Page 20: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (April 1971)

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Steuart Receives MSB

Approval In Principle

For Three Tankers

The Maritime Subsidy Board has approved in principle an ap- plication from Steuart Investment

Company, Piney Point, Md., for a construction subsidy to aid in the building of three 78,000-dwt tank- ers.

Newport News Shipbuilding and

Dry Dock Company, Newport

News, Va., will construct the tank- ers at a total cost of $68.25 million.

The ships, which will carry heat- ing and industrial fuel oil from

Curacao to Steuart's petroleum ter- minal on the Potomac River at

Piney Point, Md., represent the

Prst new construction award under the 1970 Merchant Marine Act since its signing last October.

They are also the first ships to be procured through the negotiated bidding process authorized by the new bill.

According to William B. Ewers, general maritime counsel for Steu- art, when the three ships are in service, they will almost entirely eliminate the 53 voyages per year which foreign vessels have made to

Piney Point. One of the chief rea- sons for the new maritime pro- gram has been to increase the amount of American foreign trade carried in United States ships.

Master Contracting

Stevedore Association

Elects Redlich Pres.

C.R. Redlich

C.R. Redlich, president of Ma- rine Terminals Corporation of San

Francisco, has been elected presi- dent of the Master Contracting

Stevedore Association of the Paci- fic Coast. He succeeds George

Schirmer, board chairman of the

California Stevedore & Ballast Co., who served as the association's president for the past 10 years.

Other officers of the MCSA elect- ed at the group's 10th annual mem- bership meeting held at Pebble

Beach, Calif., on March 7, were: first vice president, J.C. Hering, chairman of W.J. Jones & Son,

Inc. of Portland; second vice presi- dent, Clayton R. Jones, president of Jones-Rothschild of Portland; third vice president, John A. Hy- land, president of Crescent Wharf & Warehouse Co. of Wilmington,

Calif.; fourth vice president, Ches- ter Eschen Jr., president of Cali- fornia Stevedore & Ballast Co. of

San Francisco; treasurer, William

G. Fahy Jr., secretary-treasurer of the San Francisco Stevedoring Co.,

Inc.

Newly elected as directors of the association, in addition to Mr.

Jones, Mr. Eschen, Mr. Hering and

Mr. Hyland, were: Fred R. Smith, president of the Seattle Stevedor- ing Co.; Neil Whisnant, president of Brady-Hamilton Stevedore Co. of Portland; Leslie M. Westfall, president of Westfall Stevedore

Co. of Eureka, Calif., and Capt.

John H. Anthony, president of

Metropolitan Stevedore Co. of

Wilmington, Calif. 22 Maritime Reporter/Engineering News

New Limitorque XPM valve opera- tors control cargo flow.

The new Limitorque XPM is the first electro-mechanical water- tight valve operator developed specifically for safe, dependable and economical cargo handling on tankers and barges. The new device not only meets U.S. Coast

Guard safety standards, but is also watertight and structurally strong to withstand the force of angry seas.

The first ship to be equipped with Limitorque XPM operators is the new 76,500-dwt Esso San

Francisco, shown on sea trials, above. One man at a central con-

This operator controls a tank valve deep in the hull. trol station can operate all cargo- handling valves for 21 tanks, so that her full 650,440-bbl cargo can be loaded or unloaded in less than 18 hours.

The basic design for the Limi- torque XPM represents a new refinement of the Limitorque

SMB, already world-famous for dependability in propulsion-sys- tem service on more than 80% of automated U.S. merchant ships.

The Esso San Francisco is the first of three new Limitorque- equipped sister ships to be built

Remotely-controlled manifold valves on deck. by Avondale Shipyards. Each will have approximately 100

Limitorque XPM valve opera- tors on deck, and up to 50 Limi- torque Model SMB operators in propulsion and steering systems.

If you want the best in valve- operation automation, specify

Limitorque. Write for engineer- ing and performance data, and complete catalog information.

Limitorque Corporation, Dept.

MTR36, King of Prussia, Pa. 19406.

LIMITORQUE

VALVE CONTROLS

Marine Square Club

To Hold Annual Dinner

In New York April 17

The Marine Square Club, Incorpo- rated, announces its 43rd Annual

Dinner-Dance to be held on Saturday,

April 17, 1971 in the Grand Ballroom of the Hotel Commodore, 42nd Street and Lexington Avenue, New York

City.

A reception is scheduled for 7:30 p.m., with dinner following at 8:30 p.m. Dress is formal. The charge of $22.50 per couvert includes gra- tuity.

Checks should be made payable to

Marine Square Club, Inc., and mailed to George M. Huff, P.O. Box 52,

Bayonne, N.J. 07002.

The net proceeds for this dinner- dance will be given to the scholarship fund of the New York State Mari- time College.

Maritime Reporter

First published in 1881 Maritime Reporter is the world's largest audited circulation publication serving the global maritime industry.