Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Zero Halliburton, stylized as ZERO Halliburton, is a manufacturer of hard-wearing travel cases and briefcases, mainly of aluminium. Founded in 1938, the company was sold in 2006 to ACE Co., a Japanese luggage manufacturer.
Halliburton planned to move its headquarters to Houston in 2002. [89] Halliburton, which signed its lease to occupy a portion of 5 Houston Center in Downtown Houston in 2002, [90] moved its headquarters there by July 2003. [91] Halliburton occupied 26,000 square feet (2,400 m 2) of space on the 24th floor in 5 Houston Center. [86]
President Reagan and Nancy Reagan in 1987—the military aide at right-center is carrying the nuclear football. The nuclear football, officially the Presidential Emergency Satchel, is a briefcase, the contents of which are to be used by the president of the United States to communicate and authorize a nuclear attack while away from fixed command centers, such as the White House Situation Room ...
Operating for a little more than a year, the airline was purchased by American Airlines for $1,400,000.00 through a complicated agreement primarily to obtain the Contract Air Mail (CAM) 33 mail services contract won by Halliburton and Southwest Air Fast Express. American renamed the airline Southern Transcontinental Airways and operated the CAM ...
Kevin Winter/Getty. Sean Baker accepts the Best Picture award for "Anora" onstage during the 30th Annual Critics Choice Awards at Barker Hangar on Feb. 7, 2025 in Santa Monica, Calif.
Halliburton designed the aluminum suitcases which are now manufactured by Zero Halliburton. "An Uncommon Man;" Erle P. Halliburton Monument in Memorial Park, Duncan, OK; erected – 1993. Halliburton was inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame in 1957. [4] Halliburton died on October 13, 1957, in Los Angeles at the age of 65.
MDRT – measured depth referenced to rotary table zero datum; MD – measurements/drilling log; MDEA – methyl diethanolamine (aMDEA) MDL – methane drainage licence (United Kingdom), a type of onshore licence allowing natural gas to be collected "in the course of operations for making and keeping safe mines whether or not disused"
Extremely small (as small as 5 inches (13 cm) diameter and 24.4 inches (62 cm) long) linear implosion type weapons, which might conceivably fit in a large briefcase or typical suitcase, have been tested, but the lightest of those weighed nearly 100 pounds (45 kg) and had a maximum yield of only 0.19 kiloton (the Swift nuclear device, tested in ...