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David B MayGill, CO

David May Phones & Addresses

Gill, CO   

145 Claxton Ln, Cabot, AR 72023    501-8431199   

Mentions for David B May

Career records & work history

Lawyers & Attorneys

David May Photo 1

David May - Lawyer

Office:
Bruce S. Osterman
Specialties:
Litigation, State, Local And Municipal Law, Real Property, Intellectual Property, International Law, Contracts & Agreements, General Practice
ISLN:
905077732
Admitted:
1978
University:
University of California, B.A.
Law School:
San Francisco Law School, J.D., 1978
David May Photo 2

David May - Lawyer

Office:
Seyburn Kahn, P.C.
Specialties:
Corporate Tax Planning, Individual Tax Planning, Estate Planning
ISLN:
905077749
Admitted:
1975
University:
Georgetown University, 1980; University of Kentucky, B.A., 1972
Law School:
Cleveland State University, J.D., 1975
David May Photo 3

David May - Lawyer

Specialties:
Business, Litigation: Commercial, Litigation: Personal Injury, Military
ISLN:
905077718
Admitted:
1979
University:
Kansas Wesleyan University, B.A.
Law School:
Drake University, J.D.

David May resumes & CV records

Resumes

David May Photo 5

David May - Gill, CO

Work:
risk free security Oct 2014 to 2000
Security
kerbs dairy - Gill, CO Jun 2014 to Aug 2014
laborer
Independent pump and system managment - Eaton, CO May 2014 to Jun 2014
shop hand
grease monkey - Greeley, CO
coutesy / hood tech
Education:
homeschooled - Greeley, CO 2013 to 2013
ged in ged

Publications & IP owners

Us Patents

Floating Tether Cords

US Patent:
5600873, Feb 11, 1997
Filed:
Aug 6, 1993
Appl. No.:
8/103185
Inventors:
David G. May - Little Rock AR
International Classification:
A45F 500
US Classification:
24 32
Abstract:
Buoyant tether cords that remove ignition keys from personal watercraft to safely disable the motor in the event a rider falls off. When dropped in the water the cords float so that the ignition key is not lost. The cords float horizontally to maximize visibility. The cord has an elongated embodiment and a looped embodiment. Both have a brightly colored floating body that is attached to a stretchable, coil section. The coil enables the cord to elongate or contract. Both cords have one end to be coupled to the watercraft key, and an opposite end to be coupled to the rider. The floating body comprises an elongated, tubular foam core having an interior passageway. The core is preferably made from lightweight, flexible low-density closed cell foam. The core is preferably coaxially covered by a resilient, tubular knitted fabric sheath that strengthens and colors it. Each coil comprises plastic-coated string.

Floating Tether Cord

US Patent:
D368758, Apr 9, 1996
Filed:
Jan 31, 1995
Appl. No.:
D/034235
Inventors:
David G. May - Little Rock AR
US Classification:
D21238

Floating Tether Cord

US Patent:
D372756, Aug 13, 1996
Filed:
Jan 31, 1995
Appl. No.:
D/034234
Inventors:
David G. May - Little Rock AR
US Classification:
D21237

Floatable Retainer For Eyeglasses

US Patent:
5015085, May 14, 1991
Filed:
Nov 6, 1989
Appl. No.:
7/432619
Inventors:
David G. May - Little Rock AR
International Classification:
G02C 100
G02C 300
US Classification:
351 43
Abstract:
A floatable eyeglass retainer comprising an elongated, solid cord that is covered with tubular fabric. The cord is made of a buoyant material, which is also flexible. An oval shaped piece of resilient material is fastened directly to each end of the cord by use of a clamp. Covering each clamp is a small piece of tubing made of a buoyant material. A resilient spacer is slipped onto both ovals forming a small opening in which the temple of a pair of eyeglasses is force fed into, keeping the retainer in place on the eyeglasses.

Buoyant Jewelry

US Patent:
5680679, Oct 28, 1997
Filed:
Jun 30, 1993
Appl. No.:
8/083530
Inventors:
David G. May - Little Rock AR
International Classification:
G02C 300
US Classification:
24 32
Abstract:
Buoyant jewelry for retaining and protecting personal articles. Each jewelry/retainer comprises a brightly colored, buoyant body coupled to one or more fasteners for securing various articles such as sunglasses, keys, or personal care products which the swimmer or water sportsman desires to conveniently retain. The jewelry items comprise eyeglass retainers, bracelets, anklets, name badges, and necklaces. The body comprises a resilient core of low-density foam covered by a flexible, tubular sheath. The sheath brightly colors and reinforces the body. In one mode the fasteners comprise resilient tubes for axially gripping the ear pieces of conventional glasses. An alternative fastener comprises a flexible fabric channel for receiving fine wire or wrap-around ear pieces. Another embodiment comprises a cord looped through an item to be floated, and an optional cap is provided for slip-fitting over existing containers of personal care products. An alternative jewelry item configuration comprises a buoyant loop formed by clamping the ends in generally parallel relationship, so that the fastener projects angularly away from the loop.

Buoyant Eyeglass Retainers

US Patent:
5235355, Aug 10, 1993
Filed:
May 2, 1991
Appl. No.:
7/694888
Inventors:
David G. May - Little Rock AR
International Classification:
G02C 514
US Classification:
351123
Abstract:
Buoyant jewelry for retaining and protectinq personal articles. Each jewelry/retainer comprises a brightly colored, buoyant body coupled to one or more fasteners for securing various articles such as sunglasses, keys, or personal care products which the swimmer or water sportsman desires to conveniently retain. The jewelry items comprise eyeglass retainers, bracelets, anklets, name badges, and necklaces. The body comprises a resilient core of low-density foam covered by a flexible, tubular sheath. The sheath brightly colors and reinforces the body. In one mode the fasteners comprise resilient tubes for axially gripping the ear pieces of conventional glasses. An alternative fastener comprises a flexible fabric channel for receiving fine wire or wrap-around ear pieces. Another embodiment comprises a cord looped through an item to be floated, and an optional cap is provided for slip-fitting over existing containers of personal care products. An alternative jewelry item configuration comprises a buoyant loop formed by clamping the ends in generally parallel relationship, so that the fastener projects angularly away from the loop.

Detachable Retainer Straps

US Patent:
2017018, Jun 22, 2017
Filed:
Mar 8, 2017
Appl. No.:
15/453590
Inventors:
David Glen May - Little Rock AR, US
International Classification:
H04M 1/04
A45F 5/00
Abstract:
Magnetic retainers for detachably holding and suspending items such as cell phones from a user or support comprise a hanger and a holder that are magnetically coupled together. The holder is removably attached to an item such as a cell phone, and the hanger is removably suspended from the phone user. The hanger selectively, detachably couples to the harness with vertically aligned permanent magnets. The hanger may comprise a loop, clip, or lanyard that is worn or held by the user or attached to a static support. The holder is retrofitted to cell phone structure with a flexible, anti-slip sticky-tape connection that is removably, adhesively secured between parts of the cell phone body, its interior, or its case, being sandwiched and restrained between abutting parts. Magnets are permanently attached to remote ends or portions of the hanger and holder through either a shrink wrap connection or a snap fitting arrangement.

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