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MaldivianDigital® :: Forum (Free subscription) | 11 hours ago
*Boeing loses GPS satellite contract to Lockheed Martin The defeat could mean fewer jobs at Boeing's El Segundo facility, which would have made the satellites. In another blow to Boeing Co.'s...
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Market Watch (Free subscription) | yesterday
Lockheed Martin Corp. was awarded a $1.4 billion Air Force contract to build the next-generation global positioning satellite system, beating out rival Boeing Co. in what analysts are saying was an important win for the military contractor.
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City & Local News (Free subscription) | yesterday
Criminal investigators from the Defense Department yesterday offered a $5,000 reward for information leading to the conviction of those responsible for damaging two Army helicopters at the Boeing Co. plant in Delaware County.
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Indy Star (Free subscription) | yesterday
WASHINGTON » Lockheed Martin Corp. beat out Boeing Co. to win an Air Force contract worth up to $3.57 billion to build as many as 12 next-generation global positioning satellites, the Pentagon said Thursday. The deal is the first of three to supply a total of 32 satellites for the Pentagon's new GPS III system.
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News & Information (Free subscription) | yesterday
Lockheed Martin Corp. beat out Boeing Co. to win an Air Force contract worth up to $3.57 billion to build as many as 12 next-generation global positioning satellites, the Pentagon said……Read more
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The St Louis Business Journal (Free subscription) | yesterday
The Boeing Co. was awarded a $5.2 million U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) contract to demonstrate the effectiveness of Guidance Integrated Fuzing (GIF) technology developed under the Seeker Integrated Target Endgame Sensor (SITES) program, the company announced Friday. (BA)
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LA Times (Free subscription) | yesterday
The defeat could mean fewer jobs at Boeing's El Segundo facility, which would have made the satellites. In another blow to Boeing Co.'s battered defense business, the U.S. Air Force on Thursday tapped rival Lockheed Martin Corp. for a contract potentially worth more than $3.5 billion to build a new generation of global positioning satellites.
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kansascity.com (Free subscription) | yesterday
Army criminal investigators are looking into damage to two military helicopters on a production line at a Boeing Co. plant in suburban Philadelphia, prompting the company to shut down the line.
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Examiner (Free subscription) | yesterday
Lockheed Martin Corp. beat out Boeing Co. to win an Air Force contract worth up to $3.57 billion to build as many as 12 next-generation global positioning satellites, the Pentagon said Thursday. The deal is the first of three awards to supply a total of 32 satellites for the Pentagon's new GPS III system.
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Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Free subscription) | yesterday
WASHINGTON -- Lockheed Martin Corp. beat out Boeing Co. to win an Air Force contract worth up to $3.57 billion to build as many as 12 next-generation global positioning satellites, the Pentagon said Thursday. The deal is the first of three awards to supply a total of 32 satellites for the Pentagon's new GPS III system.
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Channel 7 News (Free subscription) | yesterday
Lockheed Martin Corp. beat out Boeing Co. to win an Air Force contract worth up to $3.57 billion to build as many as 12 next-generation global positioning satellites... the Pentagon said Thursday.
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News -- Philly.com (Free subscription) | 05/15/2008
The Boeing Co. resumed full production today on its Chinook combat helicopter assembly line in suburban Philadelphia, ending a two-day shutdown prompted by discovery of damage to two of the nearly completed aircraft.
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San Fransisco Chronicle (Free subscription) | yesterday
Lockheed Martin Corp. beat out Boeing Co. to win an Air Force contract worth up to $3.57 billion to build as many as 12 next-generation global positioning satellites, the Pentagon said Thursday. The deal is the first of three awards to supply a total of 32...
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City & Local News (Free subscription) | 05/15/2008
More than 100 Boeing Co. employees were sent home yesterday, and dozens of late-shifters were told not to report to work, as Army and Defense Department officials continued to investigate possibly intentional manufacturing defects in two CH-47 Chinook helicopters.
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News -- Philly.com (Free subscription) | 05/15/2008
Work remained halted at the Boeing Co. plant in Ridley Township yesterday as suspicions of foul play dominated an unfolding investigation into how two military helicopters were damaged as they were nearing completion for an Army contract.