^ N°185 May 1976 - allianceschlumberger.org · kka irÇ. abt afr ÛÊlchÛntex reÎ^e jean syves...
Transcript of ^ N°185 May 1976 - allianceschlumberger.org · kka irÇ. abt afr ÛÊlchÛntex reÎ^e jean syves...
t INTER(X)IVIII
Intercom is published for better liaison between field engineers and management of Schlumberger Overseas, Société de Pros-pection Electrique Schlumberger and their subsidiaries. 42 , rue Saint-Dominique, Paris VII®, France. Tel. ; 555.91.23. Editor: Nicole GAUTHIER Assistant Editor: Jeanne RUDBECK Technical Assistant: Liliane CHERIERE
1 IN BRUEGHEL'S CHIAROSCURO Part I: Goings-on in Groningen
7 ANNOUNCEMENTS
9 MAROONED IN THE MIRE: IRIAN JAYA
1 2 CHIEFS AT THE SWAMP CHIEF
1 6 IVORY COAST
2 1 PERSIA PERSISTS
2 8 IN BRUEGHEL'S CHIAROSCURO Part II: The End of the Beginning
3 4 FAMILY NEWS
3 7 SOME LIKE IT COLD
4 0 SENIORITY
4 3 IGUANA ANYONE?
4 8 SIC TRANSIT WRT TO PHT
Our Cover The lighting recalls Ruysdael... the colors, perhaps Rembrandt. Yet the artist behind this sunset over Groningen's waters is Rosemary Pease. The sun will rise again in the morning on the sight of a flock of managers, flown north for a visit to Schlum-berger's Holland locations "In Brueghel's Chiaroscuro" (oppo-site). But it will set definitively on NTC, which you wil l read about in "The End of the Beginning" on Page 28.
Back Cover An ad for Johnston. Read more about it on Page 20.
Contributors to this issue André Baudot, René Heyte, Gene Kauffman, Kenneth Lunn, Marie-Rose Mesnil, Rosemary Pease, Dudley Reed, Jacques Ritzenthaler, Pascal de Sloover, Stina Stowell, Francis Tous-saint, John Chalk.
SAVINGS March 8, 1 976 $ 13,91 April 8, 1976 $ 14,02 May 8, 1 976 $ 14,14
SPES/OVERSEAS ENGINEERS
ALPHABETICAL LIST Personnel Situation as of 14, 1976
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I L L SON STEPHEN JOHN MUJNE JEAN-CLAUOE
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HONT I ROBERTO LUIS MONTOYA MüRON LUIS MOüRE JOHN MOREAU JEAN-CLAUDE MORIN LOUIS
MORVAN MICHEL MORVANCARAOEC MICHEL HOSTELLER LAVIO WALTER MOUCHIROUO GERARD .ROBERT MOWAT GORDC:̂ R
»^UGOAN CHhISTOPHER JOHN MÜLLER CERHARO MURRAY ALLAN MOTELET MICHEL MARTIAL
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Intercom pays Holland a visit : Part 1 - GOINGS-ON IN GRONINGEN
•
Wintry Holland has a gloomy streak in her nature, and she was exposing it that bleak morning in late December, when a swarm of Managers - Personnel, CED, and EUR - swooped down from the overcast sky upon a peaceful spot of the Schlumberger map - G r o n i n g e n . At that time of the year, the landscape ordinarily looks like this, "pictured" at dawn by Rosemary Pease, except that the sun which here is trying to break through the early-morning fog is sup-posed to rise... Actually the height of its success can be mesured by the
darkness of the following images.
•
• •
a:
1. The HOT shop extends along a quiet street, lined with similar industrial setups, that serves as Schlumberger shop yard. 2. No doubt Wim v.d. Poel will emerge victorious from his battle with the spooler: after four years he knows how to tame these beasts. 3. At the other end of the cable, Paul Wisnewski looks skeptical, while Evert Leeman, the 12 year-senior Foreman, makes one last adjustment before they start checking out the magnetic marks of the cable. Paul, a Frenchman who was hired 15 years ago, succumbed to nor-thern magic and married a Dutch girl who gave him two children.
4. Among the managerial mob things are taking a menacing turn. Jean-Claude is telling the bosses how delighted he would be to drive them to the well site this afternoon. 5. "Hello, Paris? Yyyess, I'm afraid they are here... all of them. " After connecting the line, Mllou Kolk, Secretary, will join her co-workers for lunch. 6. And somewhere in the recesses of the electronic lab, Mr. Leeman is thinking of answering the grumblings of his stomach too. 7. Rembrandt? Vermeer? Let the best specialist in chiaroscuros interiors now come forward. Holding their pose in the lunch and coffee-break room are, from left: Rudi Heller—Mechanic, Jan Start—FT Specialist, Mllou, Evart and Paul. 8. In the engineers' room, we come upon John Pease with a headache called RISE...
i i ; o i I â
1... and here "they" are, now at the well-she of Coeverden, 100 km. south-east of Groningen. "Mrs. Intercom's" grimace demonstrates what she thinlcs of being on the wrong side of the camera... 2... which is not the case for Reinard de Groote, winchman, who seems quKe overjoyed. As for Gerard Zviderveld, well, cameras clearly make him nervous. 3. Brrr.. HOT is cold - especially in Coeverden and especially in December. Our two engineers have donned as many coats as they can carry. Philip Allen (left) diabolically waits to see K Roger
Casaburi's fingers will be frozen to that log he's gripping. 4. "I demand a second opinion" announ-ces Roger to the visitors who are awaiting his conclusions. 5. Roger will have not only a second, but a third and fourth opinion as well. All influential persons present want to stick their nose in the problem of the puzzling log. 6. And the melancholy northern sun disappears behind a curtain of reeds, catching its own last reflections in the gloomy waters of Holland. This is an-other photo by Rosemary Pease.
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GOINGS ON IN GRONINGEN
1. Maybe the sun doesn't shine often in Groningen, but who can resist an invitation to let the fun shine in... espe-cially when it is proffered by Sonia Barbarit. 2. "We accept" declare John Pease (left) and Yves Maria-Sube (right) with alacrity, and Willy Claes adds, "I'll drink to that, if somebody gives me a drink." 3 . Say "gouda" everyone! Ian Strecker sports a smile as wide as the diameter of a round of gruyère, while newlywed Nicole Maria-Sube says it with flowers, which can hardly compete with her smile. 4. Scotsman Euan Baird saves the flowers, saves his smiles, and says it with his hands (more economical that way)... and so shouldn't be surprised if Rosemary Pease, on his right, doesn't hear him. Quel fromage! 5. "What am I doing here when I'm 3 0 0 km. away?" True, Philippe Jeanson was not present at this party but away on a job. However, one of Intercom's favorite tricks is to endow our subjects with ubiquity. You see another example of our tampering with time and place here in Henrietta Claes, who was actually spending a few days in Belgium on this occasion. 6. "All's well that ends well." Jean-Claude has the last word, as is his right as Master of Groningen.
