Page 8: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (May 1985)
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COVERAGE
FOR MORE MARINE SALES IN '85
JULY 1
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June ID • ANNUAL DIESEL ENGINE REVIEW
Update on recent developments in fuel efficient engines for marine propulsion and auxiliary power.
U.S. EAST COAST SHIPYARDS—A Re- view • PLUS—A wealth of current marine busi- ness and technical information first- weeks before the slower monthlies.
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Yearbook (June 1) and the regular June 15 issue, into the largest data- filled and most informative marine industry yearbook in the world. Vital statistics dealing with the worldwide shipping and shipbuilding industry, inland waterways, offshore drilling and the world Navies will be covered in great detail, with current status and future trends articles authored by world experts in each area.
This June Yearbook volume will be a true reference tool. A source of vital information to be read, reread and referred to all year long by MARITIME
REPORTER'S unequalled readership of thousands more marine industry decision-makers than are reached by any other marine industry magazine in the entire world.
Closing Date—May 10 • 1985 YEARBOOK ISSUE The Big Data-Filled Marine Industry Annual
Industry statistics, forecasts and trends. Exclusive reports authored by in- dustry leaders on the current status and worldwide forecast for shipbuild- ing, ship repair, Navy, offshore drilling, coastal, shallow-draft and inland waterways. Includes world shipbuilding tables, U.S. shipbuilding tables and Navy construction data. • U.S. Navy • U.S. Merchant Shipbuilding • Offshore Drilling • Offshore
Drilling Rigs • Offshore Service Vessels, Tugboat and Inland Towboat
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OFFSHORE EUROPE '85
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PRIVATE U.S.
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Builders of the 600-ship Navy, a study of the vital role played by private com- mercial and shipbuilding/boatbuilding yards in the construction and mainte- nance of the world's most powerful
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ENGINEERING NEWS 118 East 25th Street
New York, NY 10010 (212) 477-6700 10
Raytheon Establishes
New Ventures Unit—
Steadman Named
President
Raytheon Company of Lexington,
Mass., has established a new office to arrange and manage venture in- vestments for the diversified elec- tronics company.
Chairman Thomas L. Phillips said the new enterprise would be coordinated closely with the compa- ny's strategic planning function, and would seek investments in young companies in business areas related to Raytheon's present and future lines. "Our objective," he said, "is to share in emerging tech- nologies that are best participated in through investments in young en- trepreneurial companies. Where we identify growth potential and useful links to Raytheon's own products and fields of technologies, we plan to take appropriate equity positions in those start-up firms."
David R.A. Steadman has been named president of Raytheon
Ventures, and will direct the new office to be established at company executive headquarters in Lexing- ton. He joined Raytheon in 1974 as manufacturing director of Cossor
Electronics in England, where he was promoted to managing director the following year.
Mr. Steadman was responsible for the acquisition of Data Logic in 1977, and served as chairman of that subsidiary. He was elected a vice president of Raytheon Company in 1980, and served as president of
Raytheon Data Systems until that business was sold in 1984.
Brochure on Tensar®
Geogrids Offered By Armco
Construction Products
Advanced civil engineering soil design and cost-effective construc- tion technology make Tensar geo- grids the answer to a broad range of marine construction projects, ac- cording to an eight-page, four-color brochure now available from Armco
Construction Products Division, a division of Armco Inc., Middletown,
Ohio.
Tensar geogrids are high-strength polymer structures made from high- density polyethylene or polypropy- lene. They perform as a system of distributed anchorages with a soil matrix, interlocking within soils through the openings of the grids.
The geogrids can be constructed into gabion units that can be used for coastal structures, waterway channel linings, retaining walls, rev- etments, and scour-protection mat- tresses. High tensile strength, dura- bility, and ease of installation are benefits cited in the brochure.
During the patented manufactur- ing process, polymer sheets up to inch thick are stretched laterally and longitudinally, producing the high tensile strength. Tensar geo- grids come in lightweight, easy-to- handle rolls, and require no special tools or specialized labor.
For a free copy of the brochure,
Circle 58 on Reader Service Card
Maritime Reporter/Engineering News