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Breda To Market B&W Boilers In Italy • Babcock & Wilcox (U.S.A.) and Breda Termomeccanica E Locomo- tive, S.p.A., Milan, have signed a license agreement giving Breda the right to manufacture and market B&W-designed marine boilers in Italy. In announcing the agreement, Robert E. Whitam, B&W's man- ager of Marine Commercial Opera- tions, said the move marks the en- try of B&W (U.S.A.) into the in- ternational marine propulsion ma- chinery market. Mr. Whitam noted that the pre- ponderance of world ship construc- tion is foreign, and that the agree- ment would now open up this pre- viously untapped market for the company. "In addition, we hope to convey to domestic shipowners and oper- ators a broadening of our scale of operations," Mr. Whitam said, pointing out that a "good percent- age" of ships built overseas are owned and operated by American companies. Babcock & Wilcox (U.S.A.) is one of the world's largest manu- facturers of marine boilers with over 11,000 boilers installed aboard more than 4,700 vessels of all types. Breda, which is also licensed by B&W (U.S.A.) to manufacture and market utility boilers in Italy, is a major manufacturer of mechanical machinery. USCG Icebreaker Project Officer Assigned To Lockheed Project leaders confer over the hull model of the USCG icebreaker. Left to right are Comdr. David L. Green, newly assigned resident project officer for the Coast Guard; Martin L. Ingwersen, Lockheed's executive vice president for operations, and Earl R. (Buck) Saunders, Lockheed's ice- breaker project manager. Comdr. David L. Green, former- ly Chief of the Naval Engineering Branch of the 11th Coast Guard District Headquarters in Long Beach, Calif., has been assigned to Lockheed Shipbuilding and Con- struction Company, Seattle, Wash., as the Coast Guard's resident ice- breaker project officer. Lockheed is building the Coast Guard's new 400-foot 60,000 - shaft - horsepower icebreaker under a $52-million con- tract awarded in August. Commander Green heads a Coast Guard office at the shipyard that will grow to 30 officers and men by July of next year. A 1955 graduate of the Coast Guard Academy, New London, Conn., Commander Green also holds a master's degree in naval architecture and marine engineer- ing from the University of Michi- San\ His icebreaker experience in- cludes duty as 'engineering officer and executive officer aboard the CGC Makinaw, an icebreaker as- signed to the Great Lakes. Com- mander Green's other duty assign- ments have included command of the patrol boat Cape Fairweather, the Cape Christian Loran Station on Baffin Island, and the Coast Guard Resident Inspection Office at Avondale Shipyards, New Or- leans, La. AEIL Appoints John H. Crosthwaite American Export Isbrandtsen Lines has appointed John H. Crosthwaite as general manager of sales, according to an announce- ment by Laurence J. Buser, presi- dent and chief executive officer of the line. Mr. Crosthwaite has been with the company since 1965, most re- cently as general sales manager for container operations. Prior to that, he was Midwest regional manager based in Chicago. THE LARGER. THE BETTER ? NO. NOT ALWAYS. That's our answer to economical petroleum transpor- tation. That's why we've designed many standardized tankers. Not the world's largest, but very economical. And our latest masterpieces are two new standards: 250,000 DWT and 270,000 DWT tankers. We solved many problems by designing them. Prob- lems of today and tomorrow. The new IMCO ruling. The Suez condition. The Malacca Strait. And, the most important of all: how to build, cruise, load/ unload more economically. Features are impressive: newly designed automation and remote control devices; PRIMA-VAC system for fast stripping; fully standardized auxiliaries for simple maintenance; inert-gas system for maximum safety and minimum corrosion. We are confident of success. Because we've already received orders from major shipowners—Mobil Oil, Campagnie Auxiliaire De Navigation, World Wide (Shipping), Ltd., and Island Navigation Corporation. It's another great step for us, the specialists in stan- dardization. Sasebo Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. HEAD OFFICE: Tokyo, Japan Telex: J24245 "SSKDOCK" Cable Address: SASEBODOCK TOKYO Phone: 211-3631 SASEBO SHIPYARD: Nagasaki, Japan Telex: 7428-19 "SASEBODOCK SAS" OVERSEAS OFFICES! NEW YORK OFFICE: 11, Broadway, New York. N.Y., 10004, U.S.A. Telex: 421675 "SASEBO NEWYORK" USA Cable Address: SASEBODOCK NEWYORK LONDON OFFICE: Bishopsgate House, 80 Bishops- gate. London, E.C.2.N, 4AU. England Telex: 883888 "SASEBODOCK LDN" UK Cable Address: SASEBODOCK LONDONEC2 HONG KONG OFFICE: Hang Chong Bldg . Oueen s Road. Central. Hong Kong Cable Address: SASEBODOCK HONGKONG OSLO AGENT: NIELS EBBESEN & CO. Fr. Nansens Plass 8, Oslo 1, Norway Telex: 16675 "EBBES N" Cable Address: EBBES STOCKHOLM AGENT: ARNE LARSSON & CO. A. B. Banergatan 37 P.O.B. 27707,10 2 51 Stockholm 27 Telex: 1513 "FRDSHIP S Cable Address: FRIENDSHIP 36 Maritime Reporter/Engineering News