Aviation Week & Space Technology

Staff
Murray Sigler, president/CEO of the Winnipeg (Manitoba) Airports Authority, has won the Airports Council International-North America Leadership Award for his performance as 1999 chairman of the Canadian Airports Council.

Staff
DASA-MiG joint venture MAPS has been selected to upgrade Romania's fleet of MiG-29 jet fighters, in collaboration with Romanian firm Aerostar. At least four aircraft will be initially modernized under the agreement.

Staff
John Patterson has become managing director of GB Airways, based at London Gatwick Airport. He was director of alliances at British Airways and succeeds John Osborne, who has been named managing director of Virgin Express.

ROBERT WALL
The Army has picked AAI's Shadow 200 to meet the service's long unfulfilled requirement for an unmanned aircraft to provide brigade commanders with a close-range reconnaissance and target acquisition capability. AAI was one of four bidders in the Army's tactical unmanned aerial vehicle (T-UAV) competition. The losing competitors were Alliant Techsystems, General Atomics and a TRW/IAI/S-Tec team. All four participated in a fly-off during October and November.

NORMAN R. AUGUSTINE
It is sobering to realize that my contemporaries and I have thus far lived through the entire space age, and fully two-thirds of the aeronautical age. During this period, our profession contributed significantly to winning a world war, ending a prolonged Cold War, exploring the Moon and the planets and--in its spare time--establishing the Global Village.

Staff
Franco-Russian launch company Starsem is studying a new version of the venerable SL-4 Soyuz booster intended to further increase the launcher's lift capability into low Earth and geostationary transfer orbits. The new variant, dubbed Soyuz/ST+, would be equipped with an upgraded third stage that would make the booster more attractive for medium-sized Earth observation and scientific satellites, Chairman/CEO Jean-Yves Le Gall said here during a Starsem users' conference.

ROGER-MAURICE BONNET
Is discovery still possible? Do we still have the potential to dream as we did only recently in the past century? Do we need the intimate challenge of competition with another power to explore and discover? Have we reached the limits of physical laws? All of us who reached maturity in the second half of the 20th century have thought about these questions. We realize how much more we can do in space, we see how many more opportunities space offers to mankind.

EDITED BY JAMES R. ASKER
National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) Director Keith Hall received a nice gift from Lockheed Martin just days before Christmas. Company officials informed him they were dropping their protest of an NRO award to Boeing to build the next generation of U.S. optical and radar imaging satellites. Lockheed Martin, which has led work on classified U.S. imaging satellites since 1958, was stunned in September when the NRO awarded the work to Boeing (AW&ST Sept. 13, 1999, p. 27). The company appealed the award, but its chances of overturning the selection were viewed as slim.

NEELAM MATHEWS
The hijacking of an Indian Airlines Airbus A300 in Kathmandu, Nepal, with 189 crew and passengers on board on Christmas Eve has pointed up weak spots in India's crisis management aviation policy. The hijacking was still underway last week when Aviation Week&Space Technology went to press, but the essential facts are: -- Flight 814 took off from Kathmandu's Tribhuvan International Airport on Dec. 24 bound for New Delhi when it was seized by five Islamic extremists as it crossed into Indian airspace over Lucknow.

EDITED BY PAUL PROCTOR
New aircraft under development in Wichita include a smaller version of the CitationJet. Across town, Raytheon is working on two new business jets. One is sized between the Premier 1 and Hawker Horizon. The second is to be bigger than the new Hawker Horizon.

Staff
Mark P. Burdick has been appointed vice president/general manager of the Wireless Group and Timothy P. Ross vice president/general manager of the Space and Defense Group of Anaren Microwave Inc., Syracuse, N.Y.

EDITED BY PAUL PROCTOR
Honeywell and Coherent Technologies Inc. of Lafayette, Colo., have entered into a long-term contract to develop a new hybrid air turbulence warning for air transports. By combining Honeywell's RDR-4B predictive wind shear on-board weather radar with CTI's infrared radar technology, the system will detect every type of turbulence from rough air in thunderstorms to clear air turbulence in dry weather conditions, the companies said. First deliveries are planned for late 2002. The system will weigh less than 50 lb. and mount infrared light sensors on the radome.

PAUL MANN
The Clinton Administration is weighing a complaint to international aviation authorities that would challenge Europe's impending crackdown against hushkitted U.S. aircraft operating on the continent. In the wake of a December failure at a U.S./European Union (EU) summit to fashion a transatlantic compromise on noise reduction, the U.S. aviation industry has endorsed a putative Administration decision to lodge an Article 84 complaint under the Chicago Convention with the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO).

