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FAIRBORN — Three Wright State University graduate students have proposed a change in the Air Force’s supply-chain program that they claim could save the service tens of millions of dollars in costs annually.
The students in the university’s master’s of science in logistics and supply chain management degree program, in a project done for the class, studied Air Force parts distribution systems that support aircraft programs. Their study concluded that if just 4 percent of spare parts inventories for the F-15C Eagle aircraft were consolidated from decentralized warehouses, the Air Force could save millions.

More than 1,650 students to graduate this spring across Wright State’s Dayton and Lake Campuses
A path shaped by service
Wright State to award honorary doctorate to publishing executive Kirk Davis at spring commencement
Wright State students spot the finish line, celebrate Spring Semester’s end at April Craze
Chick-fil-A near Wright State’s Dayton Campus approved by Beavercreek City Council