To find out what ends well turn to Page 2 8 and Part II: "The End of the Beginn-ing," and see as well our next issue with Part III: "See CED—Sea Side": Our visit to Ijmuiden and the Hague.
ANNOUNCEMENTS A s even door-knobs must know by now, since we are certainly the last to announce
it... Bernard Alpaerts, formerly General Manager of Forex Neptune, has been appointed Vice President-Schlumberger Limited. In charge of the Drilling and Production Services group, Mr. Alpaerts is also the Schlumberger executive responsible for Dowel! Schlum-
berger. Alain Roger, formerly President of Flo-pétrol, has been appointed President and General Manager of Forex Neptune.
Henri Freyss, formerly Vice President-Operations of Flopétrol, has been appointed President and General Manager of Flopétrol.
Bernard Alpaerts in discussion with René Delmäs. In front of them on the table is a model of offshore platform 8 1 . "
"Pentagone
Jean-Claude Picard, formerly Ma-nager-Technique, Eastern Hemis-phere Wireline, has been appointed Director of Engineering at Etudes ét Production Schlumberger at Cla-mart. His replacement will be an-nounced in the near future.
Effective May 1, 1976, Bernard Vivet has transferred from Etudes et Pro-duction Schlumberger and been ap-pointed Manager-Interpretation De-velopment, Eastern Hemisphere Wire-line.
STOP PRESS.. STOP PRESS.. STOP PRESS.. STOP With e f f e c t from May 15, 1976, the organ iza-t i o n o f the Market ing department w i l l be as f o l l o w s :
Repor t ing to André Misk , Manager Market ing :
. Bernard V ivet Mgr I n t e r p r e t a t i o n Development
. David Ki tson Mgr Sales Promotion
. P h i l i p p e Rossi Mgr - CLIC
The I . D . group now i n c l u d e s :
. P h i l i p p e Souhaité Mgr - Formation Eva lu-a t i o n
. Jean E. Gartner Mgr - Geology and Geophysics
Patient and a frog
A20-YEAR-OLD student who was admitted to the
Nasarawa Hospital. Kano for an undiagnosed aliment has been "delivered of a frog."
The "historical patient" hag complained of severe headache and stomach pains when she was admit-ted about a month ago.
Commenting on the inci-dent, the senior medical of-ficer in charge of thi hos-.
pital. Dr A. N. Shaheel, conceded that the froa in-cident could have something to do witchcraft but argued that since the patient was never diagnosed to be preg-nant at the time of her ad-mission, it would not be reasonable to say that she had given birth to a frog.
Besides, the doctor add-ed. it was not biologically possible for a human being to give birth to frog.
ARE THEY TALKING ABOUT A FRENCHMAN?
You lied!
C H A M P A G N E O N T H E R O C K S ? D o D u t c h
canals f r e e z e in winter? M a n f r e d B O E T E L bet " N O " , a n d A n d r é B A U D O T " Y E S " .
i
f Sciatic ncrvs affc-ctcd ir. low&'c
IJiMpacitatiM ! Several days. Abi« to BOA In bed.
ibility : E. Ja.i
Injuries ; A. Badrh / Badly ahalcen, BO ««1 injury sustaÎMd. E. Lartiaii/ Dislocated or broken hip and TinH
Incapcicicac iun ; A. / 3 days
E. Lartian / 3/6 weeks. Damage ta Schlumberger roof : $ 20.
I j w ^ i
TELKX CIÎECKÎKG Saturday
Sunday
fiHil
HOW'S
THA T AGAIN DEPARTMENT
'iJl "'"Sis
Book Shelf Raymond Chandler raised the low ly crime novel to a work of art. In The Long Good-bye we have another chapter in the gritty life of his hero-dectective Mar lowe . Wi th his rude w i t , lively sense for the grotesque, his disgust for sham and sent imenta l fog, and his con tempt for the petty, Mar lowe is the Amer ican idealization of man. He doesn't care for money or status: usually he accepts only expenses and l i t t le or no pay. In a Chandler who-dunni t , it never matters w h o kil led whom. The signif icance of the novels is social and psychological . The images f lash around like guns. What you remember is the atmosphere of Cali-fornia l ife: the squalid motels, the pol luted freeways. This is a c lown ish wor ld:
grotesque, manic, hi lariously sad. Chand-Jeresque is not far f r om Chaplinesque. From the crass world of Cali fornia we move to the ultra-refined wor ld of Buddenbrooks, which is the name of a wea l thy merchant fami ly at the zenith of their success in turn-of- the-century Germany. Thomas Mann s first novel and unsurpassed master-piece traces the fami ly 's decline through their interest in and eventural ly morbid pursuit of art. The novel works on many levels: on the simplest it is a very moving family chronicle: it is also a drama of how the conf ident European ch i ld of the En-l ightenment was t ransformed into the unsure, neurotic hero of the 2 0 t h century: and fmally, Buddenbrooks is an allegory of Spengler 's thesis of the Decline of the West .
T Received some pieces of news f rom Groucho Green...
Al'l Throw-Away le t te rs 3way throwers
Throw-Away Department
TA Letters
Mar,2!, 76
ue. Trash Basket
!.. Junk Barrel : L i t t e r
Intercom
fAD-TA-01-76
This is the f i r s t in a series of Throw-Away Letters. Please throw i t away.
C-
GG/xrz/gs Groucho Green irt \ J
AH fhrow-Away Letters Away throwers
Throi-z-Away Department
TA Letters'- ^
Har .B , 1976
Junk Bas tie t
T » ) aker :Set ntercom
. . . . îàpTfl-543'76
This i s the: S43«: Throw-Away:
thrown awa#;Mfare « i l i n g . Please fo l Tow h 543 'have been'
iG/gs
Marooned in the Mire :
Usually characterized as an outpost of mud andmosquitoes, Irian Jaya is also a tauntingly beautiful location, offering such scenes
iese young Indonesians Taying on a raft near the island's shore.
IRIAN JAYA They can't qui te recall how or why they ended up in Irian Jaya. Perhaps it was to forget ,
but they can't remember. . . A l i t t le unpleasantness back in the Old Country.. . someth ing to do w i t h a pack of marked playing cards, a Belgian
heiress, a loofah and a pair of black leather socks. At any rate, t h e ' t w o Schlumbergfe?"shgineers found themselves banished to a >
colony of other exiles of the oil business. Jacques Ritzenthaler and Francis Toussaint discovered a
scruffy bunch await ing t h e m as they arrived at Sorong
Airport f r om Jakarta, Java, the Headquarters for th is
island wh i ch lies in the Indonesia Region. Here
the t w o remained for many months, acquir ing a certain scruffiness themselves, and
taking pictures of each other and the rest
of the »nd. As
t ime wore on their innocence
wo re off-for strange th ings happened to
the engineers of Irian Jaya. In th is
cau ld ron of mud and mos-
qu i t oes b o y s were moulded
into men... men were moulded into
women. . . and in one curious case,
a Polish ar isto-crat was mou lded
' m t o ; a - s h e e p r :
w e r e ail happy about th is however as they
had,^a lways w a n t e d to :: have , a iïSméchouj.ii:;:;
K::-:;KS:K:
Lugo, the small island where our engineers and the service com-panies' personnel have their camp. In the background is Irian Jaya, which is part of the Republic of Indonesia and located on the island of Papua, New Guinea.
