_Aerospace Daily

Staff
The U.S. Air Force will send two Joint STARS aircraft to support the peacekeeping mission in Bosnia - one A model test aircraft used in Desert Storm, and the only production model E-8C being completed by prime contractor Northrop Grumman at Melbourne, Fla. - defense officials confirmed Friday during an AF press demonstration of the Theater Battle Arena (TBA) simulation facility used for mission planning.

Staff
The House National Security R&D subcommittee will hold hearings next month on theater missile defense, says Rep. Curt Weldon (R- Pa.), chairman of the panel. He says the hearings will go into command and control, and the whole problem of differentiating between strategic defensive missiles, which are restricted by treaties, and theater types, which are not.

Staff
A Georgia company that makes glass presses had to lease a Russian Antonov-124 last month to fly one of their machines to a customer in China, because ships are too slow and other planes are too small. The Lynch Machinery company's huge HDTV-11 glass press makes television picture tubes, and Chinese manufacturer Henan Anyang Color Picture Tube Glass Bulb Company demanded speedy delivery. The Georgia company expects to see more of the same, as does Dr. Cedric Suzman of the Southern Center for International Studies.

Staff
Hughes Aircraft Co. said it has completed test flights of its Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar System (ASARS-2) with a compact new, multi-mode processor that could be integrated and deployed within 30 days. Hughes' Radar and Communications Div., under contract from the U.S. Air Force Reconnaissance System Program Office, Wright Patterson, AFB, Ohio, developed the processor in a 14-month program. ASARS-2 is one of the U-2 reconnaissance aircraft's main sensors.

Staff
Secretary Perry's memorandum of December 6, 1995, requested that I promulgate guidance for making block changes to existing contracts to unify the management and manufacturing requirements of those contracts on a facility-wide basis, wherever such changes are technically acceptable to the government. Secretary Perry further directed that the single point of contact for this effort will be the Administrative Contracting Officer (ACO) assigned to a facility. Accordingly, I am providing the following additional guidance on these issues.

Staff
Loral, Lockheed Martin and Hughes are considered the likeliest winners in an emerging bidding war for Westinghouse Electric's defense electronics business, which is going on the auction block along with another, unnamed "smaller business" to help pay for Westinghouse's recent acquisition of television network CBS.

Staff
Five big procurements for small computers are planned by the U.S. Army Information Systems Management Activity, Ft. Monmouth, N.J.: Army Workstation-1 (dual award, 1st quarter FY '96, 3-year contract), Army Standard Systems Technology Support-1 (2nd quarter FY '96, 2-year contract), Army Personal Computer-2 (dual award, 2nd quarter FY '97, 2-year contract), Army Portable Computer-2 (dual award, 2nd quarter FY '97, 2-year contract) and Super-Minicomputer (1st quarter FY '98, 5-year contract).

Staff
Russian space officials visit Houston this week to look for ways to recycle existing space hardware, including perhaps the entire Mir space station, into the International Space Station. Russia's Duma is having second thoughts about spending scarce funds on new modules for the International Station when parts of Mir - the Spektr and Priroda modules - are brand new. Both sides are wearing kid gloves, with NASA willing to listen to anything that doesn't impact schedule and cost (DAILY, Dec.

Staff
Raytheon, Texas Instruments, Boeing and McDonnell Douglas already have "beta site" efforts under way to implement the new Single Process Initiative (SPI) intended to cut acquisition costs by block changes eliminating mil spec restrictions throughout a given contractor facility, Paul G. Kaminski, under secretary of defense for acquisition, told a Pentagon news briefing Friday.

Staff
The U.S. Air Force has completed a study to upgrade the F-117 Night Hawk aircraft, but is keeping its recommendations secret. "This is what we recommend to happen to the airplane," an Air Force official told reporters yesterday, but he refused to disclose what the recommendations actually entail. Some of the proposals could quickly turn into acquisition programs, while others might require further study.

Staff
WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC CORP., Sunnyvale, Calif., received an additional $6.3 million from the U.S. Navy for support of alteration of U.S. and U.K. Fleet Ballistic Missile (FBM) Vertical Support Group (VSG) equipment. The Dept. of Defense said in announcing the award on Nov. 30 that it brings the cumulative value of the contract to $40.5 million.

Staff
DELEX SYSTEMS INC., Vienna, Va., is in line to provide the Anti-Surface Warfare Tactical Training Program to the Egyptian Navy. U.S. Naval Air Systems Command said in a Nov. 22 Commerce Business Daily notice that Delex is the only company able to carry out the work under the required schedule.

Staff
A large spacecraft associated with Russia's abortive moon landing program of the early 1970s is expected to reenter the atmosphere after almost 25 years in orbit, and the U.S. Space Command says it's big enough that some pieces will reach the earth's surface. Space Command trackers predicted Cosmos 398 will reenter on Sunday, measuring its radar cross section at 13 square meters-"a size large enough to give it a chance of surviving reentry."

