular stream happens to be in Nigeria, with Bill SWETT manning the oars and passed on to us
with the compliments of Régis MARION.
Yolande and Jean-Pierre STEINER (PHT) were marri-ed in Lièpvre, France, on May 19, 1979.
WEDDING
Hanspeter ROHNER writes from Abidjan: "Attached is a picture taken at our wedding on the 11th of No-vember, 1978 in Geneva. Christiane (formerly Dubois) says it is one of the best snaps she's ever seen because my nose seen in profile attracts almost as much attention as her Liz Taylor looks. (She did not mention the Liz Taylor part: that's my version)."
MOVES • Jurran SCHOONBEEK (left above) has replaced Michael Davenhill as Controller of Africa Unit Jurran, who was formerly with Dowell-Schlumtxrger, is located in London. In Algiers, Marcel TOURNEREAU - formerly with Mechanical atSTS- replaces Claude IMBERTas manager, North Africa.
42
ill:
KAI-KAI A comedy thriller m one act
Written and Directed by
D.C. HAWKINS
"Dear Intercom, The accompanying programme and play were written for a Xmas theatre In the Schlumberger bachelor house In Port-Harcourt occupied by Hervé COLIN, Roger KING and Mike BIVEN. We, the players thought you might be interested In a montage of script and photos..." David Hawkins.
43
- R E N G
ody t h r i i i e r an o r r a c t
Ä r i t t en and Di rsctec i
by
D.C. HA'.VKirjS
-K. 3î^ûup of roway English football
^ supporters enter- the tail end of
a SDfig dying an their lips. "Nice
one-Charlie, let's have another
Lad3, tonights an rae - you name it
Slugsie gets it. Just hope their
food is better than their football
eh patron ?
Mais alors - walcomc Monsieur Slugsie-
you are out of the hospital. But
do you came back here ? I hopR al 1 is
f-orgiven. Sit down r.y friands, and let
Albert get you a carafe on the nouse.
Cheers patron, occeptsd with pleasure
but none of your ctieija vino, give the
boys a slug fr-a-Ti that fancy oottls.
; . '•'ais patron, tr>at is Fifi's bottle
tf^hich no one <r;ust tcucn. ^nugs the
bottls).
Slugsie will pay (grans the bottle]
drinK up lads - a ti;-a3t tc ünitnci and
Fifi -Ahoeusr the h&il she is. (all drin?<
x-a c. -lu if'c-
A'/^-
boys, last year in this very same oiiû.
, this big broad ^ashen her_üpttJp. nTTTÎZ ^ ;ojf- CÀ* ' s^*J-head a«=të-r.hrew me throijçjh the bleedini^
window, t landed on the glass and that':
wHy (very high pitched) I sometimes loo;
my temper. ~ ~
£"i Albert _j_ that Is. pur Fifi but
grace ä Dieu W B have a last tsctcie of her
K3i-i<ai in the store. If not her entente
would not ba so cardials. " /
Bring some grub^ while I slip out for a ^ leak.
d r-efctr-
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
David HAWKINS, internatio-nally renowned playwright, was born in Maidstone Kent, UK on August 3 which makes him a none too tame Lion. A graduate of Cambridge, he joined Schlumberger in Octo-ber of 1966 and has so far been to the following areas; Clamart School, four years in Australia and New Zealand, two years at HOP, two years in the South Gulf Region, a year as Station Manager at Great
Yarmouth and now District Manager, Port Harcourt. David is married to the former Simone Lortie of Canada. "French Kai-Kai" is one of dramatist HAWKINS most ambitious efforts so far (leaving aside his Schlumberger achievements, of course) and although there is not much hope that "Kai-Kai" will outrun Agatha Christie's "Mouse-trap" we are sure those fortunate enough to get tickets to the sold-out performances of the comedy will be rolling in the aisles with laughter. Encore! * (Editor's note).
DRAMATIS PERSONNAE PIERRE Proprietor of the "Chez Pierre" restaurant in Marseille. An evil minded rogue living on the fringe of the underworld. Runs a dubious hostel. Haunt of prostitutes and crooks.
ALBERT Waiter at the "Chez Pierre" for thirty-five years. Jealously infatuated with FiFi; believes cash is the only obstacle to marriage.
FIFI A lady of fallen virtue but sharp of tongue and large in spirits. Her brother is cap-tain of the Marseille football side which lost today. Much money had been bet on the result by the local Mafia. She has proof some players were bought and is as mad as hell. Word is out she will go to the police with information against either the Mafia or the English punters who set up the match.