IRIAN JAYA
Francis Toussaint, who took part of these photographs and Bambang Surjono-Operator have not only put their shoulders to the wheel, but their heads and necks as well.
He looks like a king surveying his realm but Supardi is actually keeping an eye on the sheave wheel.
This is not a pleasure boat. It's the Lugo Island engineers' equivalent of the New Yorker's bus, the Parisian's Métro or the Caiifornian's metal monsters of the freeways—the little outboard is for commuting to the job.
10
Jacques Ritzenthaler, photographer and winner of the best-dressed engineer in a DSU A 13 unit award. Note the superbly cut off jeans which allow a naughtily nude suggestion of knee, the salmon-colored T-shirt made of cotton ("matière noble" as the French say) cleverly fashioned so as to leave space for a beer belly—if necessary, the distinguished boots which accentuate a well-
developed foot.
•f'iäti r
Local children from the village across the river like to hang around and watch the work's progress.
The big bird carries the DSU A 13 unit to another location. Jacques Ritzenthaler is no longer inside.
Patrick Allouard Car-ny in a noble attempt to dismount the drum.
Continued on p. 14
11
Setting: The platform known as "Swamp Chief working for the client Elf in Nigeria about one hour by boat from WRT. Two engineers Roger King and Jean-Marc Juliot are startled by the sound of thudding footfalls of VIP
size shoes.
Enter Pierre Carrive, André Salaber and Robert Maestrati.
RK to JMJ: Do you hear the thudding foot falls of VIP-size shoes?
AJS to others: Nothing to it. In my field days [ performed, oh, hundreds of these jobs.. . just a little matter of a sonic and a gamma ray
Elementary, my dear Maestrati . By the way, where's Bellessort?
Dramatis Personae
Roger K i n g Jean-Marc Juliot
Pierre Carrive A n d r é J. Salabet R o b e r t Maestrati
J a c q u e s Bellessort R e n é Heyte
f t - î •
I I - H
B m ©B©
AJS to self: And I thought this would be a routine visit. Where the hell's Bellessort?
In this crucible of pain, many heads of perspiration were dropped on the sonic and the gamma ray, but difficulties were vanquish-ed and the tired men headed back to WRT, picking up on the way Jacques Bellessort, looking cool and refreshed, as he had spent the day swimming and sun-bathing.
Curtain: The jester appears to formulate the moral of the play. (It has to have a moral because ivt' said it was a morality play. And René Heyte is surely the one to teach us about morality.)
JB: Ah. it's great to be back in the field... the smell of the gamma ray... the feel of the sonic! How did it go, by the way?
RM: Silence.
- in order of appearance:
- A n Engineer - A n o t h e r Engineer
- E P S Director of Product ion
" - E A S Vice President -^Nigeria Div is ion M a n a g e r
- Générai M a n a g e r , Afr i ca Region - a Jester (and Warri Distr ict Manager)
(...which, interpreted, means absolutely noth-ing. But then neither does this play. All events are apocryphal except that Salaber, Carrive and Bellessort did visit the Swamp Chief and they did have to tackle some pro-blems with the sonic, and René Heyte con-tributed the pictures.)
Jester: When the butterfly sleeps on the beach, does he flutter his gamma ray? You bet your sweet life he doesn't. And so it is w i t h u s . . .
Jean-François Coulon and Bill, a Mechanic from JVT, discuss how odd it is to have a dry field in Indonesia.
I I
Back at the shop, Supardi and Harri Wuny check over the tools. After all, if the tools don't work, neither can the engineer.
Greta Garbo and Marlene Dietrich, step aside! You've been replaced by R. Moulton, Geolo-tist, and Francis
Toussaint.
Bernard Layan falling asleep to the lullaby of David Mosteller eating ice-cream, ecstatically.
In this photo, Pa-trick AHouard Carny is either coming or going, but he can't remember which or where, perhaps be-cause he forgot.
It looks like a Club Méditerranée village but is in fact the CG G camp about 40 kilometers away from Lugo.
The best view of the island can be had from the top of a coconut tree. Small steps are cut into the bark to make
climbing easier.
IRIAN JAYA (continued)
Although it looks like a Japanese engraving, this is a case of life imitating art. The strange birds of Lugo are enough to make one give up engineering for ornithology.
15
A view of Abidjan tal<en from René's hotel room. The former fisherman's village is now a booming port handling more than 50 ocean-going vessels a day. The country's flourishing coffee and cacao plantations underpin an economy that supports modern apartments
and a flood of automobiles. •
IVORY COAST
Skilled artisans still carve the elephant tusk figurines which gave the ivory Coast its name, but economic advances have altered most of this nation's other tradi-tional ways.
Abidjan, the capital, was a little fisherman's camp at the turn of the century. It now boasts highways with cloverleafs and buildings which may seem more reminis-cent of Miami Beach. Yet, outside the city, hippopota-muses still wallow in sluggish rivers and elephants crash through untamed rain forest, sixty different African lan-guages are spoken and tribes of pygmies still inhabit the region of Man in the west.
Elephants aren't the only species crashing through Ivory Coast's jungles. There is also René Heyte. After his stint as AlV District Manager, René spent his vacation explor-ing the country's interior around the region of Man and Mont Toukoui.
"Say, has anyone seen a branch of the Société Générale?"
mmm
17
You cover a thousand kilometers of jungle trail, and three kilometers from the paved road your car breaks down. René stops at the local mechanic's to see what they can do about a radiator leak. •
IVORY COAST
A bridge made of lianas. Sup-posedly, the village eiders careful-ly guard the secret of construction from the young men. When a bridge is to be built, the old men gather all the vines, then sneak out and build the bridge during the night—during ONE night. The bridge in these pictures is due to be replaced.
It looks dangerous, but René has just watched a woman with a load on her head saunter across with no difficulty at all, sooo...
"i really didn't want to see the other side anyway." René now gives it a teeter-tottering try, but it's not as easy as it looked: the bridge sways, your feet slip through the holes, and all the time the treacherous river (are there crocodiles?) is waiting beneath you.
ÔkAf^Ù HOTEL
PUNCH I want a hundred and twenty-eight get-well cards
Ä11 Thrcw-Away Letters Away t h r w e r s
m-TA M o d i f i c a t i o n No. 7023
Mar.26. \ m
JA
Howard Hughes
Tilg f i e l d sent u i s« ï« cofBplaints having as i u b j e c t tlie unsuff ic lar t t s i z e o f
sew of the i r Trash Baskets, m Lettars which are not thrown away c a r e f u l l y
may Und i n the v i c i n i t y o f the undersized basket and la ter be recovered and
f i l e d by iim&n e r r o r .
