Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Presentation

Photo use




Fleming, Daniel. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Photograph. Agora 46.1 (Jan. 2011): 4-8 Ebsco. Texas A and M University-Commerce, Commerce, TX. 10 February 2014.

This is fair use because it came from the library database. The library database is open to the public for use of its materials.

Orphan Boy. Dir. Vanessa Burzynski. Grimes County Database. Children’s Aid Society. Web. 20 Mar. 2014.
This is in the Public Domain because it is from the Grimes County database.  This constitutes a government owed entity which makes it accessible to the public for free use.
 
Dan Sheuerman. Orphan Train. 2007. Photograph. Lost Children: Riders of the Orphan Train. National Endowment for the Humanities. 28.6. Web. 20 Mar. 2014.
This is Public domain because it is from the NEH.GOV website. The government website is open to the public for free use.
 
A Man was Lynched Yesterday. 1938. Photograph. Library of Congress. Web. 20 Mar. 2014
This is Public Domain because it is from the Library of Congress. That give us the ability to use it because it is government owned.
 
Protesters Sprayed with Hoses. 1963. Photograph. Library of Congress. Web. 20 Mar. 2014
This is Public Domain because it is from the Library of Congress. That give us the ability to use it because it is government owned.
 
Martin Luther King Jr. Photograph. Wikipedia.org. Web. 20 Mar. 2014.
Copyrighted.
 
Martin Luther King Nobel Prize. Photograph. Web. 20 Mar. 2014.
 
Copyrighted.
 
Lee Harvey Oswald. Photograph. PBS.org. Web. 20 Mar. 2014.
 
This image is from an organization that receives its funds to operate from the American public through donations and from the U.S. government. For this reason, I believe that it is Public Domain.
 
Syler, Larry. Tears and Joy Spell Christmas.1962. Photograph. Locust Special 5.2 Commerce: East Texas State College.
This is Fair Use because it comes from the library database that we are given access to because we are students. We may use it for educational purposes but not for monetary gain.
 





 

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Remixed



Winning Changes Everything
 
Liston went to his corner, and when the bell sounded for the seventh round, Liston stayed on his stool...Clay suddenly realized what had happened, leapt up, and danced around the ring, yelling, "I am the greatest in the world! I am the king of the world!"
In a few days fight fan's reactions turned from stunned to stupified, as Cassius Clay announced that he was renouncing his "slave name," and the new name given him by the black Muslims to which he now belonged was Muhammed Ali. I was confused by the name change.
 
 Busby, Mark. Cedar Crossing. Fort Worth: TCU Press, 2013. 62. Print.

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Cassius...um Muhammed

 
When Muhammed Ali defeated Sonny Liston, it sent shockwaves throughout the boxing world. This loud-mouthed kid actually lived up to the hype...