[Vtigercrm-aclgroup] View Your Credit Score Fast

Credit Score Tracker CreditScoreTracker at pbdlntrawls.net
Tue Jul 16 20:35:55 UTC 2013


View Your Credit Scores Fast and Free

href="http://www.pbdlntrawls.net/1696/49/96/363/809.12tt74660319AAF7.php






Unsub- http://www.pbdlntrawls.net/1696/49/96/363/809.12tt74660319AAF8.html


























 l year ending Sept. 30. When lawmakers approved a new spending bill 
at the end of March they gave the Pentagon greater latitude in 
where to find the savings.In an attempt to take some of the 
sting out of the more than $40 billion in across-the-board budget cuts, 
Congress shifted additional money to operations and maintenance accounts. 
Over time, defense officials have continued to study the legislation and 
figure out where they can cut and where they can add money 
back to fill shortfalls and fund priorities.Navy officials have argued that 
the furloughs -- particularly for civilian workers at Navy shipyards and 
depots -- will end up costing the service more than the salary 
cuts would save.Navy officials said they believe they can find the $300 
million needed to eliminate the furloughs for roughly 200,000 civilians 
in the Navy and Marine Corps, and that discussions with Pentagon leaders 
on that proposal continue.The officials said that according to a Navy analysis, 
forcing shipyard and depot workers to take 14 days off would extend 
the amount of time it will take for ship maintenance. They said 
that would create a ripple effect that will keep vessels at the 
shipyards longer and create a backlog.Ultimately, the backlog would delay 
deployments, forcing other ships to remain at sea longer, increasing their 
costs.
 he kinds of nuclear capabilities referenced in the passage," Pentagon spokesman 
George Little said. Clapper echoed the assessment.Meanwhile, North Korea 
was leveling new threats Friday. According to South Korea's Yonhap News 
Agency, the regime warned that Tokyo would, in the event of a 
war, be the first target "if it continues to maintain its hostile 
posture." North Korea was apparently threatening Japan because it vowed 
to destroy any missile heading toward the country.Separately, South Korean 
President Park Geun-hye reportedly said she's open to working with the North 
to resolve the standoff if the regime ends its provocative behavior.The 
dispute over the North's nuclear capability started with the Capitol Hill 
hearing Thursday. At the hearing, Rep. Doug Lamborn, R-Colo., read aloud 
what he said was an unclassified paragraph from a secret Defense Intelligence 
Agency report that was supplied to some members of Congress.He said, reading 
from the report: "DIA assesses with moderate confidence the North currently 
has nuclear weapons capable of delivering by ballistic missiles, however 
the reliability will be low.''The reading seemed to take Gen. Martin Dempsey, 
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, by surprise, who said he 
hadn't seen the report and declined to answer questions about it.Pentagon 
officials told Fox News that the memo he read from was in 
fact classified. However, someone at the Defense Intelligence Agency mistakenly 
marked
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.vtigercrm.com/pipermail/vtigercrm-aclgroup/attachments/20130716/21c51def/attachment.html>


More information about the vtigercrm-aclgroup mailing list