Vol. 86 No. 583, June 2002
Index
- Editor's corner.
- Evolving themes in Defense transformation.
- Readers forum.
- Air Force to change acquisition practices.
- Centralized scans for export licenses.
- Inouye: U.S. must stay in Pacific Rim.
- NATO countries much too obsessed by tanks.
- Bio-war exercise tested emergency response.
- NorthCom chief to set up contingency plans.
- U.S. anti-terror strategy focused on 'last war'.
- Augmenting the Air Marshal program.
- Nuke explosion would make 'nasty cleanup'.
- Texas A&M to establish homeland security hub.
- Chemical analyzer hits the road.
- Safety glasses, gloves developed for TV series.
- Tank combines benefits of steel walls, bladders.
- A good ghillie is hard to find.
- Detector identifies plastic and metal mines.
- System pinpoints friendly forces.
- Chinook's funding troubles worry 'Darkhorse' aviators.
- Naval aviation: lessons from the war; Enduring Freedom reinforces need for new targeting pods, radar, data links.
- Tamper-proof GPS receivers installed in smart weapons.
- War Game exposes potential Army weak spots: information overload, airlift shortfall cited as possible vulnerabilities of future force.
- Delaware Valley firms, labs vie for federal R and D dollars.
- Congressmen: more money for military research.
- Route to improved security for air travel gets bumpy.
- U.S. Navy raises barriers to protect base at Norfolk.
- Security vehicle links first responders with state, feds.
- Bases more aware of threats, still vulnerable: despite a series of blue-ribbon reports, security policies continue to evolve.
- Responding to bio-terrorism requires a concerted effort.
- Air Force Research branch in pursuit of innovation.
- Aviation firm aims to stir interest in compound helos.
- Iridium CEO outlines plan for expansion: Defense Department satellite voice-communications traffic skyrockets after Sept. 11.
- Marines defend new amphibious vehicle: cost overruns are nowhere near Nunn-McCurdy breach, says program manager.
- Brigades not likely to deploy in 96 hours: Army works to lighten Stryker's load, so it can fly longer distances on C-130.
- Government.
- Industry.
- Division hosts systems engineering meeting.
- Procurement committee gives memorial award.
- Industry cited for 'flexibility' in war.
- NDIA events calendar.