SLUGSIE Spokesman of a group of drunken Englishmen celebrating an unexpected victory at their regular yearly meeting over Marseille. A rough character who would not be happy if his team was shown to be a set-up and all bets cancelled. He has just collected his money.
INSPECTOR CLEUZOT Senior detective of the local Sûreté who thinks there is insufficient crime in the town to prove himself as a top ranking detective.
WANG Kl Cleuzot's servant and shadow employed as his trainer in combats, sans armes, to keep his reactions swift. Fanatically lo-yal to Cleuzot, who he thinks has been passed over for promotion. He is always looking for crimes for his master to solve.
44
REVIEWS CAST IN ORDER OF APPEARANCE
.had me clinging to my seat..." SPEARMINT WEEKLY
"...Cleuzot's unique perspective, Fifi a tour de force..."
LANDSCAPE GARDENER
"...like "Death in the Afternoon"... "we understand"..."
SYDNEY MORNING HERALD
PIERRE
ALBERT
SLUGSIE
SHORTY
SLIM
SUPPORTERS
FIFI
INSPECTOR CLEUZOT
WANG Kl
"... theatreland will never be the same again..."
REFUSE MONTHLY
FRENCH KAI-KAI
Guy PIQUET
Kama! STAMBOUL
Douglas SINCLAIR
Wol CHAFFE
D. HAWKINS
Mike BEVIN
Philippe ARBONA
Sze-Meng CHEW
ACT I
Pierre and Albert whilst preparing for the evening ahead, are discussing the match of the day. PIERRE. - Albert, today is a Saturday, triste. ALBERT. - Oui, patron, but all is not perdu. PIERRE. - Mais avec six buts contre un, I must say ce soir we are, définitivement, vaincus. ALBERT. - Vaincus? But patron, we have only dix-neuf châisos PIERRE. - Albert, humour like that puts you in the même classe as those canards singing their horrible songs outside. ALBERT. - Désolé, patron, but at the match I got the pognon to propose to my Fifi who, this ten years 1 have looked up to with la grand amour, and now 1 burst with happiness. PIERRE.- You rigole, Albert, she will drain you of your last sou,drinking her expensive Kai-Kai and then laugh at you derrière your dos. And where from is this money? ALBERT. - Les maquereaux gave me a t ip to bet on Manchester United et voilà, it is not patriotic but it is very profitable.
SCENE
Interior of waterfront cafe "Chez Pierre" in the Marseille red light dis-trict. Time 7 p.m. Occasion - The evening after the crushing unexpected defeat of the Marseille Football Club by Manchester United. Town is in mourning but for the chorus of the British revellers echoing down the damp streets.
4 5
PIERRRE. - Un jeu dangereux but, to your poste, Albert, our first clients are coming.
/\ group of rowdy Eriglish football supporters enter- the tail end of a song dying on their lips. "Nice one, Charlie, let's have another one. " SLUGSIE. — Lads, tonight's on me-you name it, Slugsie gets it. Just hope their food is better than their football, eh patron?
PIERRE. - Mais alors-welcome Monsieur Slugsie you are out of the hospital. But why do you come back here? I hope all is forgiven. Sit down my friends, and let Albert get you a carafe on the house. SLUGSIE. - Cheers, patron, accepted with pleasure, but none of your cheap vino, give the boys a slug from that fancy bottle.
ALBERT. - Mais patron, that is Fifi's bottle which no one must touch. (Hugs the bottle). SHORTY. - Slugsie will pay (grabs the bottle). Drink up, lads-a toast to United and Fifi whoever the hell she is. (All drink).
46
SLUGSIE. - Well boys, last year in this very same pub, this big broad smashed her bott le-just like this one -on me head, threw me through the bleeding window, landed on the glass that's why (very high pitched) sometimes loose my temper. PIERRE. — Oui, Albert, that is our FIfi but grâce à Dieu we have a last bottle of her Kai-Kai in the store. If not her entente would not be so cordiale. SLUGSIE. - Bring some grub, patron, while I slip out for a leak. PIERRE. - Albert, give them the plat du jour.
