Latest News Updates From George Abry
Peterbilt Retailer Named Top Dealer
His success and his loyalty — both to the industry and the community — earned George F. Grask the ATD Truck Dealer of the Year award for 1999.
April 14, 1999Lift Group Lauds Training Rules
TT File PhotoWhen the Industrial Truck Association meets this week in Washington, D.C., its members will be basking in a victory. The trade group, which represents makers of lift trucks and components, spent the last 10 years trying to get more stringent training standards for forklift operators.
April 13, 1999No Outlet at Truck Stops
No one seems sure why truck stops don’t provide electrical hookups for vehicles to plug into. The idea seems plausible enough.
April 7, 1999No Electrical Outlet at Truck Stops
TT PhotoNo one seems sure why truck stops don’t provide electrical hookups for vehicles to plug into. If outlets for trucks were installed at travel plazas, drivers could plug in like planes do between flights.
April 7, 1999Trucks Add Pull to Cancer Effort
It’s obvious when you step into it that this is no ordinary trailer. It has a reception area, a classroom and even a kitchenette. This trailer is supposed to look good.
March 23, 1999Hurley Dumps LTL Unit for Bigger TL Operation
For more than two decades, William R. Ewing seemed to have made the right choice. What began as a truckload and newspaper distribution operation, called Hurley Transportation Cos. in Phoenix, grew into the largest less-than-truckload carrier in Arizona.
March 17, 1999Supporting the Education of Business
Like many people, trucking executive Russell Gerdin and his wife Ann always wanted to give something back to the community.
March 17, 1999Emery Worldwide Buys Out Partner
Emery Worldwide of Redwood City, Calif., has reached an agreement to acquire the air and ocean freight business of Walsh Western International Ltd., its partner in Ireland.
March 16, 1999Fuel Pumps Are Drying Up Where Owners Didn't Plug the Leaks
Truckers face having parched fuel tanks along a desolate, 100-mile stretch of Interstate 10 in California. Not a single fuel pump could be found on the road between Indio and Blythe because of the enforcement of federal rules regarding underground tanks, according to news reports.
March 9, 1999Fuel Pumps Are Drying Up Where Owners Didn't Plug the Leaks
Diesel was more expensive when stations had to tear out tanks. (TT File Photo)Truckers face having parched fuel tanks along a desolate, 100-mile stretch of Interstate 10 in California. Not a single fuel pump could be found on the road between Indio and Blythe because of the enforcement of federal rules regarding underground tanks.
March 9, 1999Follow Us
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