William Harold
William Harold Brondyk, Mansfield, MA US
Patent application number | Description | Published |
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20120100152 | ANTI-HUMAN CD52 IMMUNOGLOBULINS - The present invention relates to humanized immunoglobulins, mouse monoclonal antibodies and chimeric antibodies that have binding specificity for human CD52. The present invention further relates to a humanized immunoglobulin light chain and a humanized immunoglobulin heavy chain. The invention also relates to isolated nucleic acids, recombinant vectors and host cells that comprise a sequence which encodes a humanized immunoglobulin or immunoglobulin light chain or heavy chain, and to a method of preparing a humanized immunoglobulin. The humanized immunoglobulins can be used in therapeutic applications to treat, for example, autoimmune disease, cancer, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, multiple sclerosis and chronic lymphocytic leukemia. | 04-26-2012 |
20140341910 | ANTI-HUMAN CD52 IMMUNOGLOBULINS - The present invention relates to humanized immunoglobulins, mouse monoclonal antibodies and chimeric antibodies that have binding specificity for human CD52. The present invention further relates to a humanized immunoglobulin light chain and a humanized immunoglobulin heavy chain. The invention also relates to isolated nucleic acids, recombinant vectors and host cells that comprise a sequence which encodes a humanized immunoglobulin or immunoglobulin light chain or heavy chain, and to a method of preparing a humanized immunoglobulin. The humanized immunoglobulins can be used in therapeutic applications to treat, for example, autoimmune disease, cancer, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, multiple sclerosis and chronic lymphocytic leukemia. | 11-20-2014 |
William Harold Carveth, Edmonton CA
Patent application number | Description | Published |
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20110078881 | Ergonomic snap hook - Use of a snap hook requires the capture loop to be cradled in a joint of the index finger to prevent it from rolling in the hand. Hooks having a cylindrical body roll easily, and those having an oval section capture loop roll more easily. When a hook rolls, its loop can move to a position where it blocks access to the gap, requiring it to be repositioned in the hand. Ergonomic requirements for this hook included: spacing the hand a maximal distance from the gap, stabilize it from rolling in the hand, and minimize hand movement in use. The hand does not close around the hook; it is held between the thumb and a finger, a natural configuration in which the hand retains the lie of its usual open form. Stability from rolling occurs from the contact forces being within the wide contact surfaces of the body and the button. The larger the contact forces, the more stable the hook is. By its nature, it does not roll. | 04-07-2011 |
William Harold Larsen Roldan, San Juan, PR US
Patent application number | Description | Published |
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20150108304 | WALL HANGER - A wall hanger device and method for installing a wall hanger device. In one exemplary embodiment at least a first hanger body having at least a first lower hanging element; at least a first fastening element that is a first needle having at least a head, a shaft, and a point; the shaft having at least a middle portion and a front end; the first hanger body having at least a first bore that has cross sectional dimensions complementary to the middle portion; the first hanger body and the first fastening element being an autonomous assembly made of molded plastic, and the shaft that is forcibly detachable from an outer end of the first bore when an external force is exerted on an outer face of the head while a back of the hanger body is positioned adjacent to a hanging surface, which then allows the middle portion of the first needle to slideably and frictionally enter the first bore until an under face of the head is adjacent to a portion of a front of the hanger body, and the point and the front end to puncture, then enter into, the hanging surface. | 04-23-2015 |