Not exact matches
Some items in the bag might include cosmetics,
newspapers,
magazine articles, airline
or movie ticket stubs,
photographs of people
or places, a music CD, grooming materials, keys, a candy wrapper, a crayon, a slip of paper with a first name and phone number written on it, a recipe, an empty soda can, a parking ticket, a check made out to them, a rubber band, a keychain with no keys on it, a receipt from a grocery store
or a fast - food restaurant (If you are stuck for a long list of items, you might even brainstorm in advance with students a list of nouns / things that might be found in students» pockets / purses
or in a «junk drawer» at home.
Provide students with
photographs — with captions removed — cut from
newspapers and /
or news
magazines.
She takes out letters, some of them more than a hundred years old,
photographs, postcards,
newspaper clippings,
magazines, and leafs through them, she thumbs through the pile of lifeless paper and then sorts it yet again, this time on the floor,
or on the desk by the window.
Keeping a diary and collecting images /
photographs and
newspaper or magazine cuttings
or photocopies are invaluable aids for when you finally sit down to collect your thoughts and start writing your book.
Warhol appropriated images for his portraits from
magazines,
newspapers,
or directly from publicity
photographs.
Represented by contiguous small fields of color, these quasi-abstract forms might be
photographs, postcards,
or images cut from
magazines or newspapers.
The portraits depict men, women and teenagers, and are based on images taken from television,
magazines or newspapers; on Mr. Hayes's own
photographs;
or on his imagination....
Taken from
photographs in
newspapers or magazines, the careful reconstitutions of these images in graphite neutralize the violence
or chaos of people's lives.
crayon with a title
or a quote
newspaper clippings and
magazines and sometimes objects the paper used would usually be cut from personal snapshots polaroid
photographs and thousands of images torn from
magazines and
newspapers a painting is never a literal rendition of a (2 words, 13 characters)
«Covered Person: (A) an entity that disseminates information by print, broadcast, cable, satellite, mechanical, photographic, electronic,
or other means and that (i) publishes a
newspaper, book,
magazine,
or other periodical; (ii) operates a radio
or television broadcast station (
or network of such stations), cable system,
or satellite carrier,
or a channel
or programming service for any such station, network, system,
or carrier;
or (iii)-- operates a news agency
or wire service; (B) a parent, subsidiary,
or affiliate of such an entity;
or (C) and employee, contractor,
or other person who gathers, edits,
photographs, records, prepares,
or disseminates news
or information for such an entity.»
It is the author's responsibility to obtain written permission and defray all fees for the use of any quotes over 300 words from previously published academic material; non-original
photographs, figures,
or tables
or any portion thereof, exclusive of data; and quotes of any length from
newspapers,
magazines, poems, songs, and anything broadcast over radio
or television.