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FreightWaves Classics: Port of Milwaukee serves the Great Lakes and US inland waterway system
railpage.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from railpage.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
FreightWaves Classics: Port of Milwaukee serves the Great Lakes and US inland waterway system
freightwaves.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from freightwaves.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
ayodhya news: Maulvi Ahmadullah Shah Faizabadi: क्रांतिकारी फ्रीडम फाइटर अहमदुल्ला शाह फैजाबादी होगा अयोध्या मस्जिद का नाम - ayodhya mosque to be name after freedom fighter maulvi ahmadullah shah faizabadi
indiatimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from indiatimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
By Thomas Phinney
Note: Consult your attorney for advice on any particular legal matter. No reader should act, or refrain from acting, on the basis of this article, without seeking advice from legal counsel in the relevant jurisdiction.
Whether you use fonts as a graphic or web designer, or are perhaps starting to make fonts, understanding the legal issues around them is important. What are font lawsuits about, what legal protections do fonts have and how does it affect you whether you use fonts or make them?
Font lawsuits take many forms. Some are within a company, such as when Tobias Frere-Jones sued Jonathan Hoefler. Some are business disputes between companies in the font business, whether around distribution/relicensing deals, making derivative fonts and selling them (Adobe v SSi), making similar fonts (ITC v Monotype), or allowing fonts to be embedded in documents (Monotype v Adobe).
Springfield Zoning Board deals another blow to biomass project; rules building permit has expired MassLive.com 2 days ago Peter Goonan, masslive.com © Leon Nguyen | hnguyen/@repub.com Springfield Councilor Jesse Lederman speaks at a demonstration in September of 2020, in opposition to plans for a biomass energy plant in East Springfield. The Zoning Board of Appeals has ruled that its building permit has lapsed.
SPRINGFIELD A proposed biomass wood-burning plant in East Springfield was dealt another blow Wednesday night when the city’s Zoning Board of Appeals ruled that a building permit for the project has expired.
The board voted, 4-1, that Palmer Renewable Energy’s building permits for the project, issued in 2011, and extended by the building commissioner, lapsed due to inaction on the permit for more than 180 days.