Please check your êquif^ïsent. Trash Baskets w i t h a diameter less than 30" and/or
a height less than 20" are to öe thrc»»n away and t o be replaced by na« baskets
type ' l ' (see drawing) .
T-258459
/ \
FOR THE GREEDY
René Heyte, that old bon vivant, has had a brainstorm-or perhaps we should say bellystorm. He would like to start a column in Intercom where gastronomes far and wide could sound off about restaurants they have discovered in Jakarta, Vienna, Timbucktoo... you name it.
Recommended restaurants would be classified according to the food (did you have to have your stomach pumped afterward?), decor (did they give you a knife and a fork?), ambiance (were the topless dancers girls?), and service (did the waiters drop lasagna on your new Yves St. Laurent tie?). We could award one, two or three Schlumberger trucks instead of
stars.
Of course, problems of nationalistic credibility might arise. For example, there are Frenchmen who will not venture into a restaurant without a ritual bow to St. Michelin; and some Americans won't admit that any meat will surpass a Steak THAT Big! (ever tried the grouse in England?). So it is essential that the recommender identify himself. That way the reader will know how big a grain of salt to take with what he's reading.
Perhaps we should also mention, briefly, those feeding holes we would never put foot in again, except to treat our worst enemy to dinner. Readers,
the ball's in your court!
IB-s obsolete îB-i-
The new basket TB- l can be ordered frm TAD on standard Material Order forms.
The îw te r ia l nunüser i s T-256460.
This modi f icat ion i s eompslsery obsolete. Forget i t . Modif icat ion No. ?024
V/1H be sent to you as soon as possib le, provided successful f i e l d t e s t s .
t f t i s pre»infomiat ion w i l l keep you under tens ion - I t w i l l employ the Dotby system.
Groyct^o Green
G6/6S/QG/K/9S
Groucho Green's latest news...
Schlumberger COnReSPONDENCE
DATE Apr i l 13, 1 9 Î 6
TO: N i c o l e Gau th i e r - I n t e r c o m
FROM: M e l G r a y - Johns toa
S U B J E C T :
Chef John Stowell hopes to earn three trucks in the new Intercom International Res-taurant Guide.
N i c o l e , l o r y e a r s I V e e n j o y e d I n t e r c o m - - but I ' v e t e e n d e r e l i c t in m y du ty a e a c o n t r i b c t o r .
L e t m e m a k e a m e n d s , a t l e a s t , m y f i r s t ins ta l lment . E n c l o s e d i s a fu l l page J o h n s t o n ad f o r In te rcom - - a f i r s t , I b e l i e v e !
Yovir a v i d r e a d e r s will love i t ; and t h e i r c l ients will be d e l i g h t e d , too. What
M G î e j t A t t . P . S . i t wi l l con t r ibu te to S c h l u m b e r g e r '
could a s k ?
B e s t r e g a r d s .
Sister companies apply to buy space in Intercom ...and obtain our back-cover thanks to our special treatment.
20
1 farmer threshes wheat
in rural Iran between
Ahwaz and Isfahan.
Ken Lunn is a man of extremes: he spent six years freezing his assets off in the
Canadian Arctic with Schlumherger of Canada before joining
Eastern Hemispheré Wireline as free point back off specialist
in Iran's sun-baked oven A hwaz in March 19 7J.
Here he momentarily dropped the challenges of productionfiçld engineering
to pick up the challenge of the camera. The results. Ken's first
contribution, include some shots taken during a four day trip
with his family to Isfahan as well as of a costume party for Schlumberger and clients
held at the Lunn house in Ahwaz. From the looks of the latter,
we judge that the scenes from this débauché not shown in the
pictures had best be leji to the imagination.
John Aitken, dressed as Socrates or a sack of flour,
ponders how to count 50 rials, while Graeme Dun-
comhe graciously offers John's attire to Judy Corts
in exchange for a drink and Frank Corts (in hat)
warns John that his machismo is showing.
persia oGHsisbs
21
• * • • •
When the party grew dull,
Jacques Pelissier, Mohamed Harichane, Ase Pelissier and
Jean-Paul Menanteau queued
for the gall-bladder opera-
tions which turned out to be
the high point of the evening.
Nancy Lunn, disguised as Nancy Lunn has just discovered the North
Gulf Division Manager disguised
as Roberto Monti.
Daniel Cousquer could not
restrain himself from showing
his appreciation of the cake,
but then, perhaps the idea of
French restraint is a con-
tradiction in terms.
22
Tony Thomasson, AHZ' Main-
tenance Technician, tried to
assume his best behavior for
his first appearance in Inter-
com 's pages.
p<zrsn pGHsisbs
"/i's my wife! She's diguised herself
as an Iranian vaseT René Simond
is dismayed but Jean-Paul Menan-
teau and Ase Pelissier are impress-ed.
A typical rural village on the
road between Ahwaz and Is-
fahan bakes under the pitiless
As you near Isfahan, you cross this
expanse of orchards and farm land in a
fertile plain dotted with pigeon houses.
pGHsia p ^ n s i s b s
John Galvin (now in Egypt) knows that
when you're drinking seriously, it's
prudent to start out on the floor.
2 4
900year old bridge in Isfahan.
One of the country's oldest
cities, Isfahan, with its splendid
monuments and beautiful
natural setting, is sometimes
called the Venice of Iran.
''Well, it could be tobacco...'"
In a teahouse a gracious Ira-
nian offers Nancy Lunn a drag
of his water pipe.
The Iranians are master
craftsmen, each new generation
learning his skills at his father's
feet and using his father's
tools. The objects created by
this silversmith are sold by weight.
On the road the Lunns passed some
interesting piles of dung. The manure
is collected by the local women who
shape it into a sort of pie and then
heap it up to be used as stove fuel.
On another road, an interesting pile
of Jim Jones, AHZ Field Service
Manager, and his new car, which blew
a head gasket on the way to the Pa-
zanun well.
seiiM
« 5 ?
"mm
I pzrsvj pensisbs
The objects created by pigeons in this
tower are used for fertilizing the fields.
Or at least they were until chemical
fertilizers rendered these dovecots obsolete.
26
Local staff Bruin (Mechanic) and Hormoz
(Head Crew) bring in Jim's car. But what
happened to Jim?Maybe he too was left behind
to he used as fuel.
I N BRIJI ÎGH Part IL THE END OF THE
•1^
SCHUJMBER6ER
iy
The bright side of NTC-14. When the eight students who attended the training program which came to an end last December look back on their "good old days" as neophytes with Schlumberger in the North Sea Region, no doubt these colorful images will come to mind, along with (we hope, at least) some recollection of what they have been taught there. True, so far, their souvenirs will not differ much—except for their fellow-student faces—from those of their colleagues of earlier N T C schools. But NTC-14 trainees were granted an extra-bonus—some special memories which none of their predecessors can claim a share in: they have experienced the "end of the beginning," that is, they were the last students to be formed in N T C Delftgau. The school is now closed and they locked the door themselves before their departure. It is these last moments you are invited to relive with them in the following pages.
