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ITT Awarded $14.5-Million Contract For Voice Terminal Unit ITT Corporation, Defense Com- munications Division, Nutley, N.J., was awarded a $14,463,600 firm- fixed-price contract for the produc- tion of the Advanced Narrowband Digital Voice Terminal (ANDVT) including the basic terminal unit and accessories for ship, air and shore use. The work will be performed in both Melbourne, Fla. (80 percent) and Nutley (20 percent), and is expected to be completed June 30, 1990. The Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command, Washington, D.C., is the contracting activity (N00039-86-C-0032). Esa ni . UNIT OF GENE HAL SIGNAL HENSCHEL Digital Master Clock System The Henschel Digital Master Clock System provides a syn- chronized display of time in various shipboard locations. The master clock displays both local time and Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). This crystal controlled, microcomputer based master clock transmits multiplexed time (hours, minutes and seconds) and date (month, day and year) information to a maximum of 40 remote repeater clocks and/or data and bell loggers. The remote repeater clocks display either local time or GMT in various mounting configurations to suit most applications. Time is continuously displayed on both the master and repeater clocks by red, 6 digit LED displays, easily viewed up to 25 feet away. The date is displayed on the master clock by use of a front panel switch. This calendar function is set to maintain the correct date for changes in month, day, year and leap year. D J '-I 5 Battery back-up is provided to maintain both time and date in the master clock and in a few selected repeater clocks during any loss of input power. Clock accuracy is maintained independent of the input power frequency by a self-contained crystal oscillator. Time and date are easily set by means of pushbuttons on the front panel. When changing time zones, hours may be changed independently of minutes and seconds so that time accuracy is not lost. HENSCHEL Henschel 9 Hoyt Drive P.O. Box 30 Newburyport, Massachusetts 01950 U.S.A. (617) 462-2400 Telex: (RCA) 294074 Aegis cruiser Thomas S. Gates slides into the Kennebec River after recent christening. She is largest combatant ship built by BIW in its 101-year history. Bath Iron Works Launches Its First Aegis Cruiser Circle 182 on Reader Service Card 10 A new era of Navy shipbuilding was ushered in at Maine's historic Bath Iron Works (BIW) yard re- cently with the launching of the Aegis guided missile cruiser Thomas S. Gates (CG-51), signalling BIW's entry into the Ticonderoga Class shipbuilding program. The Maine shipyard currently has contracts for six Aegis cruisers, and will continue to bid for additional ships of the class. BIW also has been selected by the Navy to design and build the lead ship of the new Aegis guided missile destroyer class, the Arleigh Burke (DDG-51). This ship is scheduled for launching in 1988. The Aegis cruiser/destroyer pro- gram is expected to extend to the turn of the century and perhaps beyond. Bath Iron Works, a builder of Navy and commercial ships since 1884, looks to the Aegis program to replace the construction activity and employment generated by the Navy's FFG-7 guided missile frigate program that the yard initiated in the early 1970s. After designing and building the lead ship of that class, the Oliver Hazard Perry, BIW se- cured contracts for 23 additional FFGs. The last of those ships will be delivered this year. The principal speaker for the Gates launching ceremony was Adm. Elmo R. Zumwalt Jr., who was Chief of Naval Operations when he retired from the Navy in 1974. Since his retirement, Adm. Zum- walt has remained in the public eye as a spokesman for the maintenance of proper balance of power between the United States and the Soviet Union. Other participants in the program included Sen. George J. Mitchell (D-ME); Vice Adm. William H. Rowden, commander of the Naval Sea Systems Command; Vice Adm. Joseph Metcalf III, deputy naval operations for surface warfare; Rear Adm. Donald P. Roane, deputy commander for surface combatants; Rear Adm. John F. Shaw, Aegis shipbuilding manager; and Capt. William A. Rehder, supervisor of shipbuilding, conversion and repair, Bath. The ship that was launched is named in honor of the late Thomas Sovereign Gates, Jr., former Secretary of the Navy (1957) and Secretary of Defense (1959) under President Eisenhower. After 14 months as Secretary of Defense, Mr. Gates left the Pentagon and be- came president of Morgan Guaranty Trust. In 1965, he became the firm's chairman and chief executive offi- cer. He died in 1983 at the age of 77. His widow, Mrs. Anne Gates, served as the ship's sponsor. Her granddaughter, Sarah C. Scott, was maid of honor. For complete information on all Bath Iron Works facilities and ser- vices, Circle 24 on Reader Service Card 16-Page Catalog On Expansion Joints Offered By Unaflex A new 16-page catalog describing design, application and selection of metal expansion joints and flexible connectors is available from Unaflex Rubber Corporation of Ft. Lauder- dale, Fla. Unaflex provides a complete line of both metal and rubber expansion joints for use in power generation, water and waste treatment, refining, food processing, pulp and paper production and heating, ventilating and air conditioning. Unaflex is the only American manufacturer of both stainless steel and rubber bellows-type expansion joints. The catalog is available at no charge. For your copy, Circle 2 on Reader Service Card