ALBERT. - This evening, messieurs, we have cuisses de grenouille, that is, legs of frogs and châteaubriant? SLIM. - Eggs, chips and steak, mate-none of that fancy muck, eh Shorty? ALBERT. - 'Ow would messieurs like their steak? Bleu with petit pois? SLIM. — Brown with a lot of ketchup for God's sake and get a b leedin move on. (Aibert writes the order and goes to the l<itchen tal<ing the empty Kai-Kai bottle). SLUGSIE. — (Re-enters) Well, boys, that's one problem over, Where's the grub? SHORTIE. - Coming Slugsie, and where are the women, we want some fun. PIERRE. — I will send the chef to have Fifi come immediately. She can take care of you all (leaves through the kitchen door). SLIM. - While we wait for Slugsie, tell us a joke. (Tells a joke. Pierre comes back. Albert comes with a covered dish and serves the steak, just as Slugsie finishes his joke).
SHORTY. - Ha ha, you should have been on the stage, Slugsie. Oh at last here's the famous châteaubriant. (Albert whips cover off. FIfi enters).
SLIM. - My Gawd, Shorty, get a load of that! PIERRE. - May I present FIFI, notre spécialité de la maison. SHORTY. — (Raucously) How much do you charge for the night, luv???
FIFI. - Monsieur (dignifed) I do not charge by the night, I c h a r g e by the met re (drawing herself to full height). SHORTY. - Jesus, then we ain't got the money for a cuddle. SLUGSIE. - Shorty, maybe she means your metre and then you can have her for nothing. FIFI. - You miserable English beat us at football and some cochon gets rich. 1 know who and I know how and so will Cleuzot when we meet. But first I need a drink. (Goes to the bar). ALBERT. - Fifi, my sweet, I have mille balles saved, we can marry at last. FIFI. - Get lost, little fornicateur, and where the hell is my Kai-Kai? ALBERT. - Ah Fifi, i get you your last bottle but you will reqret this decision for the faithful Albert. (Albert goes out). FIFI. - Fifi never regrets, and when 1 tell Inspector Cleuzot my connaissance on the match you will all be sorry.
PIERRE. - Bizarre, he was here with his crazy karate assistant Wang Ki, il y a une heure and I think they know you have some dangerous information for them. Be careful Fifi you have enemies who would stop at nothing to keep your silencieuse. FIFI. - You are not men to be so peureux. (Albert appears with new bottle). Give me my Kai-Kai. (She snatches it from him, drinks neat from the bottle and five seconds later utters a strangled cry and crashes to the ground). PIERRE. - Parbleu, she has fainted. ALBERT. - Mon Dieu, she is dead. SLUGSIE. - Let's get the hell out of here. (Inspector Cleuzot enters) CLEUZOT. - Stay where you are. Je cherche Fifi and I have a message from my servant Wang Ki who followed her here, that she is, en effet, here, where he followed her. SHORTY. - Jésus, it's the fuzz. CLEUZOT. - Non monsieur, I am Cleuzot of the Sûreté and, maintenant, where is Fifi? And my servant Wang Ki? SHORTY. - Well, she's just snuffed it, mate, and as for Wangkher I couldn't say. CLEUZOT. - Who are you and what is stuffed?
'v st k
48
SHORTY. - I'm Shorty and it's not stuffed, it's snuffed, mate. Meaning she is in the great brothel of the sky, that is, dead, over there, behind the bar, in the arms of the bleeding garçon.
(Cleuzot goes to the bar and peers over, Wang Ki appears from the kitchen with a bone in his hand mal<ing abrupt t<arate movements ). SLUGSIE. - Who the bleeding hell is he? PIERRE. - That's Wang Ki his assistant de judo. SLUGSIE. — Why the bone in his hand? PIERRE. - I think he's going to give him the chop.
(Wang Ki creeps behind Cleuzot and aims a chop to the necl<, just as Cleuzot spins round. He misses and hits a distraught Albert coming up from Fifi's body and knocks him flat. This incident unnoticed by Cleuzot who strides back to the table and sits down at one end.)
CLEUZOT. - Pay attention Messieurs. We have an important problem and I want you to treat it as a serious matter. (Wang Ki has a third attempt at Cleuzot and collapses cuncussed behind the bar). ALL. — Ad-lib for one minute.