28
F j ; s C I I L I l l O S C U R O BEGINNING : CLOSING NTC
(Continued)
NTC - HOW IT BEGAN, HOW IT ENDS...
Back i n the mid s i x t i e s , the o i l i n d u s t r y i n t h e Nor th Sea Region was approaching i t s f u l l swing. I t became apparent t o everyone concerned a t Schlumberger t h a t a T r a i n i n g Center f o r NUR shou ld be u r g e n t l y c r e a t e d t o handle the o i l boom i n t h a t p a r t o f the w o r l d .
The ques t began. And, l a t e 1969, l i k e the good f a i r y godmother o f c h i l d r e n ' s s t o r i e s , the NAM company made a proposal : the wel l P i j n a c k e r 12, l o c a t e d i n Delfgauw , 5 k i l ome te rs from D e l f t , i n H o l l a n d , cou ld be used as a t r a i n i n g w e l l . NAM'S o f f e r was accep ted ; Gunter Wawrzeni tz, t he Region Cased Hole s p e c i a l i s t a t t h a t t ime took upon h i s shoulders t h e r e s p o n s i b i l i t y o f t he i n s t a l l a t i o n f o r the new school . He had t o have i t b u i l t and o u t f i t t e d w i t h t o o l s , desks, c h a i r s , f i l i n g c a b i n e t s , s u p p l i e s , and the 1,000-AND-l o t h e r t h i n g s the f i r s t c rop o f NTC t r a i n e e s would need. As f o r P i j n a c k e r , i t was equipped w i t h a brand new t r i p o d , 20 ton s t rong . The opening was o r i g i n a l l y scheduled f o r March 1970, and Gerhard Clauss the "supposed- to-be" f i r s t manager. But d i f f i c u l t i e s arose t o thwar t our p l a n s ; the t own -counc i l ear-marked the zone to become a r e c r e a t i o n a l a rea , and r e s t o r i n g an a c t i v i t y i n the dormant w e l l - s i t e was not very welcome. The a u t h o r i z a t i o n s needed to open the center were hard t o o b t a i n and long t o be r e l e a s e d . . . Months went by. Carl J e n k i n s , second "supposed-to b e - M g r . " , had moved o f f - to inaugura te and manage FTC which was ready e a r l i e r . A n d y e t , how e n t h u s i a s t i c he was , a f t e r h is f i r s t v i s i t t o NTC's s i t e ! We f i n d h i s comments i n an o l d f i e l d r e p o r t : " D e l f t I t s e l f I s a q u i e t town w i t h no d i s t r a c t i o n s . The w e l l - s i t e i s i n the m idd le o f a good f l a t p a r t o f Ho l l and which, a p a r t f rom be ing green, cou ld be a dese r t or the m idd le o f an ocean. NTC has bo th an o f fshore^^opera t ion and a landbase o p e r a t i o n c lose by . " F i f t h and l a s t TC t o be i n s t a l l e d , NTC was more-over t o b e n e f i t f rom the exper ience gained i n c r e a t i n g and runn ing the o the rs - where i t was con f i rmed t h a t t r a i n i n g completed near the f i e l d o f o p e r a t i o n cou ld be even more p r o f i t a b l e than a t the o l d A r g e n t e u l l o r Clamart s c h o o l s . . . F i n a l l y NTC-1 opened i n October 1971, and the^ a c t u a l manager was Claude Jeanblanc. Claude d i d such a long s t i n t a t t h e D e l f t school t h a t he p r a c t i c a l l y earned honorary Dutch c i t i z e n s h i p ! As f o r the h i s t o r i c a l bunch o f s i x s tuden ts who p a r t i c i p a t e d i n the opening o f NTC, f o u r o u t o f them are s t i l l work ing w i t h EAS - bu t no one i s any l onge r i n the Nor th Sea reg ion : Ludwick Dupal i s I n Oman, Jean-Yves Durand I n W a r r i , J im H e r t l e i n i n L i b y a , and Régis Marion i n P o r t - H a r -c o u r t . As f o r Claude Jeanblanc h i m s e l f , he ' s s t i l l i n the t r a i n i n g bus iness as c o - o r d i n a t o r a t MEA. F u r t h e r NTC sessions were i n the hands o f Uwe P f o r t e r and Over Forne , then h is a s s i s t a n t . On the way, NTC setup which was b u i l t to t r a i n s i x s t u d e n t s , had be fo re l ong to s h e l t e r t w e l v e . We were booming as hard as the North Sea hopes. Dear P i j n a c k e r cou ld no longer alone face the needs o f so many young hands and, between the two neighbours who were dreaming o f expending, the r e c r e a t i o n a l area had the best o f i t . F i n a l l y , s i x years a f t e r P i jnacker 12 was tu rned over to Schlumberger by NAM, C h r i s t i a n Campistron and Doug Wyman were teach ing the l a s t bunch o f NTC t r a i n e e s how to run logs i n the w e l l ' s 2,000 s e r v i c e a b l e F t . , and then t o g e t h e r they tu rned t h e i r backs on the o ld chap, and l ocked the doors o f the b u i l d i n g . NTC was ove r . And, l i k e f i v e years e a r l i e r -when i t w a s I n a u g u r a t e d , "the surrounding oountrys-idey
f l a t as a ftannel and criss-crossed with canals,
looked serene - to anyone who hadn't experienced
the velocity of Dutch winter winds. " - N G .
EUR Manager, Ian Strecker has come to give the final lecture, and the atmosphere is weighted with a certain solemnity. The students start their career the same day their school ends its. Today they will receive their first assignment. Ian has written and underlined the word "Honesty on the black-board. He explains what the word means for a Schlumberger
engineer.
"Shall we lower it into the hole?" Italian Rino Bordogna (author of the color pictures, opposite) and English John Hale await instructions about disposal of this desk.
Doug Wyman, Assistant Training Center Manager, answers in the international tongue - s ign language...
2 9
...and then demonstrates the practic-al applications of his theories on desk disposal. Through the win-dow, the typical Dutch countryside in winter—as no painter would be fool enough to paint it.
"Now boys, you see those 300 sacks of concrete in the doghouse trailer? Haul them and stack them up in the classroom. I'll help... by opening the door for you." Learning from their tutor the art of destroying a door with one small screwdriver are, from left, "Ra-dar", another name for Neldon Wagner, Roman Mirzwinski, and
Rino.
The classroom is nearly empty now. Frenchman Henry Braun ponders the fate of one last precious document.
3 0
"Curly" volunteers to test if one can pass through the door without squashing his ears. Behind him, the tripod erected above the well "Pijnacker-12."
THE END OF THE BEGINNING
Hey Neldon, have you got a match?
Meanwhile, at the blackboard, Doug starts writing the moral of the tale. He will soon be aided by a team of enthusiastic volunteer artists (a piece of chalk is lighter than a sack of con-crete, isn't it?)
y; ••••
mmmmsm
ails of them, posing for thei* tutors of 14 weeks.
