Cynthia Maas - Appleton WI, US Judith Musil - Appleton WI, US
International Classification:
A61F013/15 A61F013/20
US Classification:
604385290
Abstract:
A disposable pant-like undergarment is disclosed for absorbing human discharge. The pant-like undergarment includes stretchable front and back panels. The front panel has first and second elastic bands secured along its first and second ends. The back panel has third and fourth elastic bands secured along its first and second ends. An absorbent assembly is secured to the front and back panels and is capable of being folded to enable the front panel to overlap the back panel. A pair of seams joins the front panel to the back panel to form an undergarment having a waist opening and a pair of leg openings. The first and third elastic bands create a waist band located adjacent to the waist opening and the second and fourth elastic bands create a pair of leg bands located adjacent to the pair of leg openings. The fourth elastic band has a stretching force that is greater than that of the second elastic band.
University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
Program Assistant Confidential
University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
Financial Specialist Senior
University of Wisconsin Oshkosh Feb 2006 - Mar 2016
Program Associate
Skills:
Faculty Development Student Development Higher Education Program Development Grant Writing Research Customer Service Student Affairs Teaching Social Media Microsoft Office Event Planning Fundraising
Cynthia Maas 1987 graduate of Hastings High School in Hastings, MN is on Memory Lane. Get caught up with Cynthia and other high school alumni from Hastings High
Amnestys report highlights the stories of seven women who died or disappeared in northeastern B.C., including 35-year-old Cynthia Maas, who was originally from Fort St. John and was murdered by a serial killer in Prince George in 2010. Her sister, Judy Maas, told Amnesty that her sibling went to Pr
Date: Nov 03, 2016
Source: Google
Legebokoff guilty of 1st-degree murder in deaths of 3 women, teen
After two days of deliberation, the jury found Legebokoff guilty of four counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of Jill Stuchenko, 35, Cynthia Maas, 35, Natasha Montgomery, 23, and 15-year-old Loren Leslie.