- Franklin Lakes NJ, US Laurie Sanders - Glen Ridge NJ, US Eli B. Nichols - Durham NC, US Phil C. McNeill - Chappaqua NY, US Robert Henson - Fuquay Varina NC, US
Assignee:
Becton, Dickinson and Company - Franklin Lakes NJ
International Classification:
A61M 5/32
Abstract:
Drug delivery safety devices having trigger activation systems activated by pressure against the skin of a patient and which automatically shield the needle after withdrawing the needle from the skin of the patient.
Safety Device With Collapsible Housing And Trigger Activation
- Franklin Lakes NJ, US Laurie Sanders - Glen Ridge NJ, US Eli B. Nichols - Durham NC, US Phil C. McNeill - Tarrytown NY, US Robert Henson - Fuquay Varina NC, US
International Classification:
A61M 5/32
Abstract:
Drug delivery safety devices having trigger activation systems activated by pressure against the skin of a patient and which automatically shield the needle after withdrawing the needle from the skin of the patient.
Name / Title
Company / Classification
Phones & Addresses
Robert Henson Chairman
Brown-Kortkamp Realty Co.
1612 Richmond Rd, Staten Island, NY 10304 3143674709
askins' natural talent and potential; but he does provide an alternative if a teamsuch as the Giants, for exampleis willing to wait. Schefter reported Grier and Jones are the names associated with New York's search for Eli Manning's heir apparent (via Redskins Capital Connection's Robert Henson).
The network didn't break even until its fifth year, according to former chairman and CEO Frank Batten in the book The Weather Channel: The Making of a Media Phenomenon, and didn't really hit its stride until the 1990s, as meteorologist Robert Henson wrote in his book Weather on the Air.
"I can't help but think of Hurricane Katrina (in 2005) and how people never thought they'd see, in this modern age, a U.S. weather event that could result in hundreds of deaths," said Robert Henson of the Colorado-based University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, a weather study consortium. "That hurricane, too, had a lot of warnings," but thousands stuck around in New Orleans.