THE IV ILLUMINATOR Trademark

Trademark Overview


On Monday, October 28, 2002, a trademark application was filed for THE IV ILLUMINATOR with the United States Patent and Trademark Office. The USPTO has given the THE IV ILLUMINATOR trademark a serial number of 78179201. The federal status of this trademark filing is ABANDONED - FAILURE TO RESPOND OR LATE RESPONSE as of Monday, December 1, 2003. This trademark is owned by EMBO-OPTICS, LLC. The THE IV ILLUMINATOR trademark is filed in the Environmental Control Instrument Products category with the following description:

Lighting fixtures for use in medical applications, namely, lighting fixtures for illumination of drip chambers of intravenous drip solution bags

General Information


Serial Number78179201
Word MarkTHE IV ILLUMINATOR
Filing DateMonday, October 28, 2002
Status602 - ABANDONED - FAILURE TO RESPOND OR LATE RESPONSE
Status DateMonday, December 1, 2003
Registration Number0000000
Registration DateNOT AVAILABLE
Mark Drawing1000 - Typeset: Word(s) / letter(s) / number(s)
Published for Opposition DateNOT AVAILABLE

Trademark Statements


Goods and ServicesLighting fixtures for use in medical applications, namely, lighting fixtures for illumination of drip chambers of intravenous drip solution bags

Classification Information


International Class011 - Apparatus for lighting, heating, steam generating, cooking, refrigerating, drying, ventilating, water supply, and sanitary purposes.
US Class Codes013, 021, 023, 031, 034
Class Status Code6 - Active
Class Status DateTuesday, November 5, 2002
Primary Code011
First Use Anywhere DateMonday, September 30, 2002
First Use In Commerce DateMonday, September 30, 2002

Trademark Owner History


Party NameEMBO-OPTICS, LLC
Party Type10 - Original Applicant
Legal Entity Type03 - Corporation
AddressWilmington, MA 01887

Trademark Events


Event DateEvent Description
Monday, December 1, 2003ABANDONMENT - FAILURE TO RESPOND OR LATE RESPONSE
Wednesday, April 2, 2003NON-FINAL ACTION E-MAILED
Friday, March 28, 2003ASSIGNED TO EXAMINER
Wednesday, March 5, 2003PAPER RECEIVED