32 THE ROCKETEER April 22, 1993
MACINTOSH CSALE
COMPLETE SYSTEMS
Macintosh LC 11\
4mb Ram 80 mb HD
I J
-
• 25mhz CPU & 32 bit Data Bus
• Apple 14· Color Monitor
• Apple Keyboard II
• Internal 1.44mb Superorive
• ADB Mouse II
• 7 built-in ports for peripherals
$1899
Macintosh Centris 650
4mb Ram 80 mb HD
· 8 built-in ports for peripherals
• 3 NuBus expansion slots
• 25-MHz 68040 processor
• System 7 & Built-In Appletalk
• Runs thousands of Macintosh
applications
$2499
Apple Maintosh
Color Classic
·4mb Ram
• Apple Keyboard II
• Ergonomic mouse
• Built-in speaker and
microphone
• 7 built-in ports for peripherals
$1389
LaserWriter Select 310
PostScript Printer
·1.5mb
• 5 pages per minute
• 300 dpi for text & graphics
• Includes 13 scalable fonts
• Compatible with Macs with system
6.0.7 or later
$999
Macintosh Centris 610
4mb Ram 80 mb HD
-
• 68040 Processor @ 20mhz
• Apple 14· Color Monoitor
• Apple extended keyboard
• 8 built-in ports for peripherals
• System 7 & Built-In Appletalk
$2499
LaserWriter Pro 630
Unsurpassed Quality
' 8mb Ram
• 8 pages per minute
• 600 dpi
• Includes 64 True Type fonts
• Fineprint and Photograde
• Postscript Level II
Call Don Braem at 446-4269
$2399
I~S
QEMM moves memory-hogging
drivers and TSR's out of the way!
Fedcom
QE·MM-386 Only $129
The Quarterdeck Expanded Memory Manager 386 (QEMM-386), voted "Analyst's
Choice" in a grueling test by PC Week, automatically moves memory-resident programs
and drivers intoupper memory (the "reserved" area above 640k), and allows your programs
to access the memory they need. This allows you to work faster and edit bigger docu-
ments. And best of all QEMM-386 is TOTALLY AUTOMATIC. If you've got memory prob-
lems running DOS programs inside Microsoft Windows, QEMM-386 gives you the fully au-
tomated memory management which DOS can't deliver. PLUS- get 3 great games FREE,
Ultima Underworld II, Aces of the Pacific and Front Page Sports: Football.
In The Tivoli Centre
THE ROCKETEER
THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1993 NAVAL AIR WEN'ONS STATION, CHINA lAKE VOL. 49, No. 8
Pioneer rocket scientist, VAdm.
Levering Smith, passes away at 83
By Barry McDonald
Edlt)f
C
hina Lake lost another of its
pioneers wi1h the passing of
Vice Admiral Levering Smith
April 5 at Mercy Hospital in San
Diego. He was 83.
Smith came to the then Naval Ord-
nance Test Station Inyokern in October
1947 as a Navy commander and served
as deputy head of the Explosives
Department. According to a tribute to
VAdm. Smith by Dr. William S. McE-
wan, a former head of the Chemistry
Division, in last week's News Review,
one of Smith's first duties was as pro-
ject officer of the 2.75-inch aircraft
rocket Mighty Mouse. Through Smith's
efforts and those of others, McEwan,
himself a bonafide China Lake pioneer,
wrote, "a completely new propellant
was developed and other important
problems were solved."
But his assignment to NOTS wasn't
Smith's first contact with the facility.
McEwan wrote that he first met Smith
earlier in 1947 when he was head ofthe
solid propellant desk in the Bureau of
Ordnance (BuOrd).
In an interview in- 1989 for the
China Lake History, Smith told Eliza-
heth Babcock and Leroy Doig of the
Technical Information Department of
another encounter he had with NOTS
Inyokern before receiving orders here.
After the World War II , he explained,
CalTech wanted to get out of war work,
and they were concerned that the
approximately $10 million still on their
books from earlier advances would
affect their nonprofit, tax-exempt sta-
tus.
"So [Dr.] Bruce Sage and Charlie
[Dr. Charles C.] Lauritsen approached
Please see SMITH. Page 12
New security guidelines lay down
disciplinary actions for violators
By P.""" Shoal
Slorn'ilef
W
hile the security guard is
making his rounds, he
notices a vault door isn't
securely closed. After checkinR inside
the vault, he discovers it contains a
number of classified documents. The
Law Enforcement and Security
divisions, Naval Cril1)inal Investigative
Services and the person·responsible for
the vault's security are called to the
scene.
