Page 15: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (February 15, 1983)

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Chief, Office of Marine Environment and Systems, United States Coast

Guard

Dick Whittington, P.E., Regional Admin- istrator, Region VI, United States

Environmental Protection Agency

Richard K. Meyers, 1983 Oil Spill Con- ference Chairman, American Petrole- um Institute (Texaco Inc.) 9:45 a.m. River Room

Session 1: International

Contingency Planning (A Panel Discussion)

Chairman: Captain Charles R. Corbett,

U.S. Coast Guard, Washington, D.C.

Vice Chairmen:

William L. Berry, Shell Offshore, Inc.,

New Orleans, Louisiana

Eleanor Swett, Offshore Devices, Inc.,

Peabody, Massachusetts

Panel Members:

Yoshio Sasamura, International Maritime

Organization, London, England

Captain Jose Orozco Peralta, Mexican

Navy, Mexico City, Mexico

David E.A. Barratt, Canadian Coast

Guard, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

Chris Carven, Exxon Corporation, New

York, New York 9:45 a.m. Mission Room A

Session 2: Underground Spills

Chairman: Thomas Massey, U.S. Envi- ronmental Protection Agency, Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania

Vice Chairman: Millard F. Smith, Slick- bar, Inc., Southport, Connecticut

Case History — OPEC in Southern Idaho

James C. Willmann, U.S. Environmental

Protection Agency, Seattle, Washington

Case History — Underground Oil Spill

Investigation and Cleanup

David Mclntyre, U.S. Environmental Pro- tection Agency, Lexington, Massachu- setts

A Case History: Cleanup of a Subsurface

Leak of Refined Product

Edward M. Minugh, Environmental Emer- gency Services Company, Portland, Ore- gon; Dorothy A. Keech, Chevron Oil

Field Research Company, La Habra, Cal- ifornia; Jeffrey J. Patry, Chevron U.S.A.,

Inc., Concord, California; William R.

Leek, Chevron U.S.A., Inc., San Fran- cisco, California 9:45 a.m. Mission Room B

Session 3: Dispersants I

Chairman: Gerard P. Canevari, Exxon

Research and Engineering Company,

Florham Park, New Jersey

Vice Chairman: Leo T. McCarthy, Jr.,

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,

Edison, New Jersey

Dispersant Use Guidelines for Federal

Regions IX and X

Randall W. Smith, U.S. Fish and Wildlife

Service, Sacramento, California; Robert

Pavia, National Oceanic and Atmospheric

Administration, Seattle, Washington

Dispersion of Chemically Treated Crude

Oil in Norwegian Offshore Waters

Rainer G. Lichtenthaler and Per S.

Daling, Central Institute for Industrial

Research, Oslo, Norway

Review of United Kingdom Oil Spill

Response Techniques and Equipment

Douglas Cormack, Department of Trade,

London, England 10:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m. North Exhibit Hall

Poster Session A

Chairman: John S. Farlow, U.S. Environ- mental Protection Agency, Edison,

New Jersey

Vice Chairman: E.D. Parker, Marathon

Oil Company, Houston, Texas 10:00 a.m.-10:45 a.m. Use of Dracone

Barges: A Case History

February 15, 1983

Peter A. Brunk, Industrial Marine

Service, Inc., Norfolk, Virginia 10:45 a.m.-11:30 a.m. Transfer and

Storage Systems for the Alaskan

Beaufort Sea

Paul C. Deslauriers, Marine Consult- ants, Anchorage, Alaska 1:30 p.m.-2:15 p.m. A Field Testing and Assessment of Oil Dispersant

Efficiency

J.P. Desmarquest, J. Croquette and

F. Merlin, CEDRE,, Brest, France; C.

Bocard and C. Gatellier, Institut

Francais du Petrole, France 1:30 p.m.-2:15 p.m. Underground Gas- oline Spill Recovery: A Blending of Sci- ence and Engineering

Robert W. Castle, Carl F. Foget and

Martin A. Cramer, Woodward-Clyde

Consultants, Walnut Creek, California 2:15 p.m.-3:00 p.m. The Development of a Dispersant Applicator for Cleaning

