Research Question of Choice

My research question of choice is actually a few intersecting questions, which are as follows:

How was the Smithsonian National Zoo planned, developed, designed, and built, and filled with various animal life? How did the Smithsonian National Zoo effected the Washington, DC area upon it’s establishment, and how has it continued to impact the area and people of the country today?

I think researching these questions will allow me to gain a unique perspective on an interesting aspect of the Washington, DC area, and I think it will be a fun topic to gain knowledge about!

Calvin and Hobbes

The digitized Calvin and Hobbes cartoon images used in our classes syllabus shouldn’t infringe on any copyrights regulations, so long as the cartoons are used in full and aren’t edited in any way. Anything published between 1977 and March 1, 1989, falls under public domain if it doesn’t hold a copyright notice, which I don’t believe the comic does. The comic was also published publicly in newspapers, thus making it available to the majority of the US to see and use how they wish. The act of digitizing should be completely legal, as the strip is being presented in the same way that it was originally printed, just in a different format, and by displaying the comics in full, as they were originally printed, they should be perfectly acceptable to use.

Also, Calvin and Hobbes comic strips were not a purchasable piece of art, as they were published publicly in news papers, making them available to almost anyone while in syndication. Where as publishing a novel online, where the author makes money through book sales, the comics are not subject to such restrictions.