CLEUZOT. — Wel l Gent lemen (goes to bar), if w e f ind the murder w e a p o n (starts emphasizing his words with the bottle in his hand and Wang Ki coming at him from behind with a strangling cord is smacl<ed between the eyes by the bottle and sinks slowly out of sight)... t h e n we have the murderer. Let us dr ink to a qu ick so lu t ion . (Pours everyone a glass). Gen t lemen I give you the murde re r (all drink).
i n
s lucsr
50
They hopped over to HOP!.,. Spring has not only brought back sparrows in Paris skies, but also soiTB farm.liar faœs you may new meet when strolling throughout the maze of S.T.S. offices: From left, Jean-Pierre DHALLUIN who
has left his responsibilities of Technical Mamager FE A in Singapore to take over new duties in Training matters with Technique and Marketing EHS. Claude IMBERT formerly North Africa Di stri et Manager has appointed to Data Processing Development as Field Representative. Actually Claude is not ated in Paris but in London — a hop, a skip, a jump away. Adel GUINDY, on the contrary has become a real Parisian when joinir,q fechanical at Operations . Adel is .le
former FSM of Iraq. Last but not
John WINKLER has j umped Channel with a single
to become Assistant to President Operations EHS.
John, who was previous-ly- VP General Manager EUR will he located in Paris
an-" responsible for Marketing & Technique.
leas t, over the
stride,
the Vice
(top),
I
lie-a aqua r ter s li-
a bath you would b ~ the plug is open
V : UCK'. ly enough the : - r o f v/ater in
tr^ D • : h generally
-ni lns at the same F= 'VE ] . . . )
• ; : hus have l0£'"
- : îrtain nuipher
1 ;nds during chu
- - 1-WO (Honths ; . ^ ' - " b
7" : • por-
l ie r e . : - - ; ' . s
\ r " .
- his
nfev i e
1 H.;n
Benjamin FELDER, above
on the right, moved
from Interpretation
Development in Pari s M to Marketing
with SAM in
Caracas.
Would you
believe that
Marœl TOURNEREAU
has mo'^d too ? YES,
he made it: leaving his
52
long beloved business with Mechanical at
Operations Paris Marcel has now
joined Algiers where he is re-
placing Claude Imbert as Mgr.
North' Africa Dist.
On the occasion
of his farewell
party Marcel was
binoculars
with the pho
a sexy Ber-
ber woman (lower
left photograph
on previous page)
— there must be
a hint...
Roberto tried
the binoculars
but could not
see as far as
gi ven
along
to of
those with whom he had worked at STS Inter-
pretation Develop-
ment . Glasses of
Champagne in
both his hands
barely sufficed
for him to ce-
lebrate his new
assignment to SAM
as Marketing De-velopment Engineer, located in Caracas-
Gordon jyKMVT also waved
bye bye to
KOBOpys ptmcT
i
INTERCOM INDEX
A
AGUSTSSON, 38
AHMAD, 5
AHMED, 5
ARBONA, 55
ASHLEY, 9
ATWELL, 19
AUNG WIN, 9
B
BABEY, 37
BAIRD, 19, 38
BEASLEY, 31-32
BERNARD, 5-6, 9, 13, 16, 19, 38
BLUNDEN, 36
BORDON, 52
BOTH, 36, 63
BOURRY, 37
BROWN, 57
C
CHAFFE, 55
CHATTERJEE, 19
