Page 44: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (October 1980)
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54th Propeller Club
Convention Calendar (continued from page 46)
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9 9:00 a.m.
Second Conference Session
Presiding, Sidney D. Campbell, Conference
Chairman 9:00-10:30 a.m.
Conference Panel "Omnibus Maritime Legislation—Where Is It?"
Moderator, Ernest J. Corrado, Assistant to the President, American Institute of Mer- chant Shipping, Washington, D.C.
Panelists: "Maritime Legislation •— An Overview"
Jack E. Sands, Deputy Counsel, Committee on Merchant Marine & Fisheries, U.S.
House of Representatives, Washington,
D.C.;
John D. Hardy, Staff Counsel, Subcommittee on Merchant Marine and Tourism, U.S.
Senate, Washington, D.C. "Regulatory Reform in Maritime Legislation"
Thomas F. Moakley, Vice Chairman, Federal
Maritime Commission, Washington, D.C. "Promotional Reform in Maritime Legislation"
Robert J. Blackwell (Former Assistant Sec- retary for Maritime Affairs), Attorney, Bogle & Gates, Washington, D.C. 10:45-11:45 a.m.
Conference Panel "International Maritime Regulation — Impact on U.S. Merchant Marine"
Moderator: Emanuel Rouvelas, Attorney,
Preston, Thorgrimson, Ellis, Holman &
Fletcher, Washington, D.C.
Panelists: "International Conventions the American
Merchant Marine"—G.P. Steele, President,
Interocean Mgmt. "U.N. Conference on Trade & Development—
Impact on U.S. Merchant Marine"—Robert
S. Agman, Co-Director, Labor-Management
Maritime Committee, Washington, D.C. "The U.S. Fishing Industry and Fishing Reg- ulation"—Lucy Sloan, Executive Director,
National Federation of Fishermen,
Washington, D.C. 11:45 a.m.
Luncheon Reception
TELLS ALL
One of the main reasons that our
ESZ-4000 is the world's fastest- , selling satellite navigator is L because it tells everything you J| want to know — without even being asked.
Every detail of where you are and where you're headed is constantly dis-E layed. Including position, time, speed, eading, and course and distance to any one of nine prestored waypoints.
And with the push of a single button, you can read the next ten satellite passes and the last six fixes.
THE INSIDE STORY.
Automatic inputs from speed log and gyro are standard, not optional.
And between satellite fixes, the
ESZ-4000's computer updates your ship's position every 10 seconds, using computed set and drift to make sure dead-reckoned position is as accurate as possible.
The more accurate the navigator, the more miles you'll save. The more time. And fuel, in fact, a large vessel or that it's been type approved by the Norwegian Maritime
Directorate, the Deutscnes Hydro- may save the cost of the ESZ-4000 in the course of a single voyage.
No wonder Navidyne has sold more
ESZ-4000s than any other single model on the market.
WAIT THERE'S MORE.
We haven't begun to talk about our graphisches Institut (DHI), and meets all U.S. Coast Guard requirements.
So contact Navidyne Corporation, 11824 Fishing Point Drive, Newport
News, VA 23606 USA. Telephone: (804) 874-4488. Telex: 82-3653 (NAVIDYNE NPNS).
And get the whole story on the way
Navidyne is building the most advanc-^(SgggS electronics today. 12:30 p.m.
American Marine Industries Luncheon
Presiding: Richard Dale Smith, Executive
Director, Port of Tacoma, General
Co-chairman
Speaker: John T. Gilbride, Chairman, Todd
Shipyards Corporation, One State Street,
New York, N.Y. 10004 7:00-11:00 p.m.
Tacoma Night Activities—Business Suits
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10 9:00-11:45 a.m.
Third Conference Session
Presiding, Sidney D. Campbell, Conference
Chairman 9:00-10:15 a.m.
Conference Panel "Marine Propulsion—And The Energy Crisis"
Moderator: Charles Zeien, President, J.J.
Henry Company, Inc., New York, N.Y.
Panelists: "Our Merchant Marine, Fuel Costs and Avail- ability"—Prof. Jose Feminia, State Univer- sity of N.Y. Maritime College, Fort Schuyler,
Bronx, N.Y. "Nuclear Ship Propulsion—Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow"—Max T. Johnson, Gen- eral Manager, Advanced Energy Systems,
Westinghouse Electric Corp., Largo, Pa. "Fossil Fuels for Marine Propulsion—An Out- look"—William G. Bullock, Chief, Division of Engineering, Maritime Administration,
U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington,
D.C. 10:30-11:45 a.m.
Conference Panel "The User Charge—For Rail and Domestic
Waterborne Shipping Services"
Moderator: Thomas B. Crowley, President,
Crowley Maritime Corporation, San
Francisco, Calif.
Panelists: "Rail and Water Shipping Subsidies—A Com- parison" — H.J. Bobzien Jr., President,
American Commercial Barge Line Co., Jef- fersonville, Ind. "Needed—A Consistent Tax Policy for Water and Rail Transportation"—John A. Creedy,
President, Water Transport Association,
New York, N.Y. 11:45 a.m.
Luncheon Reception 12:30 p.m.
American Merchant Marine Conference
Luncheon
Presiding, Sidney D. Campbell, Conference
Chairman
Conference Summary: Sidney D. Campbell,
Conference Chairman
Speaker: The Honorable Samuel B. Nemirow,
Assistant Secretary for Maritime Affairs,
U.S. Department of Commerce, Washing- ton, D.C. 2:30
Final Convention Business Meeting 7:30 p.m.
Annual Banquet of The Propeller Club of The
United States and American Merchant Ma- rine Conference—-(Dining, Dancing, Enter- tainment. Formal dress optional)
New Spare Parts Firm-
Scandinavian Marine-
Formed By Ray Cole
Ray Cole, formerly associated with Ampower Corporation as ma- rine marketing manager, has an- nounced the formation of Scandi- navian Marine Services, Inc. The new company will concentrate on assisting shipowners' require- ments in the area of machinery spare parts. It will act as pur- chasing agents on behalf of these owners, and utilize Mr. Cole's ex- tensive knowledge of the Scan- dinavian and European marine diesel and machinery supply mar- kets. In addition, sophisticated systems are being developed to coordinate and refine delivery re- quirements, with the ultimate goal of reducing delivery costs (par- ticularly air freight) substanti- ally.
At present, the company is op- erating at 11 Lincoln Avenue,
Westwood, N.J. 07675, with tran- sition to larger headquarters ex- pected by January 1981. Mr. Cole can be contacted at (201) 664- 3145 for further details regarding his approach to specific cost re- ductions.