Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A Ground-Based Interceptor loaded into a silo at Fort Greely, Alaska in July 2004.. Ground-Based Midcourse Defense (GMD), previously National Missile Defense (NMD), is an anti-ballistic missile system implemented by the United States of America for defense against ballistic missiles, during the midcourse phase of ballistic trajectory flight.
General Material Designation creates a list of standardized terms, describing the material of the item. Examples of GMD terms commonly used in institutional cataloguing to identify material types include: cartographic material, electronic resource, game, graphic, kit, manuscript, microform, motion picture, music, realia, sound recording, and video recording. [1]
The following is a list of locomotives produced by General Motors Diesel (GMD), and its corporate successor Electro-Motive Canada (EMC).. The NF-110 and NF-210 locomotive models were narrow gauge locomotives for use on Canadian National Railway's Newfoundland lines, as are the New Zealand DF class for use by Tranz Rail.
The GMD GMD1 is a diesel locomotive originally produced by General Motors Diesel (GMD), the Canadian subsidiary of General Motors Electro-Motive Division, between August 1958 and April 1960. This road switcher locomotive is powered by a 12-cylinder EMD 567C diesel engine, capable of producing 1,200 horsepower (890 kW).
On August 19, I booked round-trip flights from JFK Airport to Jackson Hole Airport (JAC) with American Airlines. The economy seats on connecting flights cost $650 with flight insurance. My flight ...
Elise Hunter and her husband Scott have built their two daughters' Christmas presents for the past few years. This year, the Utah couple decided to make their daughters a European-inspired ...
One post alleging that the shooter was trans and “on testosterone” received 3.2 million views and, eventually, a user-generated fact-check from X’s “community notes” feature debunked it.
General Motors Diesel selected a site on the outskirts of London, Ontario, for this plant.It opened in 1950, eventually expanding several times to 208 acres (842,000 m 2) and branching out into building transit buses, earth movers (Terex 1965-1980) and military vehicles built at adjacent facilities. [1]