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PRESIDENT SIGNS PLANE FUNDS BILLS PALMDALE WORKERS TO BENEFIT.


Byline: Jim Skeen Staff Writer

PALMDALE - President George W. Bush signed a defense appropriations bill last week that funds several Antelope Valley This article is about the Los Angeles County region. For the census-designated place in Wyoming, see Antelope Valley-Crestview, Wyoming.

The Antelope Valley
 projects and a NASA NASA: see National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
NASA
 in full National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Independent U.S.
 authorization bill containing language officially endorsing the return to the moon.

The president signed the bills while on a working vacation at his ranch in Crawford, Texas. He did not comment on either bill.

The Department of Defense Appropriations Act of 2006 provides $3.2 billion for 25 Lockheed Martin F-22A aircraft and $4.8 billion for the F-35 joint strike fighter, both of which will involve parts production in Palmdale and flight testing work at Edwards Air Force Base Edwards Air Force Base, U.S. military installation, 301,000 acres (121,805 hectares), S Calif., NE of Lancaster; est. 1933. It is one of the largest air force bases in the United States and has the world's longest runway. .

The bill also includes $332.1 million for production of Northrop Grumman's unmanned Global Hawk reconnaissance aircraft, assembled in Palmdale, and more than $12 million in new equipment and research funding for Edwards.

Although the F-22A fighters are assembled in Georgia, parts of the aircraft are assembled by Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co. in Palmdale. About 400 workers in Palmdale manufacture parts for the jets.

The center fuselage sections of the F-35 are being assembled by Northrop Grumman in Palmdale, and flight testing is planned for Edwards Air Force Base. The planes will be put together at a Lockheed Martin plant in Texas.

Northrop Grumman employs several hundred people on the F-35 program in Palmdale, while the Global Hawk aircraft are being built by a small cadre of Northrop Grumman workers also in Palmdale.

The defense bill also included $1 million for computer equipment to support flight test programs at Edwards, $4.3 million for propulsion system technologies, $1 million for research on upper stage rocket engine technologies, $4.3 million to improve engineering modeling and simulation tools, and $1.5 million for solid rocket propulsion technology research.

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), civilian agency of the U.S. federal government with the mission of conducting research and developing operational programs in the areas of space exploration, artificial satellites (see satellite, artificial),  Act of 2005 formally incorporates the ``Vision for Space Exploration'' announced in January 2004 by the president. The bill's language directs a ``sustained human presence on the moon'' as a means to provide a steppingstone step·ping·stone  
n.
1. A stone that provides a place to step, as in crossing a stream.

2. An advantageous position for advancement toward a goal.
 for future missions to Mars.

NASA estimates it will cost $104 billion to return astronauts to the moon by 2018. The first step of that effort is the development of the crew exploration vehicle
See also: Orion (spacecraft)


The Crew Exploration Vehicle (or CEV) was the conceptual component of the Vision for Space Exploration that later became known as the Orion spacecraft.
, a spacecraft that will replace the space shuttle.

NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center The Dryden Flight Research Center (DFRC), located inside Edwards Air Force Base, is an aeronautical research center operated by NASA. On March 26, 1976 it was named in honor of the late Hugh L.  at Edwards Air Force Base will be involved in both the development of the CEV CEV Crew Exploration Vehicle (NASA)
CEV Contemporary English Version (Bible)
CEV Confédération Européenne de Volleyball
CEV Confederation Européenne de Volleyball
 and in its operations.

Anticipated work for the program at Dryden includes flight testing of a launch abort (1) To exit a function or application without saving any data that has been changed.

(2) To stop a transmission.

(programming) abort - To terminate a program or process abnormally and usually suddenly, with or without diagnostic information.
 system, drop tests of a subscale model to evaluate approach and landing technologies and procedures, and range safety analyses.

Dryden is also expected to be the site for landings when the spacecraft is ready to fly.

Jim Skeen, (661) 267-5743

james.skeen(at)dailynews.com
COPYRIGHT 2006 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 3, 2006
Words:459
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