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The German submachine gun EMP (Erma Maschinenpistole) also known as MPE (Maschinenpistole Erma) was produced by the Erma factory, and was based on designs acquired from Heinrich Vollmer. The gun was produced from 1931 to 1938 in roughly 10,000 copies (in three main variants) and exported to Spain, Mexico, China and Yugoslavia , but also used ...
Marshal Zhukov of the Group of Soviet Forces in Germany ordered what was left of the 'ERMA' assets to be liquidated on August 31, 1948. [1] [4] Geipel re-established the company under the brand name ERMA-Werke in Bavaria in 1949 and in 1952 the company moved to Dachau, near Munich. Geipel's son Rudolf became the Chief Engineer of the new ...
In 1944, Erma, the main MP 40 producer, submitted the EMP 44. The receiver was produced out of welded steel tubing like the Sten . The flash suppressor was formed in the same manner as the Russian machine pistol PPS-43 muzzle brake from stamped steel.
District 5 (Port Canaveral / Cocoa Beach) - Robyn Hattaway [11] Salary is $10,083.72 annually. The Executive Management Team is headed by the Chief Executive Officer (CEO). [10] [12] In 2013, there were 233 staff members, 162 full-time, 71 part-time. [13] In FY 2017, the Canaveral Port Authority had 223 full-time equivalent employees. [10]
Port Harbor Railroad crew members posing on unit #3086, an SD40-2 diesel electric locomotive built by the Electro Motive Division of General Motors. The Port Harbor Railroad ( reporting mark PHRR ) is a short-line railroad in Granite City, Illinois , serving an industrial port district known as America's Central Port. [ 1 ]
EMP Merchandising, a German company; EMP Label Group, a record company; Ericsson Mobile Platforms, a defunct telecommunications company; Eleven Madison Park, a high-end restaurant in New York; Equipment Management Pool (EMP), an intermodal container service co-run by Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern railroads
C.T.C. No. 1 is a 620-foot-long cargo hauler brought to the south Chicago ports in 1982. With a capacity of 16,300 tons, this ship was used for storage and transfer of cement until its termination in 2009.
1937 poster celebrating the United States' first foreign trade zone, Staten Island In the United States, a foreign-trade zone (FTZ) is a geographical area, in (or adjacent to) a United States port of entry, where commercial merchandise, both domestic and foreign, receives the same Customs treatment it would if it were outside the commerce of the United States.