U S AMERICAN LEGION

Brand Owner Address Description
US AMERICAN LEGION The American Legion 700 N. Pennsylvania Street Indianapolis IN 46204 U.S. AMERICAN LEGION;UNITED STATES AMERICAN LEGION;The mark consists of an eagle with wings spread, head facing left and a circular emblem over the breast of the eagle containing a wreath, two large rings, two small rings set upon a five-pointed star, rays of the sun in the background and the words U.S. in the center in its own circle superimposed on the star and AMERICAN arched along the top of the circle and LEGION arched along the bottom of the circle.;Decals; printed certificates;Cloth patches for clothing; belt buckles not of precious metal;Ornamental pins;Clothing, namely, jackets, shirts, t-shirts, polo shirts, tank tops, sweatshirts, vests; hats, including berets and baseball caps; do-rags;Color is not claimed as a feature of the mark.;Nylon flags and nylon banners; flag kits comprising nylon flags and mounting brackets [ ; printed textile labels ];[ License plate frames ];Cigarette lighters not of precious metal;US;Plastic name tags; plastic key tags; plastic novelty license plates;
 

Where the owner name is not linked, that owner no longer owns the brand

   
Technical Examples
  1. The invention provides isolated polynucleotide molecules, including plasmids; viral vectors; and transfected host cells that comprise a DNA sequence encoding an infectious RNA sequence encoding a North American PRRS virus; and also North American PRRS viruses encoded thereby. The invention further provides isolated infectious RNA molecules encoding a North American PRRS virus. The invention also provides isolated polynucleotide molecules, infectious RNA molecules, viral vectors, and transfected host cells encoding genetically-modified North American PRRS viruses; and genetically-modified North American PRRS viruses encoded thereby. The invention also provides vaccines comprising such plasmids, RNA molecules, viral vectors, and North American PRRS viruses, and methods of using these vaccines in swine and in other animals. Also provided are isolated polynucleotide molecules, viral vectors, and transfected host cells that comprise a nucleotide sequence encoding a peptide of a North American PRRS virus. These viral vectors and transfected host cell lines are useful in providing peptides to compensate for mutated peptide coding sequences of DNA sequences encoding genetically-modified North American PRRS viruses so that functional virions can be generated.