Aviation Week & Space Technology

Staff
The U.S. Transportation Security Administration (TSA) thinks having 2,000 government employees--not airline contract workers--check passenger boarding documents would close a "vulnerability gap" at airport security zones. TSA Administrator Kip Hawley wants to hire and train 1,329 more screening officers and reassign nearly 700 already working at the agency to entrances of airport sterile areas. But lawmakers are stunned by the price tag: $60 million. TSA officials note they are 2,000 positions below the 45,000-screener cap Congress has authorized.

Staff
USAF Gen. (ret.) Howell M. Estes, 3rd, has been appointed to the board of directors of DigitalGlobe, Longmont, Colo. He heads his own consulting firm and is vice chairman of the board of trustees at The Aerospace Corp.

Michael A. Taverna, Andy Nativi and Robert Wall (Paris)
Much of this year's activity for MBDA will focus on exports, but company officials indicate 2008 is shaping up to be a critical year in the evolution of the European missile maker.

Staff
Workers at the U.S. Air Force's Arnold Engineering Development Center are scheduled to test eight Stage 3 booster motors for Minuteman ICBMs this year in AEDC's large Rocket Motor Test Facility. The tests are intended to acquire reliable data and evaluate the reliability of the booster motors, says Col. Robert Shofner, commander of the 526th Intercontinental Ballistic Missile Wing at Hill AFB, Utah.

Staff
USAF Cols. David H. Cyr and Douglas J. Robb have been nominated for promotion to brigadier general. Cyr is director of the Air Force Chaplain Service Institute, Air University, Air Education and Training Command, Maxwell AFB, Ala. Robb is command surgeon, U.S. Central Command, MacDill AFB, Fla.

Staff
Northwest Airlines plans to carry out an aggressive operating plan with a renewed fleet of Boeing 787, Airbus A330, Embraer 175 and Bombardier CRJ900 aircraft. Information was contained in a disclosure statement and amended reorganization plan filed last week with U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. Northwest will complete delivery of 32 A330 aircraft within a year. Later this year, Northwest is scheduling delivery of the first of 72 regional aircraft, equally divided between Embraer 175s and CRJ900s.

Robert Wall (Paris)
Air France-KLM is going to scale back its cargo fleet and hopes to unveil soon a new round of cost-cutting initiatives to assure continued financial strength. The Franco-Dutch airline group reported strong third-quarter results, but signaled it wants to take action to turn around the struggling cargo segment, whose results were hurt by overcapacity. Nine-month cargo operating income declined 41.3% compared to 2005, while overall group operating income was up 31%.

Staff
Joseph T. Lombardo has been appointed executive vice president of General Dynamics' Aerospace Group and president of subsidiary Gulfstream Aerospace Corp., effective Apr. 9. He will succeed Bryan T. Moss, who will become president emeritus. Lombardo has been Savannah, Ga.-based Gulfstream's chief operating officer.

Frank Morring, Jr. (Washington)
Communications managers at NASA are preparing for the day when humans return to the Moon, taking early steps to provide the first explorers a redundant satellite-communications link with each other and their controllers on Earth. Initial lunar-communications planning by NASA's Space Operations Mission Directorate (SOMD) envisions a pair of small satellites in highly elliptical polar orbits, with separate antennas for lunar and lunar-Earth radio links.

Staff
Sikorsky Aircraft Co. has opened its Heavy Lift Development Center, which will house program and engineering personnel responsible for developing the USMC CH-53K. First flight is tentatively scheduled for November 2011. About 500 people are expected to work in the Stratford, Conn., building to de- sign, develop, test and manufacture major systems and subsystems.

Staff
UNITED STATES Editor-In-Chief: Anthony L. Velocci, Jr. [email protected] Managing Editor: James R. Asker [email protected] Assistant Managing Editor: Michael Stearns [email protected] Senior Editors: Craig Covault [email protected], David Hughes [email protected] NEW YORK 2 Penn Plaza, 25th Floor, New York, N.Y. 10121 Phone: +1 (212) 904-2000, Fax: +1 (212) 904-6068 Senior News Editor: Nora Titterington

Staff
Midwest Airlines has rejected AirTran Airways' acquisition overtures, for the second time. In late January, Midwest declined AirTran's initial offer. When the federal waiting period for AirTran's proposed buyout expired Feb. 15 without challenge from the Justice Dept., AirTran CEO Joe Leonard was quick to invite Midwest to the negotiating table. Midwest CEO Timothy Hoeksema turned this down, calling AirTran's offer "inadequate."

Staff
Russia has ambitions to spend $188.5 billion in renewing its weapons inventory from 2007-15, according to the defense ministry. A substantial element of the equipment program is to refresh the country's nuclear capability--with all three elements of the triad receiving financial support. A further 50 Topol-M (SS-27) mobile intercontinental ballistic missiles are to be fielded by 2015, along with additional silo-based systems. The submarine capability is to be bolstered by the addition of eight 955/955A-class subs.

