File:Red Barber at Ebbets field Pr11606.jpg
Red_Barber_at_Ebbets_field_Pr11606.jpg (600 × 487 pixels, file size: 39 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
Captions
Summary
[edit]Red Barber at Ebbets field | |
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Title |
Red Barber at Ebbets field |
Description |
Born in Columbus, Mississippi in 1908, he began his broadcasting career in 1930, while a student at University of Florida, with the university's WRUF. He later married his nurse (Lylah Murray Scarborough) after a 1931 accident. He broadcast his first major league game in 1934 at Cincinnati. He broadcast the major league's first world series in 1935. He then moved to the Dodgers in 1939 and broadcast the major league's first televised game. Later he switched to the Yankees in 1954 and stayed through the 1966 season when he was fired. He wrote a weekly column for the Miami Herald and a monthly column for the Christian Science Monitor, and six books. He moved to Tallahassee in 1972 where he began writing a weekly column for the Tallahassee Democrat and weekly broadcasts on National Public Radio with Bob Edwards in 1981. He died in 1992. |
Date |
1943 date QS:P571,+1943-00-00T00:00:00Z/9 |
Medium | 1 photonegative - b&w |
Dimensions | 4 x 5 in. |
Accession number |
PR11606 |
Source/Photographer | https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/10013 |
Permission (Reusing this file) |
Public Domain |
Licensing
[edit]Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse |
This work was created by a government unit (including state, county, and municipal government agencies) of the U.S. state of Florida. It is a public record that was not created by an agency which state law has allowed to claim copyright and is therefore in the public domain in the United States.
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Works by defunct state agencies may be copyrighted if these rights were transferred to a new or different agency (note that legislation transferring such right may not have been codified into Florida Statutes). For example, copyright in works by the Florida Space Authority may have been transferred to Space Florida. State and municipal government agencies may claim copyright for software created by the agency (§ 119.084, F.S. 2018). In case law, Microdecisions, Inc. v. Skinner—889 So. 2d 871 (Fla. 2d DCA 2004) (Findlaw)—held that the Collier County Property Appraiser could not require commercial users to enter into a licensing agreement, holding that "[the agency] has no authority to assert copyright protection in the GIS maps, which are public records." Note: Works that are considered "public records" but were not created by a state or municipal government agency may be copyrighted by their author; the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution prevents state law from overriding the author's right to copyright protection that is granted by federal law. For example, a state agency may post images online of the final appearance of a building under construction; while the images may be "public records", their creator (eg. architecture/construction firm) retains copyright rights to the image unless the contract with the agency says otherwise. See: Government-in-the-Sunshine Manual: To what extent does federal law preempt state law regarding public inspection of records?. |
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Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 00:10, 19 December 2018 | 600 × 487 (39 KB) | Slowking4 (talk | contribs) | {{artwork |title = Red Barber at Ebbets field |accession number = PR11606 |date = 1943 |Description= Born in Columbus, Mississippi in 1908, he began his broadcasting career in 1930, while a student at University of Florida, with the university's WRUF. He later married his nurse (Lylah Murray Scarborough) after a 1931 accident. He broadcast his first major league game in 1934 at Cincinnati. He broadcast the major league's first world series in 1935. He then moved to the Dodgers in 1939 and... |
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JPEG file comment | Handmade Software, Inc. Image Alchemy v1.6.2 |
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