Aviation Week & Space Technology

Staff
Mary Jordan has become Vancouver-based senior vice president-international and British Columbia of Air Canada. She was senior vice president-customer service and operations of Canadian Airlines before it was acquired by Air Canada. John R. Kreick (see photo), a consultant and former president of the then-Lockheed Martin Sanders, has been appointed chairman of the Draper Labora- tory, Cambridge, Mass.

ANTHONY L. VELOCCI, JR.
Pratt&Whitney managers and other salaried employees were trying to cope with uncertain jet-engine production and delivery schedules last week after more than 5,100 union employees struck the company over demands for enhanced job- and retirement-security.

EDITED BY NORMA AUTRY
International Aerospace Management Co. has selected EADS-CASA Military Aircraft to perform B, C1, C2, S1 and S2 upgrades for NATO's Boeing 707 Trainer Cargo Aircraft.

Staff
RepliSet is a replicating system for nondestructive testing and engineering inspection. It's designed to transfer the microstructure of a surface to a replica medium, and produces an exact 3D copy of an engineering surface. The replica is subsequently analyzed off-site under laboratory conditions. Replicas can be taken of metallic materials and most other solid materials. Typical metallographic applications are on-site nondestructive testing in connection with quality control and inspection and maintenance of aircraft components.

BARRY ROSENBERG
With the reliability and safety of wiring in older aircraft a major concern to operators of commercial and military aircraft, an industry team led by Honeywell Aerospace has launched the Nova Wire Integrity Program that employs ``intelligent telemaintenance'' to electronically test and identify faulty wiring and connections in older aircraft. Commercial aircraft had 1,089 smoke and fire incidents over a recent 10-month period, and 82% of those were directly related to electrical systems, according to Honeywell.

FRANK MORRING, JR.
Top NASA officials will meet this week to decide how the agency can be trimmed to fit the Bush Administration's view of it, an exercise that will include talk of which field centers to close in an effort to create ``one NASA'' without costly duplication.

Staff
Cecil Hunt has been named ``of counsel'' to the Washington law firm of Harris Wiltshire&Grannis. He has been deputy chief counsel for export administration at the U.S. Commerce Dept.

Staff
Boeing decided to continue producing the 717 transport, after saying in October it was being considered for termination. However, the production rate will be reduced owing to the current slow sales, and layoffs at Long Beach, Calif., will increase beyond the previously announced 1,200 employees. The company will take a one-time $700-million after-tax charge in the fourth quarter for costs related to post-Sept. 11 production cutbacks.

Staff
America West Airlines has revised its Nov. 13 application for a $400-million federal loan guarantee, offering the government equity in the company and increasing its at-risk borrowing. The company also reported a $63-million increase, to $648 million from $585 million, in aircraft financing and concessions agreed to by manufacturers, lessors, creditors, vendors, state and local governments, shareholders and employees.

Staff
USAF IS CONSIDERING AN UPGRADE for the F-15's ALR-56C radar warning receiver and the F-16's ALR-56M. The Air Force Research Laboratory has awarded BAE Systems a $4.8-million contract for a ``critical experiment'' to demonstrate an advanced threat alert and response (ATAR) upgrade by next April, which could lead to a 30-month advanced technology demonstration.

EDITED BY PATRICIA J. PARMALEE
Eutelsat has opened a Turin-based subsidiary, Skylogic Italia, to support emerging satcom markets in northern Italy. The company will handle marketing/sales and provide technical infrastructure for a broad range of open-access broadband communications services in partnership with Euphon, an Italian media firm. Euphon will operate and support the system under an agreement concluded earlier this year (AW&ST Aug. 6, p. 21).

Staff
Machinists union members at Pratt&Whitney began returning to work on Dec. 13 after agreeing to a new three-year contract that provides some enhanced job and retirement security. Both sides made concessions. About three-fourths of District 91 members who voted on the company's proposed offer voted to end the week-long strike.

