Page 53: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (November 1971)

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ROBERT MOORE CORPORATION

MARINE ENGINEERS 350 Main Street, Port

Washington, N.Y. 11050 <516) 883-7660

CONSULTANTS

Eastern Representatives:

STAR IRON & STEEL CO.

Tacoma, Washington

Custom Cranes & Hoists • Bridge, Gantry, Portal,

Revolving Container Handling

GUNNAR NELSON

MARINE ELECTRICAL CONSULTANTS

SPECIFICATIONS, SYSTEMS & EQUIPMENT

DESIGN & EVALUATION

COMMERCIAL & NAVAL ALL REGULATIONS 195 Paterson Ave., Little Falls, N.J. 07424 (201) 256-0872

NICKUM & SPAULDING ASSOCIATES, INC.

Naval Architects and Marine Engineers 71 Columbia Street, Seattle, Wash. 98104 (206) 622-4954

OCEAN-OIL INTERNATIONAL

ENGINEERING CORPORATION

P.O. Box 6173, New Orleans, Louisiana 70114, U.S.A.

NAVAL ARCHITECTS • MARINE ENGINEERS

Phone: day or night 504/367-4072 504/366-9998

SYNCROLIFT'

OR YD OC KB AND TRANBFER SYSTEMS

A Patented Product of

PEARLSON ENGINEERING CO.. INC. I

Naval Architects • Marine Engineers

P.O. BOX 8 • 8970 S.W. 87th COURT . MIAMI, FLORIDA33156 I

PHONE: 305/271-5721 • TELEX: 051-9340 • CABLE: SYNCROLIFT

I2!£LFIBREGLASS Sc rvices • Preliminary Design • Engineering/Nav. Arch. • Material & Process Specs. • Ship Alt. Engineering • Materials Conversions • Construction Monitoring • Product Development • Prototypes, Models • Fabrication Arrangements • Repair Surveys • Strength & Aging Testing

SIDNEY MERRITT POLHEMUS

Dr. Fiberglass ® 16 Forest Drive, Centerport, N.Y. 11721 516 AN 1-5412

POTTER & McARTHUR, INC.

NAVAL ARCHITECTS - CONSULTING ENGINEERS

Design • Survey • Brokerage

R&D • Automation • EDP

Marine Management Systems

POMAR Workboats • Yachts

Tugboats • Ferries SALES Marine Equipment 253 Northern Ave., Boston, Mass. 02210 617-542-0850

M. ROSENBLATT & SON, Inc.

NAVAL ARCHITECTS MARINE ENGINEERS

NEW YORK CITY 350 Broadway (212) 431-6900

SAN FRANCISCO 657 Mission St. (415) EX 7-3596

Robert H. Shanley - William F. Yates

CONSULTING ENGINEERS

Cargo Gear, Intermodal Facilities, Bulk Handling

Studies, Design, Modifications 1420 PANORAMA DRIVE (213) 432-1610

PORT OF LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA 90802

GEORGE G. SHARP CO.

MARINE ENGINEERS

NAVAL ARCHITECTS

SYSTEMS ANALYSTS

MARINE SURVEYORS 100 CHURCH STREET NEW YORK, N.Y. 10007 (212) 732-2800

T. 111. SPIIETGEnS

CONSULTING VIBRATION ENGINEER • Torsional Vibration • Hull Vibration • Vibration Isolation Fatigue Stress Analysis 156 W. 8th Ave.

Vancouver 10, Canada 604-879-2974

Our 24th Year

Serving U.S. Clients

R. A. STEARN INC.

NAVAL ARCHITECTS & MARINE ENGINEERS 100 Iowa Street

Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin rielisircl r.

NAVAL ARCHITECTS/MARINE ENGINEERS 44 COURT STREET/BROOKLYN,NEW YORK 11201 (212) 522-2115

H. M. T1EDEMANN & COMPANY, INC.

NAVAL ARCHITECTS—MARINE ENGINEERS

SURVEYORS—CONSULTANTS—R&D 74 TRINITY PLACE

NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10006 (212) 944-5532

WEATHER

Exclusively for the Maritime Industry

WEATHER ROUTING, INC. 90 Broad Street, New York 4, N.Y.

