Bethlehem Elects Williams
Vice-President, Shipbuilding
—D.D. Strohmeier To Retire
Walter F. Williams, assistant vice-president,
shipbuilding, Bethlehem Steel Corporation, has
been elected a vice-president, effective Septem-
ber 1, of Bethlehem Steel Corporation, and as-
signed to shipbuilding, Edmund F. Martin,
chairman and chief executive officer has an-
nounced. At the same time, Mr. Martin an-
nounced that Daniel D. Strohmeier, vice-presi-
dent of Bethlehem Steel Corporation in charge
of shipbuilding, will retire April 30, 1971, and
will be succeeded by Mr. Williams.
A native of Dover, Del., Mr. Williams re-
ceived his bachelor's degree in civil engineer-
ing from the University of Delaware in 1951.
He joined Bethlehem Steel as a member of
that year's Loop Course, management training
program for college graduates, and was as-
signed to the plant engineering department of
the Lackawanna, N.Y., plant.
In 1960 he was transferred to the home
office in Bethlehem, Pa., as a project engineer
in construction engineering. Mr. Williams was
named assistant chief engineer, projects, on
the staff of the vice-president, operations, in
1965, and was appointed chief engineer of con-
struction at Bethlehem's new Burns Harbor,
Ind. plant in January 1966. He was assigned
to the engineering department as chief engi-
neer, projects group, in February 1967. Four
months later he was promoted to manager of
engineering in charge of projects, design and
construction. He was elected assistant to vice-
president, engineering, February 1, 1968. On
May 1, 1968, he was elected assistant vice-
president, shipbuilding, and was transferred
to the shipbuilding offices at 25 Broadway,
New York City.
Mr. Williams is a member of the American
Iron and Steel Institute, The Society of Naval
Architects and Marine Engineers, the Saucon
Valley Country Club and the Downtown
Athletic Club.
Mr. Strohmeier was born in Boston, Mass.
He was graduated in 1932 from Amherst Col-
lege with a bachelor of arts degree and from
Massachusetts Institute of Technology in
1934, with a bachelor of science degree in na-
val architecture. While at Amherst he was
elected to Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary
scholastic society.
Mr. Strohmeier joined Bethlehem Steel in
July 1934 and was assigned to the outside hull
department of the firm's former Quincy, Mass.,
shipyard. He was transferred to the estimating
department in 1935 and to the vice-president's
office as a technical assistant in June 1936. In
January 1939 he was assigned to the corpora-
tion's New York shipbuilding office in the
same capacity, becoming assistant to vice-
president in May 1942, and vice-president Jan-
uary 23, 1948. He served as a director of Beth-
lehem Steel Corporation from 1948 to 1965.
Mr. Strohmeier is a member of The Society
of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers,
American Society of Naval Engineers, Ameri-
can Iron and Steel Institute, American Bureau
of Shipping, Lloyd's Register of Shipping,
Shipbuilders Council of America, and the Pro-
peller Club.
From 1948 to 1949 he served on the Inter-
national Transport Committee of the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce and since 1948 has
been a member of the Chamber's National
Defense Committee. Mr. Strohmeier is a mem-
ber of the National Production Authority's
Industry Advisory Committee for the Ship-
building Industry, and the National Academy
of Sciences' Maritime Cargo Transportation
Conference. From 1949 to 1952 he was a mem-
ber of the Military Petroleum Board Tanker
and Barge Committee.
Exstran Offers Experimental
Stress Analysis Services
A new consulting service in the field of experi-
mental stress analysis is being offered by Exstran,
a consulting firm at 646 Hegenberger Road, Oak-
land, Calif.
The new organization will serve clients any-
where in the United States. Its services will be of-
fered to mechanical engineers and to naval archi-
tects in need of independent analysis for hulls and
rigging.
The firm will work within the complete range of
techniques—photoelastic model, photoelastic coat-
ing, brittle coating, moire fringe analysis, and
strain gage.
Although some large corporations have these
capabilities in-house, Exstran will be, to the best
of its knowledge, the only independent firm on the
West Coast offering such services on a contract
basis.
HOSE McCANN TELEPHONE COJNC.
"PIONEERING MARINE PRODUCTS FOR OVER 35 YEARS"
Pioneers and originators of marine sound powered tele-
phones over thirty-five years ago, Hose-McCann is re-
garded today as the finest name in I.C. equipment,
offering a wide variety of marine products, some of
which are listed and illustrated below.
Every Hose-McCann product is precision engineered and
manufactured to provide many years of dependable,
trouble-free operation. The name Hose-McCann as always,
stands for reliability, integrity and the highest standard
of quality.
GENERAL ANNOUNCING AND
DOCKING LOUDSPEAKER SYSTEMS
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MARINE AUTOMATIC
DIAL SWITCHBOARDS
I TELEPHONE INSTRUMENTS
STEERING STANDS
FIRE AND GENERAL
ALARM PANELS
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WATCH CALL SYSTEMS AND
ASSOCIATED ROOM UNITS
SOUND POWERED
TELEPHONE SYSTEMS
RUDDER ANGLE INDICATOR SYSTEMS
OTHER HOSE-McCANN PRODUCTS: • Navy and Commercial Sound Powered Telephone Systems and Accessories • Navi-
gation Light Panels • Engineer's Signal and Alarm Panels • Annunciator and Control Panels • Power Failure Alarm
Panels • Bells and Contact Makers • Automation Equipment • Dumbwaiter Communication Systems
For further information and specifications on any of the above products, write to:
HOSE McCANN TELEPHONE CO., INC.
524 WEST 23rd STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y. 10011
TEL. (212) 989-7920 (CABLE) CYBERNETIC NEWYORK
"Originators and Pioneers of Marine Sound Powered Telephones"
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Walter F. Williams Daniel D. Strohmeier
24 Maritime Reporter/Engineering News
Digital Wave Publishing