File:HailtoPittPAHall.jpg
HailtoPittPAHall.jpg (295 × 337 pixels, file size: 26 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
Summary
[edit]Description |
A cropped scan of a photo of Pennsylvania Hall, now demolished and replaced by a modern residence hall of the same name, from inside Pitt Stadium, also now demolished. This side of Pennsylvania Hall shows the "Hail to Pitt" sign that existed in many variations throughout the years on the campus of the University of Pittsburgh. This version was painted for the 100th season of Pitt football in 1990. It depicts a stylized version of Giuseppe Moretti's Panther statues as well as the traditional script Pitt logo that served as the primary athletic logo from 1973 until 1997. Hail to Pitt is both the title of the primary fight song of the University of Pittsburgh, as well as the most common athletic slogan. |
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Source |
1993 Pitt Football Media Guide, inside front cover crop, photographer unknown, media guide ©1993 |
Article | |
Portion used |
less than half of the original photo is used |
Low resolution? |
Yes, the resolution is not of commercial/professional quality and the image size is less than 0.3Mb. |
Purpose of use |
used here for non-commercial purposes, to enrich the encyclopedic understanding of the topic and show the pervasiveness of phrase and song, "Hail to Pitt" within the culture and community of the University of Pittsburgh. It is also of historic value since the buildings and sign are now demolished. |
Replaceable? |
None, Pennsylvania Hall was demolished in November 1998 and Pitt Stadium was demolished in 1999. The sign was destroyed with the demolition of Pennsylvania Hall. |
Other information |
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Fair useFair use of copyrighted material in the context of Hail to Pitt//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:HailtoPittPAHall.jpgtrue |
Licensing
[edit]![]() | This image is a two-dimensional representation of a building or architectural work which has been destroyed, demolished, or otherwise permanently altered in a way that makes it impossible to take a new photograph serving the same encyclopedic purpose. This image is protected by copyright by the publisher of the destroyed architecture. It is believed that the use of low-resolution versions of such images
qualifies as fair use under the copyright law of the United States. Any other uses of this image, on Wikipedia or elsewhere, may be copyright infringement. See Wikipedia:Non-free content for more information. |
Note: If any public domain or freely licensed photograph of the building is discovered or obtained, this image should be deleted and replaced. If the building is out of copyright in its home country or if said photograph was taken in a country which has freedom of panorama for buildings and architectural works which do not restrict commercial use (such as the United States; see here for a full list of which countries are OK), consider uploading to Wikimedia Commons instead, which allows other Wikimedia projects to use the image. If the building is copyrighted in its home country and there is no freedom of panorama provision in that country, then upload it locally under a free license, appending the tag {{FoP-USonly}}. |
File history
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 23:19, 6 December 2017 | ![]() | 295 × 337 (26 KB) | DatBot (talk | contribs) | Reduce size of non-free image (BOT - disable) |
21:20, 8 February 2009 | No thumbnail | 347 × 397 (202 KB) | Crazypaco (talk | contribs) | == Summary == {{Non-free use rationale |Article=Hail to Pitt |Description=A photo of Pennsylvania Hall, now demolished and replaced by a modern residence hall of the same name, from inside Pitt Stadium, also now demo |
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