Aviation Week & Space Technology

Staff
Fred Buttrell, who was senior vice president-strategy and business development for Delta Air Lines, has been appointed president/CEO of Delta Connection Inc. He succeeds David Siebenburgen, who will retire but remain chairman of Delta AirElite Business Jets. Joe Kolshak, who was director of investor relations, has been named vice president-flight operations, for mainline Delta. He succeeds Dave Bushy, who will remain a Boeing 767 captain and be the airline's liaison to industry groups for pilot resource planning, training and recruitment.

EDITED BY PATRICIA J. PARMALEE
The Senate has long been frustrated with Pentagon accounting problems and lack of transparency on where money is spent, and now the Defense Dept.'s inspector general has found new ammunition for lawmakers. Investigating an allegation that the Environmental Technology Laboratory mischarged costs to Advanced Sensor Applications Program, the IG indeed discovered that $1.6 million couldn't be properly accounted for. The project is a cooperative effort between the Defense Dept.

By ROBERT WALL
The U.S. Aerospace Commission and the Defense Dept. envision a number of near-term measures that could aid U.S. aerospace companies and enhance their long-term financial outlook. Pentagon acquisition chief Edward C. (Pete) Aldridge told the commission last week at its first hearing that two policies are being developed that could improve contractors' balance sheets. One is focused on helping companies eliminate excess capacity; the other is more directly related to profit policies.

By DAVID A. FULGHUM and ROBERT WALL
U.S. heavy bombers have appeared in the Afghanistan conflict as little more than distant contrails, but the small force--primarily 18 Boeing B-1s and B-52s operating from Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean--has dropped most of the 4,700 tons delivered by the Air Force, which comprise 72% of the war's total.

By DAVID BOND
Norman Mineta and Tom Ridge, whose workloads have mushroomed since Sept. 11, each in its way, are trying to do quickly what many aviation industry professionals would be impressed with if they can do at all. Mineta, the secretary of Transportation, and Ridge, President Bush's Homeland Security czar, outlined their immediate plans Nov. 27 at Aviation Week's homeland security and defense conference in Washington. For each, work will not be slowing down for the holidays.

EDITED BY NORMA AUTRY
Marshall Aerospace will provide spares and rotables support for RAF Tristars, under a contract for up to 10 years that takes effect in January. The contract includes simulator, ground and test equipment support.

EDITED BY MICHAEL A. DORNHEIM
The U.S. Air Force is going to consolidate the intranets from 110 bases around the world into a single electronic portal called My.AirForce. The centralized system is to start operating in early 2002 and will include millions of pages from 28,000 information systems and 1,500 Web sites. Up to 1.2 million users will have access with varying levels of security, using 128-bit SSL encryption.

Staff
The U.S. Air Force awarded Boeing a $4.5-billion contract to sustain the B-1B bomber fleet for the next 15 years. Boeing also will be responsible for upgrades on the aircraft.

By ANTHONY L. VELOCCI, JR.
Mergers and acquisitions have dramatically altered the global aerospace/defense landscape in recent years. The value of those deals easily exceeds $150 billion. Still, it isn't over. Many more companies will be acquired before consolidation runs its course. With that in mind, Aviation Week&Space Technology, in collaboration with Charles River Associates Inc. (CRA), undertook a six-month analysis of consolidation--past, present and pending.

EDITED BY MICHAEL A. DORNHEIM
General Electric outsources some of its information library support to Sopheon (www.sopheon.com), including services for the aircraft engines unit and the corporation. The library is used for research, development, and legal and business information. Employees can search for data themselves through a network portal, or e-mail the Sopheon research staff to help them. The library culls information from the Web, published literature and proprietary sources.

Staff
Douglas Barrie will join Aviation Week&Space Technology as London bureau chief on Jan. 7. Barrie has covered aerospace issues within Europe for numerous aviation and aerospace publications for the past 13 years. Barrie, a British citizen, graduated from Edinburgh University. He succeeds John D. Morrocco, former European bureau chief, who left the magazine earlier this year to join Boeing in Chicago. Pierre Sparaco, who is Paris-based senior European editor, will be promoted to European bureau chief, effective Jan. 1. Barrie will report to Sparaco.

By PIERRE SPARACO
EasyJet, a growing low-cost British carrier, is seeking to establish an additional hub at Paris Orly. Although it would operate initially between Orly and existing points in its route system, EasyJet also would like to serve Orly-Nice, France's second busiest city-pair. The carrier's cheapest fares on Orly-Nice would be as low as $38-52 and the highest price an estimated $120, a fraction of Air Lib's and Air's France fares.