Edited by Frances Fiorino
DFW Airport handled 281,486 metric tons of international cargo in 2006--a 12.9% increase over 2005. In addition, the airport added seven weekly flights to Asia, two international freight carriers, a new international cargo destination and it opened a nearly 400,000-sq.-ft. cargo facility capable of accommodating two Airbus A380s or three Boeing 747s. A total of 756,598 metric tons of cargo (domestic and international) were handled last year, and DFW has received international recognition as "the best cargo airport," according to CEO Jeff Fegan.

Staff
Boeing won a $113.7-million USAF contract increase to the C-17 Globemaster III Sustainment Partnership that will add on the 2007 Global Reach Improvement Program retrofits. The package includes secure communications, weather radar replacement, stabilizer struts redesign, formation flight systems, high-frequency data links and defensive systems.

By Joe Anselmo
After lagging most of its defense industry peers last year, Northrop Grumman Corp.'s stock is showing new signs of life. Shares are up 11% so far in 2007, closing at $74.96 on Feb. 15. That's not far off the stock's 13% return for all of 2006, which was far behind Lockheed Martin Corp. (up 45%), Raytheon Co. (30%) and General Dynamics Corp. (30%).

Edited by Frank Morring, Jr.
Ad Astra Rocket Co. expects to begin operating a 200-kw. "flight-like" engine prototype in ground test by the end of the year. Ad Astra is a Houston-based company that grew out of research into Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket (Vasimr) technology conducted at Johnson Space Center by seven-time shuttle astronaut Franklin Chang-Diaz. The company has opened a facility in Costa Rica, where Chang-Diaz was born, for life-cycle testing that started at lower power levels in December 2006. Next up is a test series with a 100-kw. unit already in early checkout.

Staff
The upcoming CH-47F Chinook upgrade program has--according to the Netherlands Defense Ministry--spawned interest in the Honeywell Avionics Control and Management System glass cockpit (ACMS Block 6) from Australia, Canada, Italy, Japan, Singapore and Taiwan. Honeywell developed the glass cockpit with support from the Royal Netherlands Air Force. According to Boeing, the contract for six CH-47F (NL) helicopters for the Netherlands, the first to use the ACMS Block 6 suite, was signed on Feb. 15, marking the first international sale of the F-model Chinook.

Natalie Magruder (San Rafael, Calif.)
In 1989, when I was 15, I saw two airplanes I could not identify. Several months later, William B. Scott wrote of three secret aircraft that had been reported around the country. I wrote to Aviation Week & Space Technology and within a few weeks, I received a call from Mr. Scott. Instantly the voices of disbelief from those I had told became voices of admiration.

Staff
George Vardoulakis (see photos) has become vice president-tactical systems for F/A-18 programs and William J. Schaefer the Washington-based vice president-business development for the Northrop Grumman Corp.'s Integrated Systems Sector, El Segundo, Calif. Vardoulakis was director of the company's F/A-18E/F program. Schaefer is a former deputy assistant Navy secretary for planning, programming and resources.

Edited by Frank Morring, Jr.
Japan's Koichi Wakata and France's Leopold Eyharts have been assigned slots on future long-duration expeditions to the International Space Station. This move continues the trend to broader international participation on the orbiting facility as NASA delivers pressurized modules supplied by the European Space Agency and the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency. Wakata, the first Japanese astronaut assigned to a station expedition, is scheduled to be on board when the last of three elements for Japan's Kibo laboratory arrives in the winter of 2008 on STS-127.

Name Withheld By Request
Is anyone awake at the FAA? If not, perhaps they are fatigued after flying with me on a "reduced-crew-rest" trip to Hong Kong. As a 777 captain for a major U.S. airline, our layover times are being reduced to dangerous levels. Imagine flying non-stop (16-plus hr.) from the New York area to Hong Kong and departing for home with as little as 10 hr. block-to-block rest, which yields 6 hr. of hotel sleep, if lucky.

Staff
Indonesia is considering a further order for BAE Systems Hawk trainers and light attack aircraft, although wary of the price, which it says is three times as high as some competitors'.

Staff
Airbus appeared tantalizingly close last week to signing off on a contract to provide A330-200 tanker-transport aircraft to Saudi Arabia. On Feb. 12, the French ministry of defense announced that it had struck a deal to sell an unspecified number of tankers to Riyadh, only to say hours later that it had spoken too soon. Paris still hopes to wrap up the transaction within a multibillion-euro arms agreement.

Staff
Tony Varney (see photo) has become finance director and Roger Lantz vice president-sales and marketing for Central Europe for Saab subsidiary Gripen International. Varney was financial director of the Radar Systems Div. of AMS, while Lantz was vice president-human resources at Saab AB.