Page 18: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (January 15, 1983)
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Joseph Farrell Selected
As New AWO President
Joseph A. Farrell III
Joseph A. Farrell III has been selected as the next president of
The American Waterways Oper- ators, Inc. (AWO), the national trade association for the U.S. barge and towing industry.
Mr. Farrell comes to AWO from Pullman Power Products
Corporation, where he served as senior vice president. His expe- rience also includes eight years as administrative assistant to
Senator Charles H. Percy (111.), five years with the Peace Corps, and a 12-year career as an officer in the U.S. Navy. "The breadth and quality of
Joe Farrell's background will be assets to the association as it faces some crucial tests in 1983 and beyond," AWO chairman
Thomas L. Gladders said. "His experience in management and
Congressional affairs—combined with his dynamic nature—make him the right man for the job."
Mr. Gladders headed a search committee that undertook an ex- tensive review of candidates for the position. The selection of Mr.
Farrell was ratified by the AWO board of directors at its recent quarterly meeting in New Or- leans.
Mr. Gladders said that the barge and towing industry "is battling for its economic life right now. We face not only the adverse consequences of poor eco- nomic conditions, but also the threat of increased user taxes, as proposed by the Reagan Admin- istration. The association must have the best possible leadership during this period."
As senior vice president for
Pullman Power Products Corpo- ration for the last two years, Mr.
Farrell was responsible for the development and implementation of long-range planning for the company, which is headquartered in Williamsport, Pa. From 1977 to 1980, he served as vice presi- dent-government affairs for Pull- man, Inc., and handled its Wash- ington operations, including re- view of Congressional and federal agency activities.
Mr. Farrell served as Senator
Percy's administrative assistant from 1969 to 1977. His work with the Peace Corps, from 1964 to 1969, included one and one-half years as director of the program in Honduras and, later, adminis- trative positions with the agency in Washington, D.C.
As a naval officer from 1952 to 1964, Mr. Farrell served on six warships—a destroyer, a cruiser, and four submarines, three of which were nuclear powered. He served as chief engineer of the submarine "Seadragon" on the first Atlantic to Pacific polar transit.
Mr. Farrell is a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy and also attended Brown University.
He succeeds Anthony L. Kucera, who resigned last month. Mr.
Farrell assumed his new position in early January.
Navy Awards $1.87-Million
Crane Contract To Clyde
A $1.87-million contract from the U.S. Navy for lease of two shipyard gantry cranes has been awarded to the Clyde Division of the Koehring Group of AMCA
International Corporation, ac- cording to an announcement by
Koehring.
The cranes, which are of a new design, designated by Clyde as the Model CBW-8800, will have a lifting capacity of 50,000 pounds at a 100-foot radius, and will be equipped with 120-foot booms plus 20-foot jibs, Clyde said.
Scheduled for delivery to the
Norfolk Shipyard in mid-1983, the cranes will be built at the
Clyde plant in Duluth, Minn.
A leading manufacturer of re- volving Whirley cranes and other specialized equipment for lifting and pulling extremely heavy loads, Clyde is one of the Koeh- ring group of operating units of
AMCA International. AMCA In- ternational is a worldwide pro- ducer of a broad range of indus- trial products, construction equip- ment, engineering and construc- tion services, and machine tools.
Sperry Awarded $31-Million
Contract Modification For
Materials Handling System
Sperry Corporation, Sperry
Systems Management Division,
Great Neck, N.Y., has been awarded a $31-million firm-fixed- price modification to a previously awarded letter contract for the installation of a Naval Integrated
Storage Tracking and Retrieval
System (NISTARS), a computer- ized, process-controlled, auto- mated materials handling/ware- house system, at the Naval Sup- ply Center, San Diego. Work will be performed at Great Neck (10 percent), and Naval Supply Cen- ter, San Diego, Calif. (20 per- cent), and the balance at 50 var- ious contractor locations. The
Naval Supply Systems Command,
Washington, D.C., is the contract- ing activity (N00228-80-C-UQ06).
Sonat Offshore Drilling
Sets World Record
A new world's record for deep- water drilling has been set by the drillship Discoverer Seven
Seas, part of the Sonat Offshore
Drilling fleet. The well, in the
Mediterranean off the southern coast of France, is being drilled in 5,624 feet of water.
The Discoverer Seven Seas held the previous drilling record set in 1979 in 4,876 feet of water off the coast of Canada. The ex- ploratory well GLP-1, is being drilled in French waters for the
French energy firms Total, Elf
Acquitane, and Esso's French affiliate. The deepwater well is part of an exploration program to inventory France's oil and gas resources in the western Mediter- ranean.
Sonat Offshore Drilling reports that the record well is located about 70 miles south-southwest of Marseilles. Another well is scheduled to be drilled nearby for the same parties in a water depth of 4,500 feet.
En-Mar Resources Opens
Headquarters In Houston —Brochure Available
En-Mar Resources, Inc., a new- ly formed energy and marine transportation consulting firm,
The Engineering Department of the State University of New
York Maritime College, Fort
Schuyler, Bronx, N.Y., recently held the dedication of its newly constructed ship model basin.
Prof. Jose Femenia, chairman of the college's engineering de- partment, announced that its availability adds another dimen- sion to the college's highly-ranked naval architecture and ocean en- gineering curricula. The tank al- lows students and faculty to be- come more closely involved in has opened its headquarters in
Houston, Texas.
Randolph L. Kelley, En-Mar's president, recently announced the firm was formed to provide pro- fessional, technical, and nontech- nical services to companies op- erating the oil, gas, and marine transportation industries.
Mr. Kelley, who was formerly with the El Paso LNG companies for the past 16 years, reported that the firm will specialize in assisting firms concerned with the purchase, marine transporta- tion, and sale of energy. A bro- chure is available describing En-
Mar's range of services.
For a free copy,
Write 46 on Reader Service Card
Todd Pacific Receives $8-Million Contract
Increase For PSA Work
Todd Pacific Shipyards Corpo- ration, Los Angeles Division, San
Pedro, Calif., has been awarded a $8,261,583 face-value-increase to a previously awarded cost- plus-fixed-fee contract for indus- trial work to be accomplished during post shakedown availabil- ity (PSA) for FFG-19. The Su- pervisor of Shipbuilding, Conver- sion, and Repair, Naval Station,
Long Beach, Calif., is the con- tracting activity (N00024-80-G- 2145). hydrodynamic experimentation related to ships and offshore drilling rigs.
The ship model basin was de- signed and constructed by the staff of the SUNY Maritime Col- lege's engineering department.
The basin and ancillary equip- ment were purchased with non- state funds, mainly from the
Alumni Association college sup- port drive, from the Maritime
College at Fort Schuyler Foun- dation, and from the National
Science Foundation.
Ship Model Basin Dedicated
At N.Y. State Maritime College 20 Maritime Reporter/Engineering News