Reviewed by Stanley W. Kandebo
By Robert P. White Smithsonian Institution Press 186 pp., Hardcover, $24.95 Mason Patrick began his aviation career at the top, as Gen. John J. Pershing's hand-picked nominee to head the Air Service, AEF. Patrick was to whip it into fighting shape, giving it the structure, motivation and infrastructure needed to become a first-class battle force.

EDITED BY FRANCES FIORINO
Turkish Airlines (THY), staggering from repeated economic blows, is stepping up survival efforts with additional job cuts and reductions in its 69-aircraft fleet. The carrier was in the midst of the country's deepest recession since 1945 when it was hit by the effects of Sept. 11. The carrier now expects the International Monetary Fund to implement economic measures related to a $15.7-billion loan issued in February.

By PAUL MANN
U.S./Russian arms control, enshrined in Cold War liturgy for decades, is said to be entering a treaty-less twilight. Policymakers and analysts differ sharply about whether this development is a birth or a death.

Staff
Four B-1 crewmen had to eject last week just north of Diego Garcia shortly after a nighttime takeoff on a mission to bomb Afghanistan. An engine fire continued to burn even after fuel flow was shut off. The flames caused ``multiple malfunctions,'' said the bomber's pilot and mission commander, Air Force Capt. William Steele. ``The aircraft was out of control, and we all had to eject'' at about 15,000 ft. The crew was picked up about 2 hr. later suffering only from bruises and cuts related to the violent ejection.

Staff
NOVATEL OF CALGARY, ALBERTA, will develop a GPS receiver for the local area augmentation system (LAAS) ground facility that Raytheon is developing for the FAA. LAAS is a GPS-based system designed to provide precision-landing guidance. In addition to LAAS, Raytheon is developing ground stations for the FAA's wide-area augmentation system; MTSAT satellite-based augmentation system (MSAS) in Japan, and for the U.S. Defense Dept.'s joint precision approach and landing system.

By JOHN CROFT
With Congress' mid-January mandate to probe all checked bags for explosives quickly approaching and far too few electronic detection systems in place to do the work, airlines are rapidly investigating substitute strategies offered in the aviation security legislation signed into law by President Bush on Nov. 19.

EDITED BY MICHAEL A. DORNHEIM
Bringing together a variety of map formats is often valuable, but can be difficult. For example, laying a street pattern, water system and power lines on top of a satellite image can give a good picture of a town--but these data may be stored in pixel and vector formats with different coordinate systems, labeling conventions and other standards, as well as being spread among different databases.

By PIERRE SPARACO
Buzz, a British low-cost carrier owned by KLM, is preparing to expand its French operations, including domestic routes.

By ROBERT WALL
U.S. Army aviation officials argue that a proposal to restructure the RAH-66 Comanche's development program will do a lot to reduce risk and that a concomitant plan to accelerate production would more than offset any near-term cost increases.

Staff
Long-time Airbus customer Vietnam Airlines has chosen the Boeing 777-200ER for European and U.S. routes, marking the first business transaction under a U.S.-Vietnam trade pact that came into effect earlier this month. The four aircraft, valued at $680 million, are to begin arriving in 2003.

Staff
Chris Ullman has become vice president-corporate communications for the Carlyle Group of Washington. He was associate director of communications for the U.S. Office of Management and Budget.

EDITED BY PATRICIA J. PARMALEE
Lockheed Martin Global Telecommunications' plan to unload holdings in Inmarsat and other satellite operators is not the only equity realignment underway in the industry. Last week, Telecom Italia announced it would sell its 20.5% stake in Eutelsat, along with minor shares in Intelsat (2.8%), Inmarsat (2.1%) and New Skies (3.9%), to a group of investors led by Lehman Brothers. The shares, valued at 550 million euros ($495 million), will ultimately be transferred to a new company, with Lehman Brothers holding 70% and Telecom Italia, 30%.

Staff
The board of directors of the FedEx Pilots Assn. has entered into a merger agreement with the Air Line Pilots Assn. International after a five-year period as an independent union. FPA President David Webb said reconnecting with ALPA was the ``clear choice'' after studying alternatives, including forming a union with pilots at UPS and other cargo carriers or remaining an independent. Polls of members showed a strong preference for ALPA, Webb said.