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President Biden Names Sixth Round of Judicial Nominees
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Ninth Circuit Favors USDA in Government-Funded Beef Advertising Lawsuit
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Movers and Shakers for June 13
Post date:
Wed, 06/09/2021 - 9:22am
Helge Eng joined the Department of Natural Resources as director of the Division of Forestry and Alaska state forester, after a 21-year career at California’s forest management and wildlife firefighting agency. At the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, Eng had been deputy director for forestry since 2015. He had previously spent two years as assistant deputy director for resource protection, nine years as state forests program manager, and three years as state forest biometrician for the department. He has served in a variety of membership and leadership roles in forestry, including registered professional forester and member of the Society of American Foresters; member of the California Licensed Foresters Association, chair of the Northern California Society of American Foresters, and state representative on the Society of American Foresters Policy Committee. Eng earned a bachelor’s degre
Timeline: A History Of Grizzly Bear Recovery In The Lower 48 States
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The Richard H. Chambers Courthouse, home of the Ninth Circuit. (Courthouse News photo / Bill Girdner)
(CN) An attorney for members of the band The Turtles told the Ninth Circuit on Monday that satellite radio broadcaster Sirius XM Radio has “cannibalized” record sales by skirting royalties for decades.
Sirius XM says in court papers it follows federal copyright law in that it digitally broadcasts tens of thousands of recordings it has acquired legally. In exchange for playing the songs, the company pays royalties to owners of musical compositions, just as any FM radio broadcaster or sporting arena has for decades.
But the company also says that just like any entity that broadcasts or “performs” music for the public, it hasn’t paid royalties to owners of sound recordings.