And there they have from the left, back rows ; John working in Ger-
to Aberdeen, Henri B r a n s ^ l ï Â a ^ i j j ê d ' P a u , Christian €a in (# tro i i , erstoriiilp'; N I C Manager who has changed elmies aiui is now Jn Ahwaz where he has o p S e d a new trMntag center, PTC, and Doug . ^ m a n , who is off in
sunny Spam. Front row: Robin Matyjasek, a Scotsman, also in ,Sp8i^ Ô a v M * ' î | ^ # s ilias reSelwId'^ an assipiment with SWS, Jean-Luc Bourry if In Stawanger, Norway, Radar - o o p s ,
-=Neldon;;Wa|ner ip-Jmuil|en« ^Holland, ä i i ^ Roman Wirzwinski in Al||rdren, Scotland,
lod luck!
CUPID'S CORNER
STORK CORNER
The latest additions hatched in the Schlumberger brood. Maité, a daughter, to Maria-Luisa and Francisco LASA on
February 27, 1976. Francisco's assignment: CIB. A son, François-Jérôme to Joël HACHE and Iiis wife on
February 4, 1976 in Medan, Sumatra where Joël was wi th ITC before his vacation.
A son, Matthias to Gerhard and Anne SCHOLZ on February 6, 1 976 in Singapore. Gerhard's assignment: KAT.
Vololona, a sister for Serge and a daughter for Marc and Ghislaine DUFOUR, born on March 28, 1 9 7 6 in Boulogne,
France. Marc's assignment: HOP. Adaughter, Nathalie, to Gisèle and Charles DURBEC on January
19, 1 9 7 6 in Marseille, France. Charles'assignment: GYT. A l itt le boy, Cyril Dimitr i , to Raoul and Porsavan BROT
on February 20, 1 976 in Palembang, Sumatra.
''L'AMOUR EST SOUVENT LE FRUIT
DU MARIAGE:'
To all this issue's newlyweds we extend our best wishes and offer the above words of encouragement from a most cynical and funny Frenchman, Molière.
From MEA: George RIBBLE and Melanie WRIGHT on July 19, 1975 in Atlanta, Georgia. (To be classified under "better late than never" announcements. ") Jean-Yves ORTOLA and Lucie-Marie C A N D E L A on January 31, 1976 in Nîmes, France.
From FEA: Harvey B R U N T and Jocelyn Frances E D W A R D S on January 24, 1976 in Auck land. New Zealand.
Meet Emmanuel COULON who was born on February 24, 1976 in Singapore. His parents are IVIarie-Rose and Jean-Francois who is assigned to SWi.
"Lazybones, wake up and play w i th me." John Alexander Way (2) can't see what good having a new brother is if he spends all his t ime sleeping. Mark Gregory was born in January in Sumatra where David is on assignment.
34
CHILDREN'S CORNER Happy Bir thday Laura Iris ! Laura Iris Nardella celebrates her birth-day in May. She has lodged an official complaint that Intercom never announced her birth f ive years ago in Caracas. Our excuses, Laura, but you were out of our territory as your Papa was work ing wi th Surenco at the t ime. In the gondola wi th her here are sister, Anne Claudia (8) and Father, Onofr io Nardella, w h o works at our East Asia Division.
J
Low Loo M ing of our Singapore staff (better known to most of you as Jimmy Low) w i th his wi fe Meni and their three little girls. Bun Haï (3), Bun Cun (8) and Bun Di (4).
Chris Bul len (6) tries to assert some mas-culine dominance but Amanda (9), a good feminist, is not letting herself be pushed out of the picture. The Bullens, who were most recently in ABT, have gone State-side, as Buddy was transferred to SWS.
35
... AND MOVES
36
Other bits of tittle-tattle:
f Jacques Jeandel, formerly ME A Training Coordinator, has transferred to Flopétrol and will be based in Melun, France. Warwick ChaSe is in charge of operations from the newly opened base in €ork.
André Roland is in charge of operations at the Walsall base replacing Tim Epresi who is transferred to Schlumberger Well Services. A new head at HOP, temporarily awaiting reassignment is Manfred Halper, who, in the photo below, shows what he left behind in Gabon. From the left, Jenny Taylor, Jacqueline Brie, Manfred, Michèle Courbin and Anita Pila, The occasion of the photo was the first RISE seminar in Gabon, Manfred says. Hmmmm.
In our montage, Manfred Halper plays a set with another authentic champion of the courts, Adrien Gimenez, who is also now assigned to HOP where he has been putting his finger in various pies... a bit of Recruiting here... some Prices and Contracts there... anyone need a tennis tutor?
• 0 0 3 mM
LfJ
'Snow, damn you—SNOW!"
Those engineers who enjoy assignments in w a r m and sunny climates and w h o shiver at the though t of moving to Headquarters, should know tha t w in te r in Paris has its good sides. Here's one: a ski trip to-Leysin, Swi tzer land w i th people f rom rue St. Dominique and Clamart .
A Sch/umberger's winter Olympic team at the start-off Une, from the left: Jean-Max Milcent, Noëlle Dronneau, Danielle Viol, Pierre Carpen-tier, John Stowelland Bernard Bourge (EPS).
3 7
Stina Stowe// demonstrate trying* to ho/d i.waymg train ,
ifkisband Jo/Wi (rfg^ ârf^^^^StarÈ.
steady us FJender (Mm ^ C/7«s E.vàn^d.a^ " ^
narrow train corridm^good excuse tif pet ig^to Ei/eeh
, -3- •
Captain of ttie iet's-sit-the-women-and~dr/nl<-a-be^ __ Kitson (center) surrounded by, front /eft, Hanni Piggin, Ria Kitsorn to Dave's /eft, Noël/e Dronneau, Danief/e Vm^ Phi/ippe Arna! and Pierre Carpentier.
J 8 &
3 l
A second^^ood side to IHe in wintry Paris was a sec^pft**^ ski tr ip, this t ime to Val Thorens.
NoëHe Dronneau, the organizer of the s/<i trip, and Pierre Carpentier against the
vistas of Vai Thorens.
Ria has managed to get Dave up and on his s/<is.
-
' v ' A f ^ " : V ?
Claudette goes couchette hopping. Abandoning her chair outside A.J. Salaber's office, Claudette Nelson pays a visit to the train compartment of Carol and George (SL-Limited) Johnson.
.•.
Dick and Hanni Piggin and Stina Stowell, the photographer photo-
graphed. "Last one out on the slopes is a rotten banana!" John Stowell makes sur it's
not him.
39
DUBBED IN DUBAI Dudley Reed, SGR Manager, recently presented seniority pins to three members of the South Gulf Region staff. After the brief ceremony, the three recipients and their wel l -wishers adjourned to Dubai's Ambassador Hotel for luncheon.
The three honored staff members pictured here w i t h Dudley are, from the lef t : Abdul Rahman - Messenger and Filing Clerk, 5 years; Goblnd Kataria - SGR Accountant , 15 years. Gobind is we l l known to many Schlumberger engineers, having worked in Kuwait, Beirut and Bahrain before moving to Dubai. Maybe it should be called a 16 year pin as Gobind's award was overdue by about one year; Claude Fernandez - Dipmeter computer and statistician, 5 years.
