Aviation Week & Space Technology

JOHN D. MORROCCO
The Society of British Aerospace Companies, in data released last week, said the U.K. industry's sales in 1997 were up 8% in real terms from the previous year, and employment levels have stabilized following a steady decline since the late 1980s.

Staff
Dick Crofton has been named vice president-Business Aircraft Div. of CIT Group/Equipment Financing, Tempe, Ariz.

MICHAEL A. DORNHEIMDAVID A. FULGHUM
The next generation of Tomahawk missile will be more flexible with features such as inflight retargeting and a real-time ``final frame'' TV indication of whether it hit the target. The Block 3 Tomahawks probably used in the recent attacks are the latest version, but cannot be retargeted in flight and have no self-contained method of damage assessment. The more capable next-generation ``Tactical Tomahawks'' should be operational in 2003 and may be designated Block 4.

Staff
Malcolm V. Lane has become Lakehurst, N.J.-based senior vice president of the M&T Co., a subsidiary of CDI Marine. He was a pilot for Midway Airlines and succeeds William Cox, who has retired.

Staff
Guillermo (Willy) Cabeza has become president/chief operating officer of Arrow Air Inc. of Miami. Jonathan D. Batchelor, who has been president, will be chairman and continue as CEO. And, former Chairman Todd Cole will remain on the board of directors. Cabeza was vice president-operations. Fernando L. Juarbe has become sales manager in Puerto Rico. He was manager of San Juan operations for Caribbean Air Services Inc.

EDITED BY MONICA WARNOCK
Under a $75-million contract from Israel's Tel Aviv Ben Gurion 2000 Airport program, Ceylan Insaat of Turkey will build terminal facilities and supply the terminal's electronic systems at the airport.

Staff
Scott Ritter, a former USMC captain, has resigned from his post as a concealment expert on the U.N. weapons inspection team charged with uncovering Iraqi weapons of mass destruction. In his letter of resignation, Ritter faulted the U.S. for not fighting for inspectors' unrestricted access to suspected hiding places for missiles or biological and chemical weapons. He blamed the Security Council for being unwilling or incapable of implementing its own laws. Its work is ``an illusion . . . which in all good faith I cannot, and will not be a party to,'' Ritter wrote.

Staff
The U.K. Ministry of Defense accepted delivery last week of the first of 25 C-130J transports it ordered in 1995 from Lockheed Martin. The aircraft will undergo testing by the Defense Evaluation and Research Agency at its Boscombe Down facility prior to being handed over to the Royal Air Force. A second aircraft, scheduled to arrive in the U.K. later this year, will also be involved in the acceptance trials program which is expected to be completed by early 1999.

Staff
Controllers have been able to thaw the hydrazine fuel tank in the Soho solar observatory and expected to have it at the normal 50F temperature last weekend (Aug. 29) (AW&ST Aug. 17, p. 32). They will then thaw the fuel lines and hope to use the thrusters to return the spinning spacecraft to its normal attitude in early September. Ranging indicates the spacecraft is in a good orbit and had not drifted due to potential thruster malfunction as some engineers had feared.

Staff
Joe Reedy has become senior vice president-Western region for AMR Services of Fort Worth. He has been succeeded by John Vittas as senior vice president-marketing and planning. Vittas was senior vice president-New York region.

EDITED BY BRUCE D. NORDWALL
WHEN HONEYWELL DEFENSE AVIONICS SYSTEMS upgrades F-16 cockpit displays from monochrome CRTs to color active matrix LCDs, it will have to replace the microprocessors that drive the displays, but not the software. The new processors being supplied by CPU Technology of Pleasanton, Calif., are designed with binary compatibility with the existing Mil-Std-1750As processors, to allow them to operate with the existing software. Using a compatible processor will save the F-16 program tens of millions of dollars in cost-avoidance, according to USAF's program office.

