Contract Roundup

<FONT SIZE=2>General Dynamics Corp.</FONT><FONT SIZE=2>, </FONT><FONT SIZE=2>L-3 Communications Corp.</FONT><FONT SIZE=2> and </FONT><FONT SIZE=2>ViaSat Inc.</FONT><FONT SIZE=2> each won $10 million contracts from the National Security Agency to help develop an inline encryption device for high-speed classified networks. </FONT>

General Dynamics Corp., L-3 Communications Corp. and ViaSat Inc. each won $10 million contracts from the National Security Agency to help develop an inline encryption device for high-speed classified networks.

 

Maximus Inc., Reston, Va., won a $59.7 million contract extension from the New York Department of Health to continue operating the state's Medicaid Choice project. The contract will extend through June 30, 2004.

 

Northrop Grumman Corp., Los Angeles, won a five-year, $228 million blanket purchase agreement with the Immigration and Naturalization Service to support the primary IT infrastructure and IT support services for more than 100 INS offices throughout the United States and at several overseas offices.

 

Perot Systems Corp., Plano, Texas, won two orders worth a total of $12 million from the Immigration and Naturalization Service, to digitize millions of biometric records, including fingerprints, photographs and signatures and to continue supporting a system the company developed for INS that searches historical immigrant data.

 

Rite-Solutions Inc., Pawcatuck, Conn., won an $11 million contract from the Naval Undersea Warfare Center to provide modeling and simulation and knowledge management to assess and validate the Navy's investment strategies in new undersea warfare technologies.

 

SRA International Inc., Fairfax, Va., won a task order worth an estimated $20 million to help design an enterprise information management system for the Missile Defense Agency.

 

Unisys Corp., Blue Bell, Pa., was selected by the Defense Department to support efforts to improve face recognition technology. As part of the $1.23 million biometrics research and development support task order, Unisys and the Defense Department will be working on improving identification of individuals from a database of two-dimensional photographs.

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