Tel.: HA 5-9644 Cable address: WEATHERWAY

Collins Radio Announces

Management Appointments

Collins Radio Company, Dallas, Texas, has announced three major organizational moves aimed at strengthening its top management team.

D.R. Beall, executive vice president of the

Electronics Group at North American Rock- well Corporation (NR), was named senior vice president at Collins for finance and adminis- tration.

Vice president R.C. Mullaley was promoted to senior vice president for marketing. Domes- tic and international marketing vice presidents will report to Mr. Mullaley.

R.L. Cattoi, a vice president of engineering at Collins, was promoted to senior vice presi- dent, engineering.

President Arthur A. Collins cited Mr. Beall's success in administrative and financial posts at Philco-Ford and NR, and said the execu- tive's addition to Collins corporate manage- ment will strengthen the company's efforts to regain a profitable position.

Mr. Mullaley has been with Collins since 1951 and has experience in broad areas of the company's operations.

Mr. Cattoi, who joined the company in 1950, has had major responsibilities in many of Col- lins engineering activities, including those in- volving aviation and data systems.

Collins also announced the promotion of three men to assistant vice president posts.

They are L.D. Batson, J.L. Churchill and R.R.

Mosier.

Conference To Be Held In April

Covering Pollution Control

And The Marine Industry

The president of the International Associa- tion for Pollution Control, Thomas F.P. Sul- livan, has announced that the annual confer- ence on Pollution Control and the Marine In- dustry will he held on April 20-21, 1972, at the

Rivergate Auditorium in New Orleans, La.

T'he conference will cover legislation, regula- tions, standards, enforcement procedures, re- search and technology, and future concepts for environmental conservation.

The conference will be of an interdisciplinary nature, so numerous other concerned associa- tions are being invited to participate along with Federal, state and local government of- ficials. The program will be directed at middle management in the marine field. Vessel own- ers, operators, shipbuilders, naval architects, marine suppliers, port and terminal operators and others in the marine field will be in at- tendance. There will be several hundred ex- hibits to complement the comprehensive con- ference program, which was attended by ma- rine specialists from all over the world last year. Further details may be obtained by con- tacting Carolyn Bloch, IA PC Headquarters,

Suite 700, 4733 Bethesda Avenue, N.W., Wash- ington, D.C. 20014.

Roger Sommer To Head

European Operations For

Western Gear Subsidiary

Roger D. Sommer, formerly industrial re- lations manager of Western Gear Corporation at its Lynwood, Calif., headquarters, has been named vice chairman of the board of directors of Western Gear Europe, S.A., in Belgium.

Mr. Sommer will direct Western Gear activi- ties in all European countries and in South

Africa from offices located at Transvaalstraat 7, B-2600 Berchum-Belgium, near Antwerp.

Initially, Mr. Sommer will concentrate on sales and" service activities for Sky Climber,

Inc., a Western Gear subsidiary which manu- factures powered platforms and scaffold hoists widely used in construction and building main- tenance ; and Graphic Artis Division, maker of an extensive line of quality offset printing presses and business forms equipment and col- lating systems. He will report to Western

Gear senior vice president Charles F. Bannan, board chairman of Western Gear Europe, S.A.

Mr. Sommer has a B.S. degree in business administration from Northwestern University, and a master's degree in industrial relations from Cornell University. He has been with

Western Gear since 1964.

FIRST OF SIX: The first of six new PACECO SHIPSTAIN-

ERS® for K-Lines of Japan is shown being lifted intact to its new home on the deck of the Oregon Maru docked in the Port of San Francisco. The SHIPSTAINERS, especially designed shipboard container handling cranes from Paceco, a Division of Fruehauf Corporation, Ala- meda, Calif., were ordered by K-Lines earlier this year for installation aboard its three modified containerships.

Each of the six cranes being installed fore and aft on the three vessels has the ability to load and unload an average of 32 containers, or 800 to 900 tons of con- tainerized cargo, per hour. The PACECO SHIPSTAINERS are designed with cantilevers on each side, giving1 them an outreach of 23 feet so that they can load and unload onto the pier from either side of the ship. Once the ship leaves port, the cantilevers fold completely within the crane's gantry frame for compact storage. The Oregon

Maru and its two sister ships will inaugurate K-Lines' new container service between the United States and

Southeast Asia this fall. Sailings are scheduled for every 1 5 days.

November 1, 1971 53

Maritime Reporter

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