"This is a security violation that
occurred recently (at the China Lake
site of the Naval Air Warfare Center
Weapons Division)," said John Ham-
monds, head of the Naval Air Weapons
Station China Lake Security Division.
" It was a security violation without
compromise because the vault had been
closed enough to tum on the alarm. If
anyone had tried to enter the vault, the
Arms control pacts
could affect Slation
Non-strategic agreements
may subiecl Chino lake
to various inspections
7
alarm would have sounded. So no one
could have seen those documents."
The information obtained during the
preliminary inquiry is passed on to
Capt. Douglas W Cook, NAWCWPNS
Vice Commander, who, in turn, sends a
lener to the manager who is responsible
for the area where the violation
occurred and asks what was done about
the situation and what remedial admin-
istrative or disciplinary action was
taken.
In the meantime, the manager
should have started his own investiga-
tion, Hammonds said, finding out who
was responsible for the breach of secu-
rity.
In the past, there haven't been any
minimum standards on the types of
remedial action managers should take
on security violations, Hammonds said.
Actions ranged from an oral admonish-
ment to a Letter of Caution and
Please see SECURITY, Page 22
by Terry Poscorella
BYE-BYE BUGGY prOVided on easy tronsport for 0 number of toddlers who ;ained other
children from the Navol Air Weapons Stotion Chino Lake Children·s Centers in a walk
through Michelson Laboratory and the Administration BUilding, before having a
picnic ot Solar Pork. According to center personnel. the Public Awareness Walk was
deSigned to remind Chino Lakers thot children are the future d this country. The Public
Awareness Wolk is held annually at China Lake in April, the month designated as "The
Month of the Young Child."
Earth Day
Message
Valkslauf
Mud Run
rom-HOTS
eo.nn.nder visits
Acling SECNAV Kelso
urges sailors and Marines
10 make a difference
Five Iocalleorns pick up
lhe challenge 10 compele
VAdm. Frederid Ashwonh
discusses !he pa$I and
gi_ view> on downsizing
in onruol sludge showdown
9 26 15
, OCR Text: 32 THE ROCKETEER April 22, 1993
MACINTOSH CSALE
COMPLETE SYSTEMS
Macintosh LC 11\
4mb Ram 80 mb HD
I J
-
• 25mhz CPU & 32 bit Data Bus
• Apple 14· Color Monitor
• Apple Keyboard II
• Internal 1.44mb Superorive
• ADB Mouse II
• 7 built-in ports for peripherals
$1899
Macintosh Centris 650
4mb Ram 80 mb HD
· 8 built-in ports for peripherals
• 3 NuBus expansion slots
• 25-MHz 68040 processor
• System 7 & Built-In Appletalk
• Runs thousands of Macintosh
applications
$2499
Apple Maintosh
Color Classic
·4mb Ram
• Apple Keyboard II
• Ergonomic mouse
• Built-in speaker and
microphone
• 7 built-in ports for peripherals
$1389
LaserWriter Select 310
PostScript Printer
·1.5mb
• 5 pages per minute
• 300 dpi for text & graphics
• Includes 13 scalable fonts
• Compatible with Macs with system
6.0.7 or later
$999
Macintosh Centris 610
4mb Ram 80 mb HD
-
• 68040 Processor @ 20mhz
• Apple 14· Color Monoitor
• Apple extended keyboard
• 8 built-in ports for peripherals
• System 7 & Built-In Appletalk
$2499
LaserWriter Pro 630
Unsurpassed Quality
' 8mb Ram
• 8 pages per minute
• 600 dpi
• Includes 64 True Type fonts
• Fineprint and Photograde
• Postscript Level II
Call Don Braem at 446-4269
$2399
I~S
QEMM moves memory-hogging
drivers and TSR's out of the way!
Fedcom
QE·MM-386 Only $129
The Quarterdeck Expanded Memory Manager 386 (QEMM-386), voted "Analyst's
Choice" in a grueling test by PC Week, automatically moves memory-resident programs
and drivers intoupper memory (the "reserved" area above 640k), and allows your programs
to access the memory they need. This allows you to work faster and edit bigger docu-
ments. And best of all QEMM-386 is TOTALLY AUTOMATIC. If you've got memory prob-
lems running DOS programs inside Microsoft Windows, QEMM-386 gives you the fully au-
tomated memory management which DOS can't deliver. PLUS- get 3 great games FREE,
Ultima Underworld II, Aces of the Pacific and Front Page Sports: Football.
