Aviation Week & Space Technology

Staff
Dion Flannery has been named vice president-route planning and scheduling for America West Airlines. He was senior director of long-range schedule planning and charters for Continental Airlines.

Pierre Sparaco ( Paris)
Swiss, the ``new'' carrier from Switzerland, is having a good start that largely meets its business plan's primary goals, according to company executives. Built on Swissair's ashes with a new shareholding structure and reshuffled management, Swiss serves routes to 126 destinations with 128 aircraft. It anticipates carrying nearly 10 million passengers April-December and about 14 million in 2003, its first full year. ``Nevertheless, we are a startup carrier,'' Chief Executive Andre Dose said. He added that the post-Sept.

Staff
Jim Keenan has been named senior vice president-commercial engines for Pratt & Whitney, East Hartford, Conn. He was vice president-engineering and technical support for United Airlines.

Staff
Pam Smith has been promoted to vice president from director of inflight services for American Trans Air.

STANLEY W. KANDEBO ( MARIETTA, GA.)
Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co. recently completed full-scale F-22 static loads tests aimed at verifying the structural design capability of the fighter at limit and ultimate loads. In three years of static loads testing, engineers have examined 15 strain survey conditions, 18 limit load conditions, 19 ultimate load conditions and 66 local test conditions, including the most recent trials, those directed at characterizing the ultimate loads encountered between the aircraft's wings and its weapons pylons.

EDITED BY BRUCE D. NORDWALL
The Gulfstream G-IIB with Garrett Honeywell avionics is now certified for reduced vertical separation minimum avionics (RVSM) operations, adding to the number of business jets that will be able to fly more optimum altitudes. The G-IIB is essentially a G-II with a G-III wing. Included in the package are dual digital air data computers, higher accuracy altimeters, high-reliability solid-state sensors, fully coupled autopilot and upgrades to the display system. Cost of an installation is about $250,000.

Staff
Gianni Marostica has been named president of Sabre Airline Reservations, Southlake, Tex. He was managing partner of Sabre Consulting.

Staff
Jim Dornbusch, Jr., has become manager of the Wichita, Kan., branch of Kulite Semiconductor Products Inc. and Jim Dornbusch, Sr., director of aerospace. The elder Dornbusch was program manager of the Hawker Horizon for Raytheon Aircraft, also in Wichita.

EDITED BY FRANK MORRING, JR.
It's beginning to look like NASA will have the money it needs to build the ``core complete'' version of the International Space Station, without any more nasty surprises like last year's $4.8-billion shortfall. Administrator Sean O'Keefe says the early word he's getting shows at most a ``nominal'' adjustment will be needed in the amounts budgeted for the truncated three-person station adopted to cover the shortfall.

ANTHONY L. VELOCCI, JR. ( NEW YORK)
Wall Street is anticipating a strong second-quarter for defense stocks, with many companies likely to report double-digit earnings growth. Some contractors may even raise their earnings guidance for the second half of the year. With defense stocks up by more than 15% as of last Thursday, the sector probably is as safe a haven as professional investors are apt to find in the current bear market.

Staff
Emily Carter has been appointed vice president-marketing and industry relations for the Washington-based Universal Air Travel Plan Inc. She was director of marketing.

Staff
Turkey has signed on to the next phase of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program last week. Pentagon acquisition chief E.C. Aldridge, Jr., met last week with Turkish Underecretary for Defense Industries Ali Ercan to ink a $175-million memorandum of understanding for the development phase. Turkey earlier invested $6.2 million in the concept demonstration phase. As a level three partner, Turkey will participate with the U.K., Italy, the Netherlands, Canada, Denmark and Norway for the next 10 years of the system's development-and-demonstration phase.

Staff
USAF Brig. Gen. (ret.) Jerome A. Landry has become partner executive for the Global Defense and Space Group of Cisco Systems Inc., Herndon, Va. He was a vice president of TRW and previously senior vice president-business development for BDM International.

EDITED BY PATRICIA J. PARMALEE
Airbus will contribute 60% of the 80-million-euro ($79.5-million) budget for its new technology program, Aircraft Wing with Advanced Technology Operation (Awiator). The four-year project, cofunded by a consortium of 23 partners from Europe, will validate advanced technologies for wing design applications on future transport aircraft. Many technologies will be investigated and eventually flight tested on the company's flying testbed A340, MSN 001.

Staff
Caroline M. (Maury) Devine has been named to the board of directors of Atlantic Coast Airlines Holdings, Dulles, Va. She is a fellow at Harvard University's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs and was secretary of the Mobil Corp.

