Aviation Week & Space Technology

Staff
James B. Steinberg has been named vice president/director of the Foreign Policy Studies Program at the Brookings Institution of Washington, effective Sept. 1. He has been senior adviser to the Markle Foundation. Steinberg will succeed Richard N. Haass, who is ambassador at large and policy planning staff director at the State Dept.

EDITED BY JAMES R. ASKER
Undeterred by years of rejected requests, the Pentagon is again asking Congress for base-closing authority. Not much has changed, although this year the Pentagon is asking for one, not two rounds. The review of domestic and overseas bases would begin once the Quadrennial Defense Review is complete. Final Pentagon recommendations would be submitted to an independent commission by Mar. 14, 2003, which then would have until July 7, 2003, to make its recommendations to the President. The President then would have two weeks to accept all the recommendations or reject all.

Staff
Filip Lemmens has been promoted to global sales manager from sales project manager in Belgium and Switzerland for the Vancouver-headquartered Oneworld Alliance. Julia Hearn and John Foord from British Airways have been named development manager and e-pricing manager, respectively. And, Bob Smith from American Airlines has been appointed business manager.

EDITED BY JAMES R. ASKER
Don't kiss the two-war strategy good-bye just yet. The Pentagon's long-standing force-planning goal of being able to fight two major conflicts almost simultaneously is under severe budget pressure, and the services are looking at alternatives. But lame-duck Air Force chief of staff Gen. Mike Ryan said, ``we haven't done the work to say'' the two-war benchmark is history. He even suggested that ``possibly it may remain.'' Even though force structure issues haven't been decided, Ryan called for more F-22s, rejecting the notion of a small ``silver-bullet'' unit.

ALEXEY KOMAROV
Two of Moscow's largest airports, Sheremetyevo and Domodedovo, are in the midst of long-term refurbishment efforts, as are Pulkovo airport in St. Petersburg and several in Siberia. Russia's 533 airports posted 14,730 billion rubles ($508 million) in revenues last year, an increase of 87.4% over 1999. Of the total, 3.5 billion rubles ($120 million) was invested in airport development.

Staff
William B. Watt (see photo) of Franklin Lakes, N.J., has received the William A. Ong Memorial Award, the highest honor of the National Air Transportation Assn. Watt, who was president of Aviation Consulting and cofounder of Executive Air Fleet, was cited for ``achievement and extended meritorious service to the general aviation industry.''

William B. Scott
The U.S. Air Force Academy will reinstate on-site flight screening of pilot candidates next year, but will hire a contractor to provide approximately 40 aircraft and run the turnkey operation.

Staff
Roy Chappell, who is a member of the board of directors of the Friends of Meigs Field in Chicago, and two other Tuskegee Airmen have received Phillips 66 Aviation Leadership Awards from the Experimental Aircraft Assn. The others are: Beverly Dunjill, who is a member of the Chicago Youth in Aviation project board of directors; and Charles Nichols, a member of the executive committee of the Friends of Meigs Field. The award recognizes contributions to the community to build awareness and encourage a wider appreciation of general aviation, particularly among youth.

EDITED BY PATRICIA J. PARMALEE
The Chinese National Space Administration and European Space Agency will study how the Sun affects the Earth's environment under an agreement that will see ESA instruments mounted on twin Chinese satellites. The agencies agreed to collaborate on the ``Double Star'' mission, a move they have been considering since last year (AW&ST Oct. 23, 2000, p. 38). The European instruments will be identical to those flying on ESA's Cluster satellites, which are studying the magnetosphere from four coordinated elliptical orbits.

EDITED BY NORMA AUTRY
Raytheon, BAE Systems and Applied Systems Technology each have won $3.5-million contracts from the U.S. Army to begin development of a signals intelligence sensor for the service's Shadow 200 tactical unmanned aerial vehicle.

EDITED BY NORMA AUTRY
Lord Corp. will manufacture main rotor elastomeric spherical bearings and Fluidlastic lead-lag, inter-blade dampers for Eurocopter NH-90 military helicopters. The contract covers 243 aircraft plus 55 options.

MICHAEL A. TAVERNA
Bowing to the public's demand for courteous, punctual airline travel, Europe will adopt a code of conduct for good service and implement reduced vertical-separation minima to expand airspace capacity. Last week, the European Commission and the Assn. of European Airlines (AEA) agreed to establish new guidelines intended to meet ``the main sources of complaint and frustration expressed by large numbers of passengers [and to] change the impression . . . that they have been abandoned,'' said EC Transport Commissioner Loyola de Palacio.

