Yes, if you have a license from the rightsholder of the image. This might be a broad Creative Commons license, or an agreement specific to your proposed use.
Web graphics are images. These images are usually specifically designed to fit on the web page, some are even interactive.
Web page.
A link.
Actually, it's not true that professionals believe you should use many graphics on your web page for decoration. Too many graphics can clutter a website.
high-light the page maybe
You can configure your web browser for "disk caching", so that when you visit a web site, your browser will store the page and associated graphics on your hard drive. When you come back to the same web site, your browser will check to see if the page or graphics have changed, and will download only the new or modified content. With graphics-intensive web pages and slow connections, this can greatly speed up your web browsing. But if your connection is a fast one, there may not be a whole lot of time saved between downloading everything from the web and checking to see if you already have a local copy.
On a web page graphics are best described as any pictorial design that depicts a story or is representative of what the owner wants us to know. Examples of graphics are pictorial cartoons, banners, that are usually at the top, or sides of a web page.
© or ©
caching
Open the source code in Word, so it displays as a web page. Copy the text from the Word web page, and paste wherever. The formatting is preserved. (I found this answer myself.) -- Robin Hilborn Family Helper http://www.familyhelper.net
It is called downloading.
You can copy the image from this page: wiki.answers.com/Q/WikiFAQs:Supervisor_Team, remove the word Supervisor with a graphics program, and then add your own.