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We then saw the second set of a, b, c (shown in black) and interestingly, wave c was 161.8% of wave a.
FORBES: Elliott Waves Liking Kraft Foods But Just A Little Cheaper
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Limned with equal sensitivity are two chalk drawings by Paolo Veronese, "Study of a Black Youth Eating" (c. 1580) and "Study of the Head of a Black Man" (c.1573).
WSJ: Less Familiar Faces | Revealing the African Presence in Renaissance Europe | Princeton University Art Museum | By Barrymore Laurence Scherer
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Conversely, works like Orazio Mochi's finely modeled statuette of a "Black Court Jester" (c. 1600-10) and a Flemish or French statuette of a "Black Woman at her Bath" (1580s) reveal the aesthetic delight European sculptors took in the use of bronze with various patinations as a natural medium to represent the variety of African skin tones.
WSJ: Less Familiar Faces | Revealing the African Presence in Renaissance Europe | Princeton University Art Museum | By Barrymore Laurence Scherer
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The Black Star Project was founded in 1996 as a 501(c)(3) organization designed to eliminate the racial academic achievement gap among Black, Latino, White, and Asian students.
WHITEHOUSE: Black Star
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Frank Moses (Bruce Willis) is a former Black Ops agent from the C.
NEWYORKER: Red
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C. on the shores of the Black Sea.
WSJ: 'Aladdin's Lamp'
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The Initiative may collaborate with the White House Initiatives on American Indian and Alaska Native Education, Educational Excellence for Hispanics, Asian-American and Pacific Islanders, and (consistent with section 3(c) of this order) Historically Black Colleges and Universities, whenever appropriate in light of their shared objectives.
WHITEHOUSE: The White House
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C. after choosing window fashions from a black-and-white catalog.
FORBES: Merchant Princes
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C. police officer and now executive director of the National Black Police Association.
NPR: Examining Protocol In Disorderly Conduct Cases
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Baylen of the Los Angeles Times for her intimate essay, shot in shadowy black and white, documenting the shattered lives of people entangled in prescription drug abuse, and Renee C.
WSJ: 2013 Pulitzer winners in journalism and arts
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There's Antonello da Messina's skeptical young man with thick curling hair and a black cappuccio (1478) and Laurana's nuanced marble of the introspective bluestocking Beatrice of Aragon (c. 1474-75).
WSJ: The Renaissance Portrait | From Out of a Featureless Crowd | By Karen Wilkin