Page 32: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (February 15, 1985)

Read this page in Pdf, Flash or Html5 edition of February 15, 1985 Maritime Reporter Magazine

Oil Spill Conference (continued from page 30) for Treatment and Rehabilitation of Oiled

Sea Otters

Robert A. Pastorok, Tetra Tech, Inc., Belle- vue, Washington; Jeanette A. Thomas,

Hubbs-Sea World Research Institute, San

Diego, California 11:00 a.m.-11:45 a.m. Oil Spill Response

Planning in Tropical Coastal Environ- ments

Thomas G. Ballou, Charles D. Getter, Bart J.

Baca, Research Planning Institute, Inc., Co- lumbia, South Carolina; Mohammad Al-

Sarawi, Kuwait University, Safat. Kuwait;

Cristine L. Vilardi, Exxon Production Re- search Company. Houston, Texas 11:15 a.m.-12 noon Computer Simula- tion of the Effects of Oil Development on

Seabird and Marine Mammal Populations

R. Glen Ford, Ecological Consulting. San

Diego, California; Michael L. Bonnell, Cen- ter for Marine Studies, University of Califor- nia, Santa Cruz, California 2:00 p.m.-2:45 p.m. Strategic Planning for Large and Small Oil Spills in New Eng- land

Harilaos N. Psaraftis, J.D. Nhyart, Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology, Cam- bridge. Massachusetts 2:30 p.m.-3:15 p.m. A Transportable Spill

Information Management System: A Case

Study

John A. Murphy, Dean H. Dale, Murphy

Information Services, Edmonds, Washing- ton; Lieutenant Commander Dennis J. Si- grist, NOAA/OAD, Seattle, Washington 3:00 p.m.-3:45 p.m. A Method for Site

Specific Planning for Dispersant Use

Bart J. Baca, Charles D. Getter, Thomas G.

Ballou, Research Planning Institute, Inc.,

Columbia, South Carolina; June Lindstedt-

Siva, Atlantic Richfield Company, Los An- geles, California 3:30 p.m.-4:15 p.m. Estimating Disper- sant Effectiveness Under Low Temperature and Low Salinity Conditions

James R. Payne, Charles R. Phillips, Mark

Floyd, Greg Longmire, Jose Fernandez,

Science Applications, Inc.. La Jolla, Califor- nia; L. Michael Flaherty, U.S. Environmental

Protection Agency, Washington D.C. 4:00 p.m.-4:45 p.m. Swedish Oil Combat

Program, TOBOS '85

Carola Lehtinen, Swedish Environmental

Research Institute, Stockholm, Sweden

Please call or write for further information and specifications on these or any other Navy Products.

CALL SIGNAL

STATION IC/D

Symbol No. 2988

CM

HEAD-CHEST SET '

STOWAGE BOX

Symbol No. 2924.1 (1 to 6 Compartments) ! I

I §

Ovi'o 32

Vi

Hose-McCann Telephone Co., Inc., originators and pioneers of Sound Powered telephones for marine use, has expanded their product line to include a wide variety of U.S. Navy Electrical and

Mechanical products. An assortment of these products are shown here. All Hose-McCann Navy Products are manufactured, tested, and qualified f in accordance with the latest

Military specifications. f

I i i i

SOUND-POWERED

TELEPHONE

JACK BOX

G15A/B/C

SOUND-POWERED

TELEPHONE

HANDSET

H203/U

SOUND-POWERED

HEAD-CHEST

H200/U

H202/U

HANDSET HOLDER

Z33A/B

SOUND-POWERED

TELEPHONE PLUG

H39A

SOUND-POWERED

TELEPHONE JACK

H27A

ALARM BELLS & BUZZERS

IC/B2S4 (Other types available)

HORNS & SIRENS

IC/H1S4 (Other types available)

HOSE McCANN

TELEPHONE CO., INC. 9 SMITH STREET • ENGLEW00D • NEW JERSEY 07631

PHONE 201-567-2030 • CABLE ADDRESS: H0SETELC0 • TELEX NO 642837

ORIGINATORS AND PIONEERS OF SOUND POWERED TELEPHONES FOR MARINE USE

Circle 299 on Reader Service Card 9 4:30 p.m.-5:15 p.m. Waterborne Trade of

Petroleum in the Wider Caribbean Region

Lieutenant Jane R. Ditto, U.S. Coast Guard,

Washington, D.C. 10:30 a.m. Santa Anita Room

Session A: Equipment I

Chairman: Captain Peter C. Lauridsen, U.S.