CHESHIRE, 38
CHEW, 55
CHIASSON, 19
CHRISTIE, 54
CLAVIER, 19
COLIN, 53
COOK, 12
CORCESSIN, 19
D
DANIEL, 9
DAVID, 2, 5, 9, 52-54
DAVIES, 20
DAY, 12, 26, 35-36, 45, 55
DEEPAK, 5
DENIS, 2
ii
INTERCOM INDEX
DENKL, 38
DHALLUIN, 19-20, 61
DUFLON, 19
DUPAL, 19
E
EDWARDS, 20
EVANS, 19-20, 38
G
GAUTHIER, 2
GEORGE, 9
GERKE, 5
GHAI, 5
GIMENEZ, 5
GIRAUDEL, 38
GODET, 5
GOETZ, 5, 19
GOKTEN, 5
GOMEZ, 5
GOOD, 2, 35-37, 41
GORDON, 5, 9, 63
GORRARA, 2, 29, 33, 36-37
GOUT, 5
GOY, 5
GOYEAU, 5
GRAHAM, 5, 19-20
GRANDE, 45
GRANIER, 5
GRAS, 5
GREAU, 5
GRIJALVA, 19
GUERRA, 5
H
HACHE, 5
HAILE, 38
HALFORD, 5
HALPER, 5
HARBONN, 5, 20
HARGREAVES, 5
HARRISON, 9
HARVEY, 5, 20
HASSOUNA, 5
HAWKINS, 2, 5, 53-55
HEAD, 5, 15, 54, 57
HENRY, 9
HEPBURN, 19
HERVE, 6, 50
HEYTE, 2, 5
HIRAGA, 5
HOCKEY, 5
HOLLINGWORTH, 5
HOULDING, 5
HOUSEHAM, 5
HRABIE, 5
HUNT, 5
HUOT, 5
HUSBAND, 19
I
IMBERT, 61, 63
iii
INTERCOM INDEX
J
JACKSON, 5, 20
JAFFEUX, 5
JAMES, 5-6, 9, 19-20, 38
JAN, 5-6
JEANBLANC, 5
JEANSON, 5, 37
JENNINGS, 20
JESKE, 5
JOB, 12, 31, 36, 50
JOHANNES, 5, 9, 20
JOHNS, 5
JOHNSTON, 5
JONCKERS, 5
JONES, 5
JOSEPH, 5, 9, 38
JULIOT, 9
JUON, 19
K
KAASJAGER, 5
KADARUSMAN, 5
KAMPMANN, 5
KAPUR, 5
KAUFFMAN, 5
KENNOU, 5
KHAN, 5
KING, 46, 53
KITSON, 19
KOESTOER, 5
KUMAR, 5, 19
L
LAIGNEL, 50
LANATA, 19
LAPOTRE, 6
LAW, 6, 35
LEANO, 6
LECOURT, 6
LEE, 5, 9
LEGER, 6
LEMOINE, 6
LEONI, 6
LOGAR, 6
LOISY, 6
LONG, 42, 49-50, 63
LOPEZ, 6
LUCAS, 6
LUCKENBACH, 6
LUDOLF, 6
LYON, 38
M
MACHTALERE, 13
MAGNE, 9
MALLET, 52
MARETT, 19
MARION, 52
MARSHALL, 19
MARTIN, 5, 9, 20
MICHEL, 5-6, 20, 31, 38, 48-49, 52
MILLER, 20
MIRANDA, 48
MITCHELL, 19
MORIN, 6
iv
INTERCOM INDEX
N
NEGRE, 50
NICHOLSON, 20
NOEL, 5, 9, 19
NORTH, 52, 61
O
ONG, 20
P
PARKINSON, 5
PARRA, 48
PAUL, 5-6, 9, 38
PENOT, 2
PETIT, 38, 57
PFORTER, 2, 16
PICARD, 13, 16
PIGGIN, 19
PLUG, 62
PRICE, 50
PRINS, 19
R
REINDERS, 2
ROBIN, 9
ROGER, 5, 9, 53
ROHNER, 52
ROLAND, 20
ROMERO, 48
ROSE, 30
ROUND, 59
S
SAM, 2, 5-6, 9, 62-63
SCHOONBEEK, 52
SCOTT, 5
SHARP, 31, 54
SIMON, 20
SINCLAIR, 55
SKINNER, 20
SMITH, 49
SNOOK, 31, 33
SOUHAITE, 9
SOUM, 9
SPALDING, 9
SPILA, 9
STARK, 9
STEVENS, 9, 38
STEWART, 6, 9
STONE, 9
STOWE, 9
STREETS, 9, 55
STRZINA, 9
SUAU, 9
T
TABOR, 9
v
INTERCOM INDEX
TABORDA, 9
TAN, 9
TAYLOR, 52
TERGIMAN, 9
THEYS, 9
THIEN, 9, 19
THOMAS, 5, 9, 20, 38, 45
THOMPSON, 6, 9
THOMSON, 9
TILL, 9
TONGUE, 9, 54
TONS, 50
TORRES, 9, 49
TOURNEREAU, 9, 52, 62
TOUSSAINT, 9
TURLAIS, 9
U
UTAMA, 9
V
VANNIER, 9
VEREY, 19
VINCHON, 9
VINCIS, 9
VIRO, 9
VISAGE, 9
VIVET, 13, 16
VON BUREN, 2, 9, 49
VU, 9
W
WALKER, 9, 32
WALTON, 9
WANG, 54-55, 58-60
WARR, 9
WATANABE, 9, 19
WAWRZENITZ, 9
WAY, 9, 13, 35, 50
WEBBER, 9, 19
WEISS, 9
WESTAWAY, 9
WHITE, 9
WHITTAKER, 9
WICHTL, 9
WILKINSON, 9
WILLIAMS, 9
WILSON, 9, 52
WINCHESTER, 9
WINDSOR, 9
WINKLER, 9, 38, 61
WOLFF, 9
WREN, 9, 42
WYMAN, 9
Y
YELVERTON, 9
YUASSA, 9
YUNUS, 9
YVER, 9
vi
INTERCOM INDEX
Z
ZAMMITO, 9
ZSIGO, 9