Oiled Sediments

James Glasgow and Douglass Gleason,

Maine Department of Environmental

Protection, Portland, Maine 3:00 p.m.-3:45 p.m. Emulsions and

Debris Tests at OHMSETT

Anibal Diaz, Mason and Hanger-Silas

Mason Company, Inc., Leonardo, New

Jersey 3:45 p.m.-4:30 p.m. In Situ Sampling for Trace Hydrocarbons

David R. Green and Blair Humphrey,

Seakem Oceanography Ltd., Sidney,

British Columbia, Canada 3:45 p.m.-4:30 p.m. EPA/API Standard

Reference Oil Program

Leo T. McCarthy, Jr., U.S. Environ- mental Protection Agency, Edison,

New Jersey and J.R. Gould, American

Petroleum Institute, Washington, D.C. 12:00 noon North Banquet Hall

LUNCHEON

Admiral James S. Gracey, Commandant

United States Coast Guard 1:30 p.m. River Room

Session 4: Contingency Planning 1

Chairman: Captain Gerald J. Hinson,

U.S. Coast Guard, Corpus Christi,

Texas

Vice Chairman: Pat O'Brien, Chevron

U.S.A., San Francisco, California

Oil Spill Contingency Planning for

Georges Bank

Elmer P. Danenberger, U.S. Department of the Interior, Hyannis, Massachusetts;

Captain R. Barry Eldridge, U.S. Coast

Guard, Boston, Massachusetts; Marshall

Crocker, Halliburton Services, Duncan,

Oklahoma

Probability of an Oil Spill on the St.

Marys River

Robert H. Schulze, ARCTEC, Inc., Co- lumbia, Maryland

New Directions in Navy Spill Contingency

Planning

Paul J. Yaroschak, U.S. Naval Facilities

Engineering Command, Alexandria, Vir- ginia

An Environmental Impact Study and

Pollution Contingency Plan for an Eco- logically Sensitive Area in the North Sea

T.G. Wilkinson and R. McEwan, Shell,

U.K. Exploration and Production, Aber- deen, Scotland

The Venezuelan National Oil Spill

Contingency Plan

Ian Achong, Petroleos de Venezuela,

Caracas, Venezuela; John Bennett, Ben- nett Environmental Consultants, West

Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada;

Chris Hatfield, Hatfield Consultants Ltd.,

West Vancouver, British Columbia, Can- ada; Noel Boston, IEC/BEAK Consult- ants, Ltd., Richmond, British Columbia,

Canada

Oil Spill Contingency Planning and Sci- entific Support Coordination in Bermuda:

A Successful Model

Thomas D. Sleeter and Anthony H. Knap,

Bermuda Biological Station for Research,

Inc., Bermuda; I. Walwyn Hughes, De- partment of Agriculture and Fisheries,

Bermuda

A $1 Million Spill Drill and Two Tons of

Oranges

Stephen Kaufmann, Sunshine Chemical

Corporation, West Hartford, Connecticut;

Sal G. Brancato, United Illuminating

Company, New Haven, Connecticut;

Frank Maitland, New Haven Terminal,

New Haven, Connecticut; Richard Martin,

Gulf Oil Corporation, New Haven, Con- necticut 1:30 p.m. Mission Room A

Session 5: Coastal Zone Impacts

Chairman: Commander Frank A. Boers- ma, U.S. Coast Guard, Washington,

D.C.

Vice Chairman: J.T. Leigh, Texaco Inc.,

Beacon, New York

Long Term Investigations on Chemical and Microbial Changes of a Slightly Oil

Polluted Beach

Gunter Gassmann and Wilfried Gunkel, (continued on page 20)

The Henschel Digital Master

Clock System provides a syn- chronized display of time in various shipboard locations. The master clock displays both local time and Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).

This crystal controlled, microcomputer based master clock transmits multiplexed time (hours, minutes and seconds) and date (month, day and year) information to a maximum of 40 remote repeater clocks and/or data and bell loggers.

The remote repeater clocks display either local time or GMT in various mounting configurations to suit most applications.

Time is continuously displayed on both the master and repeater clocks by red, 6 digit LED displays, easily viewed up to 25 feet away. The date is displayed on the master clock by use of a front panel switch. This calendar function is set to maintain the correct date for changes in month, day, year and leap year.

Battery back-up is provided to maintain both time and date in the master clock and in a few selected repeater clocks during any loss of input power.

Clock accuracy is maintained independent of the input power frequency by a self-contained crystal oscillator. Time and date are easily set by means of pushbuttons on the front panel. When changing time zones, hours may be changed independently of minutes and seconds so that time accuracy is not lost.

Henschel Corporation, a unit of General Signal 14 Cedar Street, Amesbury, Massachusetts 01913 USA

Telephone: 617-388-1103, Telex: 94-7444

Write 2081 on Reader Service Card 19

Maritime Reporter

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