Page 4th Cover: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (November 15, 1977)

Read this page in Pdf, Flash or Html5 edition of November 15, 1977 Maritime Reporter Magazine

Alaska Maritime

Names William Lorch

Valdez Port Manager

William C. Lorch has joined

Alaska Maritime Agencies, Inc., as Valdez port manager, accord- ing to an announcement by David

R. Enroth, general manager of the Seattle, Wash.-based steam- ship agency. Mr. Lorch served previously with Cascade Shipping

Company in various managerial capacities.

In his new position, Mr. Lorch will have complete responsibility for the company's new branch headquarters at Valdez, Alaska.

Mr. Lorch holds a Bachelor of

Science degree from the U.S. Mer- chant Marine Academy at Kings

Point, and a Master of Arts degree from the University of

Washington. Mr. Lorch also sailed as a licensed deck officer for Sea-

Land Service, Inc.

Mr. Lorch is joined at Valdez by Lee R. Doering, Dennis P.

Clark, and Patrick G. Tobin. Mr.

Doering is a former Coast Guard officer, and a deck watch officer with the National Oceanic and

Atmospheric Administration. Mr.

Clark was formerly associated with the Furness Interocean Cor- poration of San Francisco. Mr.

Tobin joins Alaska Maritime from the operating staff of Kerr Steam- ship Company, Inc., and prior to that worked in the Far East for an extended period of time.

Alaska Maritime has been han- dling tankers that call at the

Alyeska Marine Terminal since the first Prudhoe Bay crude oil arrived at Port Valdez on July 28, 1977. In addition, they had re- sponsibility to the Standard Oil

Company of Ohio for the pilot training program, which qualified more than 60 shipmasters for pi- lotage from Cape Hinchinbrook to

Rocky Point.

No. New England Section

Of ASNE Reports On

Two Technical Sessions

The American Society of Naval

Engineers (ASNE), Northern

New England Section, had their

September dinner meeting at the

Officer's Club, Portsmouth Naval

Shipyard.

Pictured above during the September meeting, left to right: ASNE Program chairman Comdr. Peter T. Tarpgaard; guest speaker Comdr. T. Martin, Com- manding Officer of USS Constitution, and ASNE chairman Harold Neville.

Guest speaker for the meeting was Comdr. T. Martin, USN, 57th

Commanding Officer of the USS

Constitution. Commander Martin spoke of the recent restoration of his ship "Old Ironsides," which was accomplished during his com- mand and under his direction. The restoration was the fifth in the long career of the Constitution and took 39 months to complete at a cost of $4.4 million. Com- mander Martin had slides show- ing the various stages of the ship's overhaul and spoke of the problems encountered, some not very common in today's modern

Navy. Restoration was completed on June 30, 1976, ensuring the continued presence of the Con- stitution for future generations.

For the October meeting, ASNE had the honor of having Capt.

Harry Jackson, USN (ret.), who spoke on the "Development of the

Design for the SSBN," a very interesting topic.

Captain Jackson, former De- sign Superintendent and Planning

Officer at Portsmouth, had a dis- tinguished career in the field of submarine design which spanned one of the most dynamic and creative periods in the history of shipbuilding. He actively partic- ipated in all phases of the evolu- tion of the submarine from the fleet type to the modern nuclear submarine of today. One of the most important of these projects was the design of the Ballistic

Missile Submarine. The group heard a first-hand account of the development of the SSBN design, from the earliest studies to the 16-missile design.

The LcTourncau Pif fcrcncc:

Total Crane Ability.

LeTourneau PCM-120 AS Rugged, dependable variable radius pedes- tal crane. Handles materiel, cargo, construction and operational lifts for offshore and other marine operations. 1200 Ft. Tons capacity. Optional boom length 60' to 120' (18288mm to 36576mm). All-electric. Optional central cab on machinery house or remote control. Minimum tail swing.

LeTourneau LeTro-Pik Lift, travel, steer simultaneously. Combines capacity of heavy-duty stationary crane with maneuverability of a yard crane. Load capacity 87,000 lbs. at four feet clear reach (39455kg at 1219 mm).

LeTourneau PCM-80 Adaptable, high capacity, full revolving pedestal crane. Specially developed to handle materiel, cargo, construction and operational lifts for offshore and other marine operations. Remote or machinery house-mounted controls. Optional boom length 50' to 100' (15240 mm and 30480 mm). Capacity 50,000 lbs. (22680 Kg).

LeTourneau PCM-350 Heavy lift 3500 Ft. Tons capacity. Variable radius pedestal or barge crane mount. 120,000 lbs. at 58' (54432kg at 17678mm). Boom length to 125' (38100mm). Two and one half revolu- tions limit to limit or 1 Vi revolutions either direction.

Capability. No other crane manufacturer offers you the experience and diversity of products that

LeTourneau offers you. From the design, engi- neering and manufacturing of entire systems, to the sale of special equipment for specific needs, our 'crane ability' has been proven over and over again on hundreds of installations.

So whatever your needs may be— offshore or onshore, high or low capacity, stationary, swing or moveable — contact the people who know the difference. Write or call: Marathon LeTourneau

Company, P. O. Box 2307, Longview, Texas 75601 (214) 753-4411 .Subsidiary of Marathon

Manufacturing Company. ® marathon

LeTourneau PCM-120 AS

LeTourneau LeTro-Pik

LeTourneau PCM-350 LeTourneau PCM-80 36 Maritime Reporter/Engineering News

Maritime Reporter

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