DAVID BOND ( WASHINGTON)
Facing an aviation community as divided as ever on what to do in the long run about congestion and delays at New York LaGuardia Airport, the FAA has bought itself more time--two years--to sort things out. Along the way, it will factor into its thinking a strong endorsement of the most market-oriented of options, slot auctions, from an unexpected, influential source, the Justice Dept. Large airlines still argue that the FAA doesn't need to do anything at LaGuardia (LGA) because the current demand-management regime keeps delays at a tolerable level.

DOUGLAS BARRIE ( LONDON)
Top level British defense aerospace executives met with Prime Minister Tony Blair and senior ministers here, during which a radical overhaul of the British defense procurement system was raised. The June 18 breakfast meeting saw senior level industrialists, including BAE Systems Chief Executive Officer Mike Turner, raise concerns about Britain's defense aerospace industrial base. Following the discussions, Turner wrote to Patricia Hewitt, secretary of state for trade and industry. He urged the government to reconsider its approach to defense procurement.

Staff
Lockheed Martin's ``Pantera'' precision attack system recently won the Royal Norwegian Air Force's Laser Target Designator Pods competition. The intake-mounted pods will be integrated with RNAF's fleet of F-16 Mid-Life-Update fighters. The $27-million award marks the first international sale for Pantera. The precision attack navigation and targeting system is an export version of the company's Sniper extended range pod, which is in development testing as the U.S. Air Force's advanced targeting pod for F-15, F-16 and other aircraft (AW&ST Feb. 5, 2001, p. 60).

EDITED BY FRANK MORRING, JR.
Last week's crash of another Northrop Grumman RQ-4A Global Hawk unmanned reconnaissance aircraft leaves Pentagon planners without an electro-optical/infrared payload to gather intelligence over Iraq should a conflict develop there. Air vehicle No. 4 carried the only available EO/IR sensor package when its Rolls-Royce engine failed, leaving just two of the aircraft for operations. Those will be restricted to synthetic aperture radar sensor payloads that are less precise than the EO/IR payload.

Staff
U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. John Jumper last week informally declared himself de facto manager of the F-22 test program at Edwards AFB, Calif., with the support of Air Force Secretary James G. Roche. Senior Air Force officials are ``dissatisfied with the plodding pace'' of the official test program and the reluctance of Edwards officials to speed up the process, an Air Force official said. Jumper and Lockheed Martin officials contend there are more efficient ways to get through the test points.

Staff
The Air Transportation Stabilization Board has provided beleaguered US Airways with a measure of hope, conditionally approving a $900-million federal loan guarantee last week that would maintain the seventh largest U.S. airline as it restructures. The three-man board recognized US Airways' ``disciplined and comprehensive approach'' to its restructuring. To qualify for the loan, which would cover 90% of its financing package, US Airways will be required to meet three conditions. The first is completing cost-cutting labor agreements that are testing CEO David N.

EDITED BY MICHAEL A. DORNHEIM
The U.K.'s Ministry of Defense has formed a link with the Exostar Web-based trading exchange, which corporate officials think will lead to de facto standards for e-commerce between government and the private sector. The link was the result of a six-month effort by Exostar and the Cap Gemini Ernst & Young management and infotech consulting organization, and involved defense contractors such as Rolls-Royce and BAE Systems. Cap Gemini Ernst & Young has a 10-year public-private partnership with the ministry to provide e-commerce and e-business services.

EDITED BY BRUCE D. NORDWALL
Lockheed Martin Naval and Electronics and Surveillance System in Akron, Ohio, is under contract to develop Medusa, (multifunction EO defense on U.S. aircraft). It may use the company's Eagle IR-countermeasures family, which utilizes a laser and an infrared camera. IR cameras in the closed-loop systems identify the missile from laser reflections inside the seeker. A complex jam code is synchronized to the missile's scan patterns (AW&ST May 21, 2001, p. 43).

DAVID BOND ( WASHINGTON)
The largest U.S. airlines eased up a bit more during June on the brake they've applied to capacity since Sept. 11. The marketplace didn't reward them. Not counting Southwest Airlines, which has continued to take 737 deliveries and increase capacity almost without interruption, the big carriers ended June closer to year-earlier capacity levels, in percentage terms, than they have been in the first half of 2002. Some of them were closer in traffic, too.

BRUCE D. NORDWALL ( WASHINGTON)
The traffic-alert and collision avoidance system (TCAS), somewhat maligned and misunderstood in the wake of the July 1 midair collision in Europe, provides more protection than is commonly understood. Pilots generally have a high regard for TCAS, and its European counterpart ACAS (airborne collision avoidance system). From the cockpit they are perceived as a safety net when the air traffic control system fails to provide safe separation.