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1983 Oil Spill Conference Program (continued from page 21) Eugene R. Fidell, LeBoeuf, Lamb, Leiby and MacRae, Washington, D.C. Robert C. Anderson, American Petro- leum Institute, Washington, D.C. 8:30 a.m. Mission Room A Session 16: Contingency Planning II Chairman: Windsor Williams, CALTEX Petroleum Corporation, Dallas, Texas Vice Chairman: Columbus Brown, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Washington, D.C. Applying OHMSETT Data to Spill Con- tingency Plans H.W. Lichte and M. Borst, Mason and Hanger-Silas Mason Company, Inc., Leonardo, New Jersey Marine Industry Group (MIRG) Robert J. Meyers and Michael R. Ben- nett, Exxon Shipping Company, Hou- ston, Texas Review of United Kingdom Contingency Planning and Resource Capability Rear Admiral Michael L. Stacey, Depart- ment of Trade, London, England Organizational Obstacles to Decision- Making During Oil Spills H.E. Mew, Jr., North Carolina Depart- ment of Natural Resources and Com- munity Development, Raleigh, North Carolina; Ann Hayward Rooney-Char, College of William and Mary, Gloucester Point, Virginia; Captain James D. Webb, U.S. Coast Guard, Norfolk, Virginia Offshore Oil Spill Equipment Evolution in Southern California — A Systems Approach? Commander Lindon A. Onstad, U.S. Coast Guard, Long Beach, California The JUE-15A MKII SATCOM Terminal * from Raytheon. li FP1' 1 Keeping captains of industry in touch with captains at sea. High-speed, down- to-earth satellite communications. The Model JUE-15A MK II provides fast, dependable and private communications with your ships, through the Inmarsat Satellite System. Communicate by voice, teletype, printer, facsimile or high-speed data. To and from ships anywhere on the high seas. The JUE-15A MK II is the world's first Standard-A, Class-1 SES Type SATCOM ship terminal approved by Inmarsat. Optimum communications flexibility. Model JUE-15A MK II is supplied in two versions: Telephone hand-set with teleprinter. Or telephone handset, video display panel with keyboard and printer. A MK III model is also available. It provides basic services at low cost, with telephone hand- set only. Tried, tested, true. The JUE-15A MK II Satellite Communications Terminal, manufactured by JRC and brought to you by Raytheon, has been thoroughly tested for accurate operation and reliability. Units are now in use on ships of all kinds. Unmatched product support. Raytheon and JRC service centers, spare parts distribution and training facilities located in the USA, Europe and Japan provide support for over 200 worldwide service agents located in major ports everywhere. We constantly monitor field service data to improve product reliability and to ensure that the correct parts and quality service are immediately available when and where needed. Technical and Operational training programs will be provided upon request. When fast communications can mean the difference between profit gain or loss, you can depend on Raytheon and the JUE-15A MK II to get your message across. Raytheon Marine Company 676 Island Pond Road, Manchester, NH 03103 USA, Tel: 603-668-1600 Telex: 94-3459 New York, NY, USA, Tel. 212-720-6800 Tampa, FL, USA, Tel. 813-877-9418 New Orleans, LA, USA, Tel. 504-835-6491 Houston, TX, USA, Tel. 713-941-2700 Los Angeles. CA, USA, Tel. 213-533-5959 Seattle, WA, USA, Tel. 206-285-6843 Copenhagen, Denmark, Tel. 45-1-570611 Oil Spill Preparedness in a Tropical Offshore Area Ging Tuang Tan, Sarawak, Shell Berhad, Malaysia ABSORB: A Three Year Update in Arctic Spill Response Sharon O. Hillman and Richard V. Shafer, Sohio Alaska Petroleum Com- pany, Anchorage, Alaska 8:30 a.m. Mission Room B Session 17: Equipment II Chairman: John Gilbert, U.S. Environ- mental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, Ohio Vice Chairman: Keith F. Kruk, Exxon Production Research Company, Hou- ston, Texas Self-Contained Oil Recovery System for Use in Protected Waters Steven Cohen, U.S. Coast Guard, Wash- ington, D.C. and Stephen Dalton, Off- shore Devices, Inc., Peabody, Massa- chusetts OHMSETT Tests of Truck-Mounted Vac- uum Systems for Oil Spill Recovery Donald C. Gates, Kevin M. Corradino and William R. Senftner, Mason and Hanger-Silas Mason Company, Inc., Leonardo, New Jersey OHMSETT Pump Tests M. Borst, R.J. Cocherell and H.W. Lichte, Mason and Hanger-Silas Mason Com- pany, Inc., Leonardo, New Jersey Research and Development in the In- stitute of Ocean Environmental Tech- nology Atsuo Yazaki, Japan Foundation for Shipbuilding Advancement, Tokyo, Japan A Portable Instrument for Screening Spill and Source Oil Samples J. Richard Jadamec, Gerd A. Kleineberg, MST2 Duane A. Marble and MST3 Lisa A. Wargo, U.S. Coast Guard Research and Development Center, Groton, Con- necticut Mobile Command and Communication Systems J.T. Leigh, Texaco, Inc., Beacon, New York and William C. Park, Mobil Oil Corp., New York, New York Enhanced Oil Biodegradation: A New Operational Tool to Control Oil Spills Bernard Tramier and Andre Sirvins, Societe Nationale, Elf Aquitaine (Pro- duction), France 12:00 noon North Banquet Hall Luncheon James H. Gillie Assistant to the Vice President of Public Affairs, Phillips 66 "Right On Instead of Rip Off" 2:00 p.m. River Room Session 18: Spill Detection and Risk Analysis Chairman: Charles W. Sieber, U.S. Coast Guard, Washington, D.C. Vice Chairman: George Clouden, U.S. Naval Facilities Engineering Com- mand, Alexandria, Virginia U.S. Coast Guard Progress in Oil Spill Surveillance Commander James R. White and Lt. Commander Richard E. Schmidt, U.S. Coast Guard, Washington, D.C. An Approach to Observing Oil at Sea Robert Pavia and D.L. Payton, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administra- tion, Seattle, Washington Second Generation Oil Spill and Mari- time Surveillance Systems Now Opera- tional in Sweden Lars Backlund and Lars Holmstrom, Swedish Space Corporation, Solna, Sweden A Reexamination of Occurrence Rates Write 311 on Reader Service Card