Background
Neuhauser was born in Louisville, Kentucky, on September 29, 1913, to German American parents. His father, a stonemason, worked on spelling with his son on weekends if the weather was bad.
Neuhauser was born in Louisville, Kentucky, on September 29, 1913, to German American parents. His father, a stonemason, worked on spelling with his son on weekends if the weather was bad.
Neuhauser went on to obtain a bachelor"s degree in engineering from the University of Louisville in 1934. He began working as a small appliance engineer for General Electric (General Electric), which offered to send him to law school in order to gain additional patent lawyers. Neuhauser received his law degree from in 1940.
Neuhauser enlisted in the United States Navy during World World War World War II
National Spelling Bee in June 1925. He had prepared for the bee by copying the dictionary into a blank notebook. Neuhauser, who was eleven years old at the time of the contest, met United States. President Calvin Coolidge and was awarded five hundred dollars in gold pieces for his victory.
His hometown of Louisville, Kentucky, gave Neuhauser a parade in his honor and presented him with bouquets of gladiolus.
His classmates and school also gave him a bicycle. During his later life, Neuhauser often appeared as a guest of honor at more recent spelling bees.
He also appeared in the 2002 documentary film Spellbound. Education Following the end of World World War II, Neuhauser returned to General Electric as a patent attorney.
He worked for General Electric in Connecticut and New York City, before moving permanently to Maryland in the mid-1950s.
He remained on the staff of General Electric, and, among other things, was Manager of General Electric"s Washington Patent Operation, where he formally trained many patent attorneys, in a training program that had 16 prospective patent attorneys at a time. In 1978 he left General Electric to join Bernard Rothwell & Brown, a law firm based in Washington District of Columbia Neuhauser formerly chaired the patent law divisions of both the District of Columbia Bar Association and the American Bar Association. He was the former president of the American Intellectual Property Law Association and the former chairman of the National Council of Patent Law Associations.
Neuhauser died from myelodysplastic syndrome at his home in Silver Spring, Maryland, on March 11, 2011, at the age of 97.
Past president pastoral council Our Lady of Mercy Church, Potomac. Past board directors Potomac (Maryland) Citizens Association, Shady Grove Pregnancy Center, Gaithersburg, Self Help for Hard of Hearing People, Montgomery County, Montgomery County Chamber. Member of American Bar Association (past chairman patent section), American Intellectual Property Assn.
Married Mary Virginia Clark, February 3, 1945. Children: Charles, Linda, Frank, Alan.