Coast Guard. Portsmouth, Virginia

Vice Chairman: Dr. Lewis R. Brown, Mississip- pi State University, Mississippi State, Mis- sissippi

New Concepts in Spraying Dispersants

From Boats

Tom E. Allen, Halliburton Services, Duncan,

Oklahoma

An Experimental High Pressure Waterjet

Barrier

K.M. Miekle, H. Whittaker, F. Laperriere,

Department of the Environment, Ottawa,

Canada

Ecumoire II: Evaluation of Three Oil Recov- ery Devices Offshore

Georges Peigne, CEDRE, Brest, France

Combustility and Incineration of Beaufort

Crude/Seawater Emulsions

D. Kretschmer, J. Odgers, University Laval,

Quebec. Canada 10:30 a.m. San Gabriel Room

Session B: Underground Spills

Chairman: Dr. John Lamping, Standard Oil

Company (Indiana), Chicago, Illinois

Vice Chairman: Harold Pecunia, Peterson

Maritime Services, Inc., New Orleans,

Louisiana

Groundwater Abatement Alternatives for

Removal of Organic Containments

Paul M. Yaniga, Groundwater Technology,

Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania

Groundwater Protection Through Early De- tection of Hydrocarbon Leaks

L.F. Donaghey, Chevron Research Co.,

Richmond, California

Containment and Removal of Fuel Oil from

Groundwater Beneath a Densely Populated

Housing Development

Joseph T. McNally, Craig G. Robertson,

Ned E. Wehler, R.E. Wright Associates, Inc.,

Middletown, Pennsylvania

North La Crosse Underground Fuel Oil

Spill

Brad Erikson, Wisconsin Department of Nat- ural Resources, La Crosse, Wisconsin

Case Study—Identification and Initial Re- covery of Jet A Fuel Underlying an Airport

Tank Farm

Kenneth M. Ries, The Greyhound Corpora- tion, Phoenix, Arizona

Investigation and Cleanup of Fuel Tank

Leaks in the San Francisco Bay Area—A

Regulatory Strategy

Don M. Eisenberg, Adam W. Olivieri, Peter

W. Johnson, California Regional Water Qual- ity Control Board, Oakland, California 10:30 a.m. San Diego Room

Session C: Case Histories

Chairman: Robert J. Meyers, Exxon Shipping

Company, Houston, Texas

Vice Chairman: A.C. Cormack, Petro-Cana- da, Don Mills, Canada

The Grounding of the M/T Tifoso, 1983: A

Test of Bermuda's Contingency Plan

Anthony H. Knap, Thomas D. Sleeter, Ber- muda Biological Station, Ferry Reach, Ber- muda; Idwal Wyn Hughes, Department of

Agriculture and Fisheries, Botanical Gard- ens, Bermuda

Case History of a South Holland Oil Spill

Antonius M. Kleij, Jozef M. Gubbens, Office of Regulations for Soil Protection and Waste

Management, The Hague, The Netherlands

The Katina Oil Spill 1982—Combatting Op- eration at Sea

W. Koops, Rijkswaterstaat. North Sea Direc- torate, Holland; F.J. Sanders, Rijkswater- staat, South-Holland Directorate, Holland;

J.M. Gubbens, Provincial Governments of

South Holland, Holland

The Tanker Assimi—A Case History

Terence M. Hayes, International Maritime

Organization, London, England, UK

Management of the Uniacke G-72 Incident

S.D. Gill, Canada Oil and Gas Lands Admin- istration, Ottawa, Canada; C.A. Bonke, Shell

Canada Resources, Calgary, Canada; J. Car- ter, Martec Ltd., Halifax, Canada 34 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.