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U.S. Navy, Marine Corps to Commission Seventh Northrop Grumman LHD Amphibious Assault Ship

   NORTHROP GRUMMAN USS IWO JIMA READY FOR FLEET DUTY
The U.S. Navy's seventh WASP Class multipurpose amphibious assault ship, USS IWO JIMA (LHD 7), built by Northrop Grumman Ingalls Shipbuilding, Pascagoula, Miss., will be commissioned into Atlantic Fleet service on June 30, 2001, in Pensacola, Fla. The new ship will be homeported in Norfolk, Va. LHDs are the Navy/Marine Corps team's large-deck amphibious assault ships, designed to deploy to troubled areas of the world and insert forces ashore by aircraft and LCAC hover craft. Media contact: Jim McIngvale, 228-935-3971. (PRNewsFoto)[JL]
PASCAGOULA, MS USA
    PASCAGOULA, Miss., June 23 /PRNewswire/ -- The U.S. Navy and Marine Corps
will commission their newest large-deck amphibious assault ship on Saturday,
June 30, 2001, at Naval Air Station Pensacola, Fla.  USS IWO JIMA (LHD 7)
departed its building yard, Ingalls Shipbuilding, a Northrop Grumman
(NYSE: NOC) company, here today, sailing into Pensacola for precommissioning
activities.
    (Photo:  http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20010623/LASA002 )
    Gen. Michael J. Williams, USMC, assistant commandant of the U.S. Marine
Corps, will deliver the principal commissioning address.  Secretary of the
Navy Gordon England will place the new ship in commission.
    Mrs. Zandra M. Krulak, wife of Gen. Charles C. Krulak, USMC (retired),
former USMC commandant, serves as ship's sponsor for LHD 7, and christened the
ship at Ingalls in March 2000.
    Other commissioning participants will include U.S. Representative Joe
Scarborough of Florida's first congressional district; Vice Adm. Alfred G.
Harms Jr., USN, chief of Naval Education and Training; John Fogg, mayor of
Pensacola; Rear Adm. John B. Foley III, USN, commander, Naval Surface Force,
U.S. Atlantic Fleet; Rear Adm. Dennis G. Morral, USN, program executive
officer, Expeditionary Warfare; and Jerry St. Pe, chief operating officer,
Northrop Grumman Ship Systems.
    The 40,500-ton LHD 7, second in size only to the Navy's aircraft carriers,
is designed to lay off a troubled area of the world and insert its
2,000-member Marine Expeditionary Unit ashore by helicopters and 40 m.p.h.
hover craft.  As the centerpiece of an amphibious ready group, an LHD is fully
capable of amphibious assault, advance force and special purpose operations,
as well as noncombatant evacuation and other humanitarian missions.
    As the seventh LHD to be completed by Ingalls, LHD 7 reports for U.S.
Atlantic Fleet duty and will be homeported in Norfolk, Va., as an element of
Amphibious Group TWO.
    Capt. John T. Nawrocki, USN, a native of Ambridge, Pa., and a
1975 graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, is USS IWO JIMA's commissioning
commanding officer.
    LHD 7 becomes the second U.S. Navy warship named to honor the enduring
legacy of those who fought and dedicated their lives to the U.S. in the
February 1945 Battle of Iwo Jima.  The first ship named for the battle, LPH 2,
was the lead ship of the LPH class of amphibious assault ships, built in the
1960's as the first "keel-up" amphibious assault ship, and decommissioned in
January 1993.
    The LHD Class is the sixth amphibious assault ship program in which
Ingalls Shipbuilding has been involved since the early 1950's.  Most recently,
prior to Ingalls' work in the LHD program, the five ships of the TARAWA (LHA
1) Class were delivered to the Navy by Ingalls between 1976 and 1980.
     LHD 7 is 844 feet long, with a 106-foot beam.  Two steam propulsion
plants, developing a combined 70,000 horsepower, will drive the 40,500-ton
ship to speeds in excess of 20 knots.

    Northrop Grumman's Ship Systems, headquartered in Pascagoula, Miss.,
includes Ingalls and the Ship Systems Full Service Center, both located in
Pascagoula, as well as Litton Avondale Industries, located in New Orleans, La.
Ship Systems, which currently employs more than 17,000 shipbuilding
professionals, primarily in Mississippi and Louisiana, is one of the nation's
leading full service systems companies for the design, engineering,
construction, and life cycle support of major surface ships for the U.S. Navy,
U.S. Coast Guard and international navies, and for commercial vessels of all
types.  Ship Systems has a firm business backlog exceeding $5.6 billion, in a
variety of naval and commercial shipbuilding programs.



SOURCE Northrop Grumman Corporation




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    Photo Notes:
    NewsCom: 
    http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20010623/LASA002
    PRN Photo Desk, 888-776-6555 or 212-782-2840
    CONTACT:
    Jim McIngvale of Northrop Grumman
    Corporation, 228-935-3971