EDITED BY JAMES R. ASKER
The Navy was poised to ground seven EA-6B Prowlers and put restrictions on another 17 late last week because the aircraft's wing center section is aging faster than expected. Among the affected aircraft is one of two prototypes with the new ICAP-III electronic warfare system. The Navy will have to replace its center wing section to avoid disrupting ICAP development. As to the entire fleet of high-demand standoff jammers, the Navy will have to buy 18 center wing sections a year--not the hoped-for 10--to achieve its goal of having 108 operational Prowlers.

EDITED BY FRANCES FIORINO
The Transportation Dept. will review the Orbitz airline-fare Web site ``within a few months'' and complete its updating of computer reservations system (CRS) rules ``promptly,'' Transportation Secretary Norman Y. Mineta told Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Ernest F. Hollings (D-S.C.). The department first asked for comments on whether and how to modify its 1992 CRS rules in 1997, on the theory that reduced airline control of CRSs--and development of airline and third-party Internet booking systems--warranted rule changes.

Staff
The payloads for two delayed Atlas missions at Cape Canaveral were transposed in last week's issue (p. 25). The EchoStar 7 spacecraft will be launched on an Atlas III from Pad 36B, while TDRS I will be launched on an Atlas IIA from Pad 36A. Also, the TDRS delay is not related to a bureaucratic issue between NASA and Boeing, but rather Boeing's modification of a single-access antenna deployment mechanism unrelated to performance deficiencies on the earlier TDRS H multiple- access antenna.

By Sumiko Oshima
Hard hit by the world airline slump, Japan's second largest carrier, All Nippon Airways, said it will suffer an 11-billion-yen (88.7-million) group net loss for the fiscal year ending Mar. 31, a surprising downturn from a 40-billion-yen net profit for fiscal 2000.

By PAUL MANN
Pressure is mounting on the White House to speed up transformation of the military in response to Sept. 11, despite skepticism that the armed forces are the main key to eradicating global terrorist cells.

EDITED BY NORMA AUTRY
Qatar Airways has selected EADS Sogerma seats for its fleet of Airbus A330 aircraft and has installed in-seat DVD systems in six A320s. Seat deliveries begin this April. The airline will begin a launch study with EADS Sogerma for an aircraft maintenance facility. And, EADS Sogerma has been selected to provide total component support for Qatar's A300-600Rs and A310-300s.

By DAVID A. FULGHUM
The largest weapon dropped on Afghanistan--a 15,000-lb. high-explosive bomb--has been used for a third time. The most recent target was the southern defenses of Kandahar, the last major city held by the Taliban.

EDITED BY JAMES R. ASKER
While Airbus officials think they have a shot at the KC-135 tanker-replacement program, the Air Force seems to be ignoring them. ``We are pursuing the idea of a Boeing 767 for several reasons,'' said the new Air Force chief, Gen. John P. Jumper. High among them is replacing the 707-like birds with aircraft whose reliability matches that of a new airliner. Another is Jumper's idea for a ``smart tanker'' aircraft. ``I sat bolt upright in bed and said, `Why on earth did we ever buy dumb tankers?''' he said.

Staff
USAF Global Hawk unmanned aircraft are finally in operation over Afghanistan. Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. John Jumper saw the first images from one of the Northrop Grumman reconnaissance aircraft Nov. 27. ``I am surprised at how good they were and I am very surprised with the reliability that has been demonstrated,'' Jumper said, but at the same time warned of undue expectations. ``The Global Hawk is still very much a test system,'' he said.

By FRANK MORRING, JR.
NASA has set a Dec. 7 launch date for two spacecraft--one designed to continue detailed study of the world's oceans, and the other to initiate worldwide study of a section of the upper atmosphere that has previously gone unexamined because it has been too high for airplanes and balloons, and too low for direct observation by satellites.

EDITED BY NORMA AUTRY
Canada's Magnifoam Technology International Inc. has won a contract to supply its PlyFab thermal-acoustic insulation system for the three Bombardier Learjet models: 31A, 45 and 60.

EDITED BY FRANCES FIORINO
AirTran Airways is seeking at least $100,000 damages against a man whose alleged security breach clipped Atlanta Hartsfield International's wings for nearly 4 hr. on Nov. 16. The Orlando-Fla.-based carrier last week filed a civil suit in U.S. District Court in Atlanta, ``seeking relief as a result of events'' that followed the actions of Michael Shane Lasseter. The gentleman was said to have run past guards and down an up escalator, a move which aroused suspicions of security forces at the nation's busiest airport.

EDITED BY JAMES R. ASKER
Transportation Secretary Norman Y. Mineta committed truth last week at Aviation Week's conference on homeland security and defense, and he is paying a political price for it. Stating what already was evident to everyone in the aviation community (AW&ST Nov. 26, p. 52), Mineta said his department can't deliver on Congress' mandate to begin screening all checked baggage for explosives by Jan. 18 without big increases in airport delays. There aren't enough explosives-detection systems, bomb-sniffing dogs and trained screeners to do the job.