AIRPORT SYSTEMS INTERNATIONAL INC., Overland Park, Kans., will supply navigation aids to Turkey worth about $900,000. Keith S. Cowan, president and chief executive officer, said "VOR systems manufactured by Airport Systems will be installed at four fixed locations within Turkey. We will also be supplying a mobile system to be used for site testing and emergency operations."
The U.S. and U.K. yesterday signed the long-awaited Memorandum of Understanding that formally establishes Britain as a partner in the Joint Advanced Strike Technology concept demonstration phase. Since early this year, JAST program officials have anticipated the signing (DAILY, April 1). Under the agreement, signed by Pentagon acquisition chief Paul Kaminski and U.K. chief of procurement Malcolm McIntosh, the U.K. will contribute $200 million to concept demonstration, the Dept. of Defense said.
MCDONNELL DOUGLAS named Fred Whiteford to the position of executive assistant to the CEO, and Harold S. "Bud" Coyle to the office of vice president, corporate ethics. Whiteford joined McDonnell Douglas in 1989, and was most recently as director of strategic planning. In his new post, Whiteford will assist Harry C. Stonecipher in day-to-day operations. Coyle joined McDonnell Douglas in 1984. Before that, he served for 26 years in the U.S. Air Force. MDC said Coyle will now be responsible for guiding and maintaining the highest ethical standards within the corporation.
STANDARD MISSILE CO., Falls Church, Va., received a $79.5 million U.S. Navy contract for production of 243 Standard Missile-2 Block III/IIIA all-up rounds for fiscal 1995 and related materials, the Defense Dept. said yesterday. The missiles are for the U.S. Navy and the government of Japan. Naval Sea Systems Command awarded the contract.
NASA's Office of Inspector General has questioned the savings claimed in the agency's cost-cutting zero-base review from consolidating aircraft operations at Dryden Flight Research Center, and recommended the move be halted until a more thorough analysis can be conducted.
Wall Street is sticking to its collective guess that A-12 prime contractors McDonnell Douglas and General Dynamics will probably win about $350 million each from the government, now that a federal judge has ruled that the Pentagon didn't prove the companies owed the U.S. $1.9 billion in advance payments because they lied about A-12 development troubles.
November 13, 1995 Lockheed Corporation Lockheed Corporation, Marietta, Georgia, is being awarded a $6,525,000 face value increase to a cost plus award fee contract for engineering and manufacturing development of five Secure Interface Systems applicable to the F-22 aircraft. Contract is expected to be completed July 2002. Contract funds will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. Aeronautical Systems Center, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, is the contracting activity (F33657-91/C-0000, P00214).
The Space Shuttle Atlantis landed safely yesterday a successful mission with the Russian space station Mir that left behind a module for future dockings. STS-74 was the last of NASA's seven shuttle missions this year. Atlantis landed on Runway 33 at Kennedy Space Center, Fla., at 12:01 p.m. EST. The landing came after an eight-day mission that marked NASA's first assembly of large structures in orbit since the Apollo missions, and that is being championed as a major milestone towards building a space station.
It was business as usual at the Pentagon yesterday as the 200,000-plus not-absolutely-essential Defense Dept. employees worldwide returned from their three and a half days of involuntary vacation, rejoining the 400,000 or so who were unaffected by the shutdown.
ADM. RICHARD C. MACKE returned to his duties as commander-in-chief of the U.S. Pacific Command in Hawaii yesterday, but Pentagon officials expected him to retire this week following controversial remarks he made last Friday at a breakfast meeting with reporters in Washington (DAILY, Nov. 20, page 287). His second in command and chief of staff of CINCPAC, Army Lt. Gen. David Bramlett, would logically assume his duties in the interim during the search for a successor.
EXIDE ELECTRONICS GROUP INC., Raleigh, N.C., which provides power management and power protection solutions for a range of applications including military and aerospace, said it will acquire Deltec Power Systems Inc., a manufacturer of uninterruptable power systems, for $195 million. Deltec designs, manufactures, markets and sells services, products and software through Deltec Electronics Corp. in San Diego, Calif., and FPS Power Systems, based in Helsinki, Finland.
Lockheed Martin's Sanders unit, as a member of the Siemens Plessey Systems team developing the U.K.'s Lychgate air intelligence project (DAILY, Nov. 16, page 268), said it will supply software similar to that included in the U.S. Air Force Mission Support System (AFMSS), a Sanders product that helps aircrews plan their flights.
The U.S. Air Force's Aeronautical Systems Center yesterday released the draft request for proposal to develop and build a decoy intended to confuse an enemy and increase protection for friendly aircraft. The Miniature Air Launched Decoy (MALD) is being developed by the Advanced Research Projects Agency as one of the Dept. of Defense's 1996 Advanced Concept Technology Demonstrations. The main requirement to be met by the winning contractor is a unit cost of no more than $30,000.
Loral's Command and Control Systems unit yesterday detailed roles of its teammates in the Theater Battle Management Core Systems (TBMCS) program, expected to be worth $143 million through 2001.
Rockwell's Rocketdyne Div. withdrew from the competition to power a proposed Atlas booster variant in September, citing the difficulty in meeting Lockheed Martin's schedule with a "real derivative" of its MA-5A rocket engine, according to a Rocketdyne spokesman. The spokesman said the U.S. enginemaker also had "some funding questions," since Lockheed Martin invested in both Russian-built engines under consideration for the Atlas IIAR-the NPO Energomash RD-180 and the NK-33 developed in Samara for Russia's N-1 moon rocket.
Less than a month after Pentagon acquisition chief Paul Kaminski put off a decision on multiyear procurement of McDonnell Douglas C-17s in an effort to win even better prices from subcontractors, a major supplier - Northrop Grumman - has worked out a deal with MDC cutting costs on its parts of the plane by some 35%.
McDonnell Douglas hopes a recent $26.7 million U.S. Navy award to support the adversary strike mission at four different sites turns out to be the spark for a whole new business line in the maintenance and support arena. MD Aerospace's Services Company unit defeated incumbent Lockheed Martin for depot-level aircraft maintenance and support on F-14s, F-5s, F/A-18s and helicopters (DAILY, Nov. 14, page 252), and it's "the first time where we've competed and won a maintenance contract like this," a company spokesman explained.
EMBRATEL, BRAZIL'S national telephone company, has signed a $70 million order with Hughes Space and Communications International for another HS 376W telecommunications satellite, similar to the Brasilsat B-1 and B-2 platforms already in orbit. Designated Brasilsat B-3A, the new satellite is scheduled for launch late in 1977 aboard an Ariane booster. It will carry 28 C-ban transponders for voice, data, business network and television service to Brazil. The order was placed as an option to Embratel's 1990 Brasilsat B contract.
Israel's Tadiran Ltd. will supply the Swiss Army with ground control systems and data links for remotely piloted vehicles. Tadiran said yesterday that its Communications and Systems Group is part of a consortium serving as subcontractors to Oerlikon-Contraves, which will supply Switzerland with about 30 RPVs worth about $200 million. Tadiran's share of the work is about $35 million.
The U.S. Air Force's new Joint Endurance Unmanned Aerial Vehicle system program office at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, will spend much of the next two years assessing acquisition issues related to the UAVs it will manage, according to the director of the office. Lt. Col. Thomas J. Di Nino told The DAILY in a telephone interview that his focus will be to "identify some of the challenges we face" in acquiring the systems.