In The Tivoli Centre
THE ROCKETEER
THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1993 NAVAL AIR WEN'ONS STATION, CHINA lAKE VOL. 49, No. 8
Pioneer rocket scientist, VAdm.
Levering Smith, passes away at 83
By Barry McDonald
Edlt)f
C
hina Lake lost another of its
pioneers wi1h the passing of
Vice Admiral Levering Smith
April 5 at Mercy Hospital in San
Diego. He was 83.
Smith came to the then Naval Ord-
nance Test Station Inyokern in October
1947 as a Navy commander and served
as deputy head of the Explosives
Department. According to a tribute to
VAdm. Smith by Dr. William S. McE-
wan, a former head of the Chemistry
Division, in last week's News Review,
one of Smith's first duties was as pro-
ject officer of the 2.75-inch aircraft
rocket Mighty Mouse. Through Smith's
efforts and those of others, McEwan,
himself a bonafide China Lake pioneer,
wrote, "a completely new propellant
was developed and other important
problems were solved."
But his assignment to NOTS wasn't
Smith's first contact with the facility.
McEwan wrote that he first met Smith
earlier in 1947 when he was head ofthe
solid propellant desk in the Bureau of
Ordnance (BuOrd).
In an interview in- 1989 for the
China Lake History, Smith told Eliza-
heth Babcock and Leroy Doig of the
Technical Information Department of
another encounter he had with NOTS
Inyokern before receiving orders here.
After the World War II , he explained,
CalTech wanted to get out of war work,
and they were concerned that the
approximately $10 million still on their
books from earlier advances would
affect their nonprofit, tax-exempt sta-
tus.
"So [Dr.] Bruce Sage and Charlie
[Dr. Charles C.] Lauritsen approached
Please see SMITH. Page 12
New security guidelines lay down
disciplinary actions for violators
By P.""" Shoal
Slorn'ilef
W
hile the security guard is
making his rounds, he
notices a vault door isn't
securely closed. After checkinR inside
the vault, he discovers it contains a
number of classified documents. The
Law Enforcement and Security
divisions, Naval Cril1)inal Investigative
Services and the person·responsible for
the vault's security are called to the
scene.
"This is a security violation that
occurred recently (at the China Lake
site of the Naval Air Warfare Center
Weapons Division)," said John Ham-
monds, head of the Naval Air Weapons
Station China Lake Security Division.
" It was a security violation without
compromise because the vault had been
closed enough to tum on the alarm. If
anyone had tried to enter the vault, the
Arms control pacts
could affect Slation
Non-strategic agreements
may subiecl Chino lake
to various inspections
7
alarm would have sounded. So no one
could have seen those documents."
The information obtained during the
preliminary inquiry is passed on to
Capt. Douglas W Cook, NAWCWPNS
Vice Commander, who, in turn, sends a
lener to the manager who is responsible
for the area where the violation
occurred and asks what was done about
the situation and what remedial admin-
istrative or disciplinary action was
taken.
In the meantime, the manager
should have started his own investiga-
tion, Hammonds said, finding out who
was responsible for the breach of secu-
rity.
In the past, there haven't been any
minimum standards on the types of
remedial action managers should take
on security violations, Hammonds said.
Actions ranged from an oral admonish-
ment to a Letter of Caution and
Please see SECURITY, Page 22
by Terry Poscorella
BYE-BYE BUGGY prOVided on easy tronsport for 0 number of toddlers who ;ained other
children from the Navol Air Weapons Stotion Chino Lake Children·s Centers in a walk
through Michelson Laboratory and the Administration BUilding, before having a
picnic ot Solar Pork. According to center personnel. the Public Awareness Walk was
deSigned to remind Chino Lakers thot children are the future d this country. The Public
Awareness Wolk is held annually at China Lake in April, the month designated as "The
Month of the Young Child."
Earth Day
Message
Valkslauf
Mud Run
rom-HOTS
eo.nn.nder visits
Acling SECNAV Kelso
urges sailors and Marines
10 make a difference
Five Iocalleorns pick up
lhe challenge 10 compele
VAdm. Frederid Ashwonh
discusses !he pa$I and
gi_ view> on downsizing
in onruol sludge showdown
9 26 15
, China Lake Museum,Rocketeer Newspaper,Rocketeer 1990s,Rocketeer 1993,Rktr4.22.1993.pdf,Rktr4.22.1993.pdf Page 1, Rktr4.22.1993.pdf Page 1