Example sentences of "[noun] of [art] [noun prp] [noun] time " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 NARAL is asking readers of the New York Times to see a loss of women 