EDITED BY JAMES R. ASKER
While much attention has been focused on North Korea's ballistic missile weapons program, the country has more quietly been making advances in its special operations capability, a Defense Dept. official says. In addition to the use of small submarines to insert special forces into South Korea, the North also is expanding its airborne special operations capability. North Korea is fielding an increasing number of small, non-metal aircraft for troop infiltration, the official says. The low-flying aircraft could be hard to detect for South Korean or U.S. radars.

ANTHONY L. VELOCCI, JR.
Looking back on 1999, investors in aerospace/defense companies have little to cheer about, and analysts are split on whether stocks are likely to rebound in the first half of 2000. Deutsche Banc Alex. Brown analyst Christopher Mecray, among others, does not expect to see a broad recovery.

Staff
Herm Reininga (see photo), vice president-operations of Rockwell Collins, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, has received the Meritorious Public Service Citation for 1999 from the U.S. Navy chief of naval research. Reininga was cited for leadership in manufacturing and technical expertise provided to the USN's manufacturing technology program.

EDITED BY NORMA AUTRY
Wesson International has installed a 3D visual control tower simulator at Eurocontrol's research facility in Brussels. The simulator will be used for airport traffic control area and air traffic procedures research.

JAMES P. WOMACKDAVID FITZPATRICK
The signature of the first century of aerospace was high-performance products---larger and larger, faster and faster, more and more capable. These were sold to military organizations and regulated commercial carriers on a cost-plus basis, because performance-at-any-price was crucial to the military, and because the costs of superior performance could be passed through by price-regulated airlines competing on service.

Staff
Jean-Luc Lagardere, chairman of Lagardere, has been designated by the French government and Lagardere group to sit on the board of directors of the European Aeronautics, Defense and Space Co. The other members will be: Louis Gallois, chairman/CEO of SNCF French railways and former chairman/CEO of Aerospatiale and Snecma; Philippe Camus, chief executive of Aerospatiale Matra; and Noel Forgeard, chief executive of Airbus Industrie.

BURT RUTAN
Most of us look back to the recent past in order to forecast the near future. If the public has little optimism that there will be significant aerospace progress over the next 35 years, it is because today's ``modern'' supersonic airliners, jumbo transports and business jets have remained virtually unchanged since their initial development in the 1960s.

Staff
D.C. Iain Glendinning (see photo) has become vice president-operations for Sabreliner and Premier turbines for the Sabreliner Corp. of St. Louis. Jim Meier (see photo) has been named vice president-government services, Claire Stewart (see photo) vice president-materiel and Jack Vaughn (see photo) vice president-corporate aviation marketing.

Staff
A DC-10 and Yakovlev Yak-42 2operated by Cuba-based airline Cubana de Aviacion were involved in separate accidents in Latin America late last month that killed more than 40 people and destroyed both aircraft.

EDITED BY FRANCES FIORINO
Alaska Airlines will break its strict north-south route network philosophy when it starts planned seasonal service between Chicago and Anchorage/Fairbanks on June 4. The daily flights, which will operate through Sept. 30, are made possible by the range of Alaska's new Boeing 737-700 transports. They will be configured to seat 120 passengers, including 12 in first class. The route will bolster Alaska Airlines' position as the dominant carrier to Alaska and supplements its 31 daily peak-season nonstop flights to Anchorage and Fairbanks, according to the airline.

EDITED BY JAMES R. ASKER
Offering his own 21st century threat assessment, President Clinton says an attempted biological, chemical or nuclear terrorist attack on U.S. soil is highly likely in the next 10-20 years. ``The organized forces of destruction will take maximum advantage of new technologies and new scientific developments, just as democratic societies do,'' the President predicted in a television interview with 60 Minutes II. Specifically, he forecast, the miniaturization of computers will be applied to reducing the size of chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.

CRAIG COVAULT
Hubble Space Telescope controllers at the Goddard Space Flight Center are preparing to return the historic observatory to science operations this week now that Hubble has been buttressed by a major increase in computer and data storage capability, new battery components, an upgraded guidance system and six critical attitude gyros added by the shuttle Discovery astronaut crew.The 13 electronic systems installed in the telescope by the shuttle Mission 103 crew have specifically laid the foundation for significant increases in observing capability, as Hubble begins its second