60
60
Jun 12, 2016
06/16
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CSPAN3
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she often used graphite or charcoal to draw them. there are very few instances where she uses color in her work and i will show you a piece where she uses color but sometimes, she would use watercolor paints. piecestingly, with these , she was never picky about the kind of paper she used. it was obvious she would use whatever she has in the studio. sometimes you see that she started a work and didn't like it, so she would scratch it out and turn it over and use the same materials to start a new piece. it really varied the type of materials she would use to draw on. them, she would either draw them in her own studio at home or -- where there are images of her drawing them there. them to theve editors of the suffragist and they would go through and editing process and should make recommendations on captions and sometimes the captions would be changed. they would make markings on the backs and these items would be put on to metal print blocks and it didn't matter how large or how small the items were, they always appeared to be about th
she often used graphite or charcoal to draw them. there are very few instances where she uses color in her work and i will show you a piece where she uses color but sometimes, she would use watercolor paints. piecestingly, with these , she was never picky about the kind of paper she used. it was obvious she would use whatever she has in the studio. sometimes you see that she started a work and didn't like it, so she would scratch it out and turn it over and use the same materials to start a new...
184
184
Jun 13, 2016
06/16
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CSPAN3
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she often used graphite or charcoal to draw them. there are very few instances where she uses color in her work and i will show you a piece where she uses color but sometimes, she would use watercolor paints. interestingly, with these pieces , she was never picky about the type of paper she used. it was obvious she would use whatever she had in her studio at the time. it could be anything from artists paper or poster to something thicker like posterboard, cardboard. sometimes you see that she started a work and didn't like it, so she would scratch it out and turn it over and use the same materials to start a new piece. it really varied the type of materials she would use to draw on. what they would do with these is and sheender drew them, would either draw them in her own studio at home or there are images of her drawing them there. she would give them to the editors of the suffragist and they would go through an editing process. allender would make recommendations on captions and sometimes the captions would be changed. they would m
she often used graphite or charcoal to draw them. there are very few instances where she uses color in her work and i will show you a piece where she uses color but sometimes, she would use watercolor paints. interestingly, with these pieces , she was never picky about the type of paper she used. it was obvious she would use whatever she had in her studio at the time. it could be anything from artists paper or poster to something thicker like posterboard, cardboard. sometimes you see that she...
75
75
Jun 10, 2016
06/16
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 75
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that are more exposed to commodity showing better price performance, commodities like lithium, and graphitegnificant improvements in the oil sector as well with the oil price performing very strongly and trading robustly around the $50 per barrel mark. rs have hade problems, a price waterhouse coopers report showed a ramp-up in capacity expansion over the ast decade had resulted in $53 billion write-down during calendar 2015. thank you so much for joining us. sorry to cut you short. , concerns about the state of the global economy, the action by many central banks to move interest rates into playing terrain, all out and highlighted by bill gross and george soros. as a result, we have seen a bond rally across the board feeding through with what is going on in japan. year yield falling below zero for the first time. yielding lesseld than zero. the 20 year remaining positive, but yielding to 10 sub 1%. tot 10 year yield falling minus 0.14%. that is the position at the moment as we had that negativity for these on the yields. right, coming up, disney and its multibillion-dollar themepark in sha
that are more exposed to commodity showing better price performance, commodities like lithium, and graphitegnificant improvements in the oil sector as well with the oil price performing very strongly and trading robustly around the $50 per barrel mark. rs have hade problems, a price waterhouse coopers report showed a ramp-up in capacity expansion over the ast decade had resulted in $53 billion write-down during calendar 2015. thank you so much for joining us. sorry to cut you short. , concerns...
77
77
Jun 2, 2016
06/16
by
KRON
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granta's that you graphite's hockey. moscow right now the scoreboard game to the stanley cup finals. >> grant: the team from pennsylvania scored a goal >> j.r.: game >> gary: to the stanley top cop. will get back to our team reporters headed up at a moment. >> gary: cleanse talk followed the radar sharks lawyers were that what are the a's doing a for game win streak. in the fourth inning three nothing in the samoan randy johnson struck out eight in six innings and then right now oakland athletics when 51. >> gary: that the official word translating 43 and 1/7 as always one more update. >> grant: nothing pittsburgh however the sharks say they a power play. the law >> gabe: augmented world expo largest augmented reality tech show it is the glasses that blend real world with a virtual these are hitting the market soon you'd be surprised what they can offer you coming up on news at 8:00 p.m.. >> pam: gm plan of replicas of the items from the force awakens buy everything from a light saber of the sale of its starts. >>> "the
granta's that you graphite's hockey. moscow right now the scoreboard game to the stanley cup finals. >> grant: the team from pennsylvania scored a goal >> j.r.: game >> gary: to the stanley top cop. will get back to our team reporters headed up at a moment. >> gary: cleanse talk followed the radar sharks lawyers were that what are the a's doing a for game win streak. in the fourth inning three nothing in the samoan randy johnson struck out eight in six innings and then...
60
60
Jun 19, 2016
06/16
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CSPAN2
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eye 60
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heavywater react to us, of sustaining nuclear reactors and they needed a moderator, a heavywater or graphite where you have these neutrons spinning around in this react to any need to slow them down to foster a decision. the thing that h2o does if you have these neutrons when you around, it might slow them down, but it absorbs those neutrons come stealing them away from a potential chain reaction. heavywater doesn't absorb them. they bombard. they slow and the neutrons move on. it is a chain reaction. the heavy water reactors committee idea and the germans do this in the americans and hispanics and 42. if you have a heavy water reactor it will grade plutonium. if you have plutonium, you have the basics for an atomic arms. this is the atomic bomb explosion over nokia's sake. the plutonium bomb. but many people talk about the german atomic bomb program, they talk about this gentleman on the far left. at the start of the war, the americans and germans were basically at the same place. they booed for new after the first but had first but at the ad and the potential for an atomic power or weapons
heavywater react to us, of sustaining nuclear reactors and they needed a moderator, a heavywater or graphite where you have these neutrons spinning around in this react to any need to slow them down to foster a decision. the thing that h2o does if you have these neutrons when you around, it might slow them down, but it absorbs those neutrons come stealing them away from a potential chain reaction. heavywater doesn't absorb them. they bombard. they slow and the neutrons move on. it is a chain...