Staff

EDITED BY FRANCES FIORINO
Sabena Belgian World Airlines' long-awaited financial recovery is expected to become a reality in 1998. During the first half, the Belgian carrier's revenues soared 25.6% to $1.16 billion. In sharp contrast with $27.5 million losses it posted for 1997's first six months, Sabena this year achieved a $1.59-million net profit.

EDITED BY PAUL MANN
With Congress about to return from summer recess, industry is ready with compromises to tighten regulations on satellite exports to China without returning commercial spacecraft to the government's Munitions List, as some lawmakers have advocated. The aerospace lobby claims that reclassifying commercial satellites as munitions would add 3-6 months and lots of red tape to the licensing process. Industry would prefer a compromise returning authority over satellite exports to the State Dept. from the Commerce Dept., bolstered by safeguards such as more Defense Dept.

BRUCE A. SMITH
The Delta 3 failure came at the start of a planned satellite launch surge by PanAmSat Corp. during which nine spacecraft were to be placed in orbit in the next 18 months to bolster the company's global communications network. Frederick A. Landman, president and chief executive officer of PanAmSat, said Galaxy 10, with 24 C-band and 24 Ku-band transponders, was intended to provide U.S. communications services when in orbit at 123 deg. W. Long.

Staff
The Libyan government has said it would respond positively to a U.S.-U.K. proposal to try two Libyan nationals suspected of the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, in a neutral country--but it could be a year before the case goes to trial.

EDITED BY MONICA WARNOCK
The Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center of the U.S. Navy has awarded Texcom Inc. a $25-million contract to provide engineering services in support of Navy communications programs. With all options, the contract could be worth $100 million.

Paul Proctor
FlightSafety Boeing is studying a London site to begin its international network of hubs providing third-party training for pilots and maintenance staff.

Staff
Gary J. Fernandes has become chairman of the board of Unigraphics Solutions Inc. of St. Louis. He is vice chairman of EDS. Other board members are: vice chairman, Gary B. Morse, senior vice president of EDS; John Mazzola, president/CEO of Unigraphics; John A. Adams, controller of EDS; J. Davis Hamlin, retired chief financial officer of EDS; Leo J. Thomas, retired executive vice president of the Eastman Kodak Co.; and William P. Weber, retired vice president of Texas Instruments.

Staff
Janet Goulton has been named commercial development manager for London City Airport.

EDITED BY FRANCES FIORINO
Delegates to the triennial session of the International Civil Aviation Organization Assembly on Sept. 22-Oct. 2 in Montreal will review an agenda of 40 items. Chief among them is a progress report on the Safety Oversight Program under which ICAO manages inspections of national aviation authorities across the globe. Less than a year ago the directors general of civil aviation of 145 nations endorsed a program expansion, calling for mandatory audits and a broader base of coverage, adding air traffic services, airports, support systems and facilities.

EDITED BY MONICA WARNOCK
Rolls-Royce has received an order from British Aerospace for the upgrade of Rolls-Royce Turbomeca Adour engines which power British Royal Air Force Jaguar fighter bombers. Under the contract, worth more than 70 million pounds ($113 million), the engines will be upgraded from Mk.104 to Mk.106 standard which offers 10% more power and reduced life-cycle costs.

WILLIAM B. SCOTT
Scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory are developing and ``ground flight testing'' technologies for microsatellites that could rescue or service spacecraft in orbit.

EDITED BY PAUL PROCTOR
Air BP is implementing a program to prevent misfueling of aircraft at its chain of fixed-base operators across the U.S. According to company officials, the system prevents pumping of the wrong grade of fuel before it reaches the aircraft. The key is a fuel density valve installed at storage tanks. It prevents cross-dumping of jet fuel into avgas by continuously measuring the fuel density of avgas flow. If jet fuel is detected, the valve closes. The General Aviation Manufacturers Assn. is cooperating with Air BP on the program.

Staff
FAA has awarded type certification to the Boeing 737-600. The smallest member of the new next-generation 737 family, the 108-passenger transport underwent 6.5 months of flight testing including more than 800 inflight hours and 635 flights. Deliveries to Stockholm-based SAS are set to begin next month pending European JAA approval.