Group portrait of the SGR staff, left to right: V. Nasta, B. Bou-tan, I. Rabbani, C. Fernandez, D. Reed, R. Peter, G. Kataria, Abdul Rahman, H. Fernandezand Bashir.
Local Staff of Abu Dhabi were honored w i th seniority pins, safety pins and words of praise from Robert Charlebois. Co-workers gathered to applaud the recipients, and certain Miles. Charlebois added their charm to the event.
SENIORITY Giambattista Taboga asks Marie-Christine and Jean-Patricl< Lacote what they've put in his drin/c but Francic Bracken (wear-ing sunglasses) seems a more likely culprit.
40
PINS FOR THE ABU DHABOIS
A Mohammed Sharif—Mechanic receives a 10 years seniority pin. Opposite him, with hand to mouth, is Raffi of the Per-sonnel Department, who was awarded a safety pin.
safety pin and For Shahbudeen, handshal<e
safety Eduardo pinnee.
Menezes was The way Raffi rushes up to claim that safety pin makes all the attendants laugh. From the left, Robert Charlebois—Ma-nager, John D'Souza—Sec., Rodrigues— a guest from QTA, Misbah—Operator, Munir—Sonde Tec., Shamsudeen— Mechanic, Sahir—OPE, Prakash—Asst. Sec., Lai Mohamed—Sch. Prs., Vijay— Storeman, Anthony—Operator, andAlavi— Elec. Tech.
Peta Charlebois says it's time to go home but Pia and Katia seem reluctant to leave all the fun.
And a safety pin for Resham Singh.
41
SENIORITY LONDON-SENIORITY FOR SALESMEN
SENIORITY PINS
5 Years Ishak ABDELMALEK (LYT) ABDULLAH FALEH (ARM) ABDULLAH HAMOOD (OMA) ABDULZAHRA JASSEMI (AHZ) LC . AHAOTU (NRD) Anthony AJUNWO (PHT) ALI SA'D BICHI (ARM) Michel BARTHELEMY (EUR) John BRAITHWAITE (GYT) Liliane CHERIERE (HOP) Claude COCHETEL (HOP) José DREVON (IRQ) John D'SOUZA (ADH) EID SALEM (ARM) Catherine GARABELLO (HOP) GHAIB HELAIL(ARM) Wi l l iam HOWELL (APR) Robert JENIN (OFA) Richard KROFT(DUB) LAL MOHAMED (ADH) D. LEES (ABT) Ian LLOYD (SHZ) MOHAMED ASLAM (ADH) Patrick MORHA (WRT) Michael OKOH (PHT) Alphunsus OSUJI (PHT) Monique PITOUS (HOP) REZEO AQUIL(ADH) Hugo SALBRECHTER (DUB) Joëlle SAVARY (AFR) SCHAVENBURG (CED) TULASHKI (NGD) A. WALKER (ABT) 10 Years Victor ANOKUTE (PHT) Youssef JAHANBAKHSHZADEH (AHZ) Jacques SALETES (HOP) 15 Years AMIR FARSHADFAR (AHZ) Hubert d'ARBOIS DE JUB. (UTH) Michel DURAND (BAH) Graeme DUNCOMBE (ARM) Xavier GRANIER (DUB) MOHD. SIDDIQ MIRZA (OMA) Pierre NAUDIN (WRT) OMIDWAR (NGD) Ibrahim ROCKNEY(NGD) Michel ROLAND (NED) Roland VANDENBOSSCHE (BUT) 20 Years Jacques BELLESSORT (AFR) Frederico BIELINSKI (SSL) REICHEL (CED) 25 Years Pierre ENSELME(HOP) Marcel FOURRET(HOP) 3 0 Years Jean GARTNER (HOP)
42
1 - Gene Kauffman sent us the pictures f rom a recent meeting which reunited the Europe Region's sales force. Seated around the post-meeting dinner table are, f rom the foreground left: Peter Udelhoven —Senior Sales Engineer EUR, Jean-Pierre Bellavia—SSE Italy, Johann Draxler— SSE Germany, Jean Suau-SSE London, Ian Strecker-EUR Manager, David Edwards—SSE London, Manfred Wi t t -mann—Marketing Manager EUR, Harry Roberts—SSE ABT, Gene Kauffman—SSE London. 2 - The dinner also served as an occasion to present two of our super salesmen w i th their seniority awards. David Edwards receives a 15 year pin 3 - Jean Suau is awarded for 25 years of service to the company.
GABON
On the occasion of his trip to Gabon in late 1975, André J. Salaber awarded a senior-ity pin to Michel Koumba for 25 years of service. Another Gabonese friend, Jean-Bernard Mihindou, also received his 25 year pin, but unfortunately v/e have no picture of this other celebrity.
This is the oldest house in Chinatown. Made ent i rely of wood, fronn its w indows glows the d im light f rom lanterns and drifts the sweet smell of incense burning.
IGUANA, ANYONE? Singapore "Been away, Marie-Rose?" "Not really... Beirut, Singapore, London..."
During the past year, Marie-Rose Mesnil, whose "home" is normally on the second étage at 42 rue St. Dominique, has been mçst cons-picuous by her absence. Which is why you could often hear the above words being exchanged when our Prodigal Daughter re-turned to our halls. She has been playing a key role in the decentra-lization of personnel records and the setting up of "mini-headquar-ters" for personnel administration for the FEA, MEA and, beginning
now, EUR Regions. The photographs here, which Marie-Rose took during her 3 1/2 months in Singapore, give us a few glimpses of that city which is called "all of the East in one place," as well as a chance to meet the FEA staff, the people who wi l l be following your career moves, inscribing your marriages and children's birth in the records and—of supreme importance-seeing to it that your paycheck
is as fat as it should be.
Sri Mar iamman Temple — the oldest Hindu place of worship in Singapore, al though since 1 850 it has been renovat-ed. Lifelike replicas of animals and deities decorate its archways and roofs. During major festivals visitors can witness
A STROLL THROUGH CHINATOWN
Singapore's Chinatown: a teeming hub of sights, smells and sounds of Asia, where you can stop at a market stall and sample choice mprsels of snake, turtle, flying fox, and every conceivable kind of food, or purchase in the medicine shops any remedy from ginseng to dried sea horses.
Mimmmîêtà» Smmi^
» 1 « « •
i i w p s ,
i | # « ..
W i i p s .
awesome Hindu f i re-walking ceremonies, wh ich are hung in the temp le to be placed The picture shows garlands of f lowers around the necks of statues by the monks.
43
Many of the f lowers which wi l l adorn godly necks come from this vendor.
These too cou ld be worn as neck adornment but eels are probably better used as nou rishment.
IGUANA, ANYONE? Singapore
How about a tasty bite of iguana?
Half a pound of python coming right up !
An apparently ancient Chinese prepares to we igh chunks of iguana for a demanding
customer.
