Finding the automatic disposal list.Quite naturally you want to get rid of it ASAR ASAR Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar ASAR As Soon As Reasonable ASAR Antenna Synthetic Aperture Radar ASAR As operated Safety Analysis Report ASAR American Society of Academic Researchers ASAR anti Static anti Reflective You don't want to wait for the approval of the National Inventory Control Point (NICP NICP Naval Inventory Control Point NICP National Inventory Control Point NICP Nuclear Incident Control Plan NICP Network Interface Computer Program (JTIDS) ), and chances are, you don't have to. The Army publishes the Automatic Disposal List (ADL) twice each year. If your excess equipment is on the list you have all the authority you need to turn in that unneeded equipment. You'll find the ADL on the Army Knowledge Online (AKO Ako (äkō`), city (1990 pop. 51,131), Hyogo prefecture, W Honshu, Japan, on the Harima Sea. Relying on its steel and chemical industries, Ako has become one of Japan's most polluted industrial cities. ) intranet portal. To get to the ADL (Spring 07) from AKO, click the folder icon called FILES, scroll down to the SHORTCUTS area, select DOWNLOAD A DOCUMENT, and enter the identification number: 7816940. You'll get an Excel spreadsheet with items listed by SOS SOS, code letters of the international distress signal. The signal is expressed in International Morse code as … — — — … (three dots, three dashes, three dots). . Be sure to check all the tabs at the bottom of the spreadsheet. You can subscribe to notifications of ADL updates. Logon to AKO, change the URL URL in full Uniform Resource Locator Address of a resource on the Internet. The resource can be any type of file stored on a server, such as a Web page, a text file, a graphics file, or an application program. to get the DA G-4 SUS Collabaoration Center and click on the ADL Excel document: https://www.army.mil/suite/page/436 |
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