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LOCKHEED MARTIN said David S. Osterhout has been appointed vice president of Washington operations. Osterhout, who was also elected a corporate officer, will succeed Dan A. Peterson, who is retiring Jan. 31, 1996, after 27 years with Lockheed Martin and the former Martin Marietta Corp. Osterhout, 56, is currently Lockheed Martin's vice president for defense and legislative affairs in the corporation's Washington office. He assumes his new post on Feb. 1.

Staff
Gulfstream Aerospace on Wednesday handed G-IV business jet engine sole-source Rolls-Royce another bulk engine order, taking production of the Tay 611 small turbofan into the next century with a commitment worth more than a quarter of a billion dollars. The new contract also answers industry speculation that with the introduction of the new G-V business jet - powered by BMW Rolls-Royce's BR710 turbofan - the G-IV and G-IV SP might begin to wind down.

Staff
LORAL FEDERAL SYSTEMS, Owego, N.Y., won a $5.1 million Army contract yesterday for Lot 1 production (13 items) of the radio frequency interferometer for the fire control radar of the Apache Longbow. Other major awards included $5.6 million from the Navy to Cray Research, Eagan, Minn., for high-performance computing (with options that could bring the total value to $15.2 million) and $12.9 million, also from the Navy, to GPS Technologies, Arlington, Va., for technical support on fleet ballistic missile submarines.

Staff
HOUSE MEMBERS voted 227-190 yesterday to accept the VA, HUD and independent agencies appropriations bill they rejected a week ago, moving the bill a step closer to President Clinton's expected veto. A Senate aide said the bill, which contains $13.8 billion for NASA, likely will come to the Senate floor early next week, but Clinton is expected to veto it in a dispute with Capitol Hill over funding for environmental programs and national service. In that case, a continuing resolution set to expire Dec. 15 would cut the NASA figure 1.92% (DAILY, Dec. 7, page 374).

Staff
This is the first in an occasional series on how companies are complying - or not complying - with Defense Secretary Perry's 1994 directive to use COTS in preference to mil specs. E-Systems is using the approach of mil-specing the container, not the contents, to maximize the use of commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) hardware in its ground station portion of the Tier II Plus unmanned aerial vehicle program.

Staff
Kaman Corp. said that Charles Kaman, chairman and CEO, will resume the title of president of the corporation. The position was held by Harvey S. Levenson, who in September announced his intention to retire at the end of this year. Levenson will continue to serve as a consultant to the company, and as a director.

Staff
As U.S. trade representatives prepared to negotiate launch quotas with Ukraine in Europe next week, Hughes was reported near a deal yesterday with Boeing for 10 flights on its Sea Launch vehicle based on the Zenit booster built in Dnepropetrovsk, Ukraine. Spokesmen for Boeing and Hughes declined to comment yesterday on the report by the Long Beach Press-Telegram that the satellite-maker's board of directors had approved a 10-launch contract with Boeing worth more than $1 billion. One source said an announcement could come as early as next week.

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Northrop Grumman executives decided to extend a planned holiday shutdown of plants in four states to avoid building up excess jetliner component inventories as the strike at Boeing continues into its third month, company officials confirmed yesterday.

Staff
Defense Secretary William Perry today is scheduled to make the long- awaited announcement on DOD policy regarding the Single Process Initiative, a method of implementing his June 1994 directive to reduce reliance on military specifications and apply commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) procurement across the defense industry.

Staff
Advanced, prototype mine-clearing equipment, including remotely controlled vehicles, will be tested in Bosnia on a strictly experimental basis, defense officials said yesterday. The officials emphasized that long-established mine-clearing techniques will be the primary mode of coping with the estimated 3 million mines in the area. However, a few radio-controlled vehicles with magnetic anomaly detection (MAD) equipment and infrared cameras happened to be with U.S. forces in Germany, and the R&D community wants to try them out in Bosnia.

Staff
The U.S. Air Force's F-22 fighter is still more than a year away from first flight, but testers are already assessing what they must do to show whether it can meet its mission. "We've come a long way on the F-22 IOTE [initial operational test and evaluation] concept" but "we have a long ways yet to go," said Lt. Col. Erwin C. Catts, who heads the F-22 effort for the Air Force's Operational Test and Evaluation Center at Kirtland AFB, N.M.

Staff
An Ariane space launch vehicle with four liquid-fueled strap-on boosters orbited two telecommunications satellites Wednesday night from the European launch center at Kourou, French Guiana. Liftoff of the Ariane 44L came at 6:23 p.m. EST, boosting France's Telecom 2C and India's 2C satellites to geosynchronous transfer orbit, according to Arianespace, the European launch consortium.