In the foreground among the other eggs are black " 1 0 0 0 year eggs," an expensive delicacy o f fered for special occasions. If pressed, however, most people admit
they are afraid to eat them.
45
»îîïsS
A The City side. Once an orchard of fruit trees and nu tmeg plantations Orchard Road today is one of the most fashionable shopping, hotel and business districts in Singapore. Chi-nese style mansions and empor iums s tand next to art galleries, plush hotels, bistros and bars.
At N° 5 4 5 of the same road, wh ich runs th rough the center of town and leads eventually to the sea, is the Far East Shopping Center wh i ch houses our FEA Region Headquarters on the 9th and 14th f loors; there is no 13th floor because superstit ion would make it hard to f ind renters.
SCHLUMBERGER IN SINGAPORE
The author of the photographs, Marie-Rose Mesnil.
The Pastoral side. The east w indows of the FEA offices look out on this agreeable vista of green. •
46
Tan Shee Ling and Michael Logan, a visitor f rom London. IVIichael has recently been appointed Mgr— EAS Systems and Programming
Representing FEA's Personnel Department, left to right, back row; J im Low, Richard W o n , Michael Logan (now back in London); f ront row: Judy Lee, Margaret Fong, Nancy Lim, Catherine Tan. •
Some glimpses of Nigerian mis-cellany were contributed by Pascal de Sloover the last time he passed through Paris.
One evening, over cof fee, Jacques Bel-lessort, Pascal de Sloover, Hanspeter Rohner and, f rom the back, René Heyte and Michèle de Sloover, grew tired of metaphysics and so instead discussed modes of t ransportat ion f rom WRT to PHT, t w o of our locat ions in Nigeria, •
Not 1856 on the Mississippi, bu t 1 975 on a river in Nigeria. Since Warr i is surrounded by swamp, there are no roads, or very few, so the local f o r m of transport is the water bus, usually f i l led to overflowing. But this is not the way one goes f r o m WRT t o PHT.
Vrrooom I Afr ica Region Managers have their o w n means of transit Nor is this way one goes f rom W R T to PHT.
If you have been reading In te rcom for more than six months, you w i l l recognize this famous scene at Warri Internat ional Airport . This t ime the hands wav ing in farewel l belong to: Patrick Vandenabeele, Brigit te Vandenabeele, Michèle de Sloovar, Paul King, Domin ique Pinnington (now in Paris, David is w i t h CLIC), Jean-François Soum, Ernst Haselbacher (now in Aus-tria), Mar ie-Hélène Soum and Heidi Haselbacher.
The object of all that affection—Jean Philippe Lemoine (Soizic is already
'* inside the plane), who was swi tch-ing f rom Distr ict Manager War r i to Distr ict Manager Port Harcourt . And THIS is the way one goes f rom W R T t o PHT.
Ah I Partir c 'est mourir un peu.
Come on, kitty I Let's go ! •
Theyte gering out fast now!
Our production line has been working night and day making the world's best bridge plugs and
retainers. We can now ship all sizes of Mach II plugs and Hornet II retainers from full inventories
in Houston. W e ' v e always made the best. Now we make enough to take care of all your
customers. Try us! Call Mel Gray or Gil Lamberson in Houston at (713) 494-6161.
We' l l show you.
JOHNSTON
Schlumberger
i
INTERCOM INDEX
A
ALEXANDER, 40
ALI, 48
ALLEN, 10
B
BAIRD, 12
BARBARIT, 12
BARTHELEMY, 48
BAUDOT, 2
BELLAVIA, 48
BELLESSORT, 18-19, 48, 54
BERNARD, 13, 20, 43, 48
BIELINSKI, 48
BORDOGNA, 35
BOURRY, 39
BOUTAN, 46
BRIE, 42
C
CARPENTIER, 43-44
CARRIVE, 18-19
CHARLEBOIS, 46
CLAES, 12
CLAUSS, 35
COURBIN, 42
D
D'ARBOIS, 48
DANIEL, 28
DAVID, 13, 20, 40, 48, 55
DAY, 19, 22, 35, 56
DE SLOOVER, 2, 54
DRAXLER, 48
DREVON, 48
DUFOUR, 40
DUNCOMBE, 48
DUPAL, 35
ii
INTERCOM INDEX
DURAND, 35, 48
E
EDWARDS, 48
ENSELME, 48
F
FERNANDEZ, 46
FINGER, 42
FORNE, 35
FREYSS, 13
G
GARTNER, 13, 48
GAUTHIER, 2
GEORGE, 40, 45
GIMENEZ, 42
GOOD, 14, 34-35, 40-41, 43-44
GRANIER, 48
GREEN, 14, 35, 52
H
HACHE, 40
HALE, 35
HALPER, 42
HARVEY, 40
HEAD, 25, 32-33, 42
HENRY, 36
HEYTE, 2, 18-19, 23, 54
HOUSTON, 56
HOWELL, 48
J
JAN, 9
JEANBLANC, 35
JEANDEL, 42
JEANSON, 12
JOB, 12, 16
JOHNSON, 45
JOHNSTON, 2, 56
JONES, 32
JULIOT, 18
JUNK, 14
K
KAUFFMAN, 2, 48
KING, 16, 18, 55
KITSON, 44
iii
INTERCOM INDEX
L
LACOTE, 46
LAMBERSON, 56
LEE, 53
LEES, 48
LEMOINE, 55
LIM, 53
LLOYD, 48
LONG, 14, 35
M
MAESTRATI, 18
MARION, 35
MESNIL, 2, 49, 52
MICHEL, 48
MISK, 13
MONTI, 28
N
NASTA, 46
NELSON, 45
NORTH, 2, 28, 34-35
O
ONG, 35
P
PAGES, 29, 34
PAUL, 8-9, 28-29, 55
PEASE, 2, 7, 9-10, 12
PELISSIER, 28-29
PETTY, 14
PICARD, 13
PIGGIN, 44-45
PINNINGTON, 55
R
RAHMAN, 46
REA, 35
REED, 2, 46
ROBERTS, 48
ROBIN, 39
ROGER, 10, 13, 18
ROHNER, 54
ROLAND, 42, 48
ROSE, 2, 40, 49, 52
ROSSI, 13
ROUND, 12
iv
INTERCOM INDEX
S
SALABER, 18-19, 45, 48
SAVARY, 48
SCHOLZ, 40
SIMOND, 29
SOUM, 55
STOWE, 44
STOWELL, 2, 45
STRECKER, 12, 35, 48
SUAU, 48
T
TAN, 53
TAYLOR, 42
THOMAS, 14
THOMASSON, 29
TONGUE, 35
TOUSSAINT, 15-16, 20
TRUE, 12, 34
U
UDELHOVEN, 48
V
VANDENABEELE, 55
VANDENBOSSCHE, 48
VERMEER, 9
VIVET, 13
W
WALKER, 48
WARR, 54
WAY, 12, 18-19, 32, 35, 40, 54-55
WOOD, 49
WYMAN, 35