By Sean Broderick
Boeing has found two failure scenarios that could cause a 767's elevator system to push the aircraft's nose down without pilot input, prompting investigators working on the October 1999 crash of EgyptAir 990 to plan more tests, Aviation Week&Space Technology affiliate AviationNow.com reported.

Staff
Mario L. Guerrier has become director of the School of Aviation and Visitor Services at Miami-Dade Community College. He was chief of single integrated operations planning for the Arizona Air National Guard.

ROBERT WALL
The U.S. Air Force may have to reduce its buy of T-6A Joint Primary Aircraft Training Systems next fiscal year as well as absorb higher prices thereafter as a result of the Navy's decision to stop participating in the program for several years.

Staff
Mark Whitman and David M. Deitch have been appointed vice presidents-business development, respectively, for the South Central and Northeast U.S. and Gary Gennari director of sales for the Eastern U.S. for Cincinnati-based Executive Jet Management. Whitman was service center sales manager for Galaxy Aerospace of Fort Worth, while Deitch was director of sales and marketing for Panolam Industries. Gennari was a senior account representative for FlightTime, Waltham, Mass.

EDITED BY PATRICIA J. PARMALEE
Spurred by a growing portfolio of U.S. military communications satellite programs, Boeing Satellite Systems has leased a building next to its El Segundo, Calif., headquarters to hold them. The company's Defense Dept./Civil Programs building houses about 300 BSS workers. Among military satellite projects managed in the $7.6-million upgraded facility are the Ultra-High-Frequency Follow-On; Advanced Extremely High Frequency, and Wide-band Gapfiller Satellite.

Staff
Jean-Pol Poncelet has been named director of strategy and external relations of the European Space Agency. He is a member of the Belgian House of Representatives and has been Belgium's deputy prime minister, minister of defense and minister of energy.

Staff
The Planetary Society's solar sail suborbital test flight was foiled on July 20 by failure of the third stage booster to send a spacecraft separation command (AW&ST July 16, p. 42). The two solar sails did not inflate because of the separation failure. A search was underway for the booster and the Cosmos 1 spacecraft, which hit Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula after being launched by a Volna rocket from a Russian submarine. Existing plans to launch an orbital solar sail mission this autumn will continue though the flight may slip into winter.

By Jens Flottau
TAM Brazil, which seeks to become a dominant player in the South American market, faces the difficult challenge of sustaining ambitious expansion efforts after the unexpected death of its president and owner Rolim Adolfo Amaro. Amaro, 58, died on July 8 in a helicopter crash near the border of Brazil and Paraguay (AW&ST July 16, p. 23). The charismatic boss leaves behind a financially sound carrier. But it remains to be seen if his successor, Daniel Madelli Martin, is capable of pursuing the strategic goals of the company with the same vigor.

DAVID BOND
The biggest U.S. airlines and the people who analyze them figure the carriers' dismal financial performance in the second quarter was due to a downturn in yields and an upturn in unit costs, especially labor costs. For the most part, they are right. But as usual, there is more to it than that.

EDITED BY JAMES R. ASKER
The Air Force has found a home for the first 18 Global Hawk unmanned aerial vehicles it is buying. But it is also holding out hope for getting more of the high-altitude reconnaissance aircraft, and they might go to another installation. Beale AFB, Calif., home of the U-2, beat Edwards AFB, Calif., Ellsworth AFB, S.D., Tinker AFB, Okla., and Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio. They, and other locations, will be in the running for follow-on buys of the UAV.

Staff
Pluto is a complex world and a wonderland of exotic planetary physics. Its attributes include dramatic seasonal cycles, an atmosphere that escapes into space as fast as that of a typical comet, a complex melange of icy and organic (perhaps even including biotic precursors) surface constituents and the most variegated surface markings seen by telescope on any known planet except Earth. Pluto's moon Charon is fully half of Pluto's size, and strangely, far different in terms of surface appearance and composition.

EDITED BY MICHAEL A. DORNHEIM
Designers who wish to work with others over the Internet can do so with PTC's Pro/Collaborate service, which is free if they are maintenance-paying users of Pro/Engineer design software. Pro/Collaborate lets them create workspaces on the Web outside their company's firewall, where they can display their designs and specifications, and others can mark them up and store them back into the workspace. The service allows temporary access to software tools for a fee, and supports discussion forums.

WILLIAM B. SCOTT
The U.S. Navy explored advanced Network Centric Operations, a working-level application of ``information superiority'' theory, by acquiring, fusing and disseminating data to widely distributed players during this year's ``Navy Global'' wargame. The Title 10 or national-level annual wargame ran July 16-27 and was the third in the Navy's current five-year Global cycle. ``Navy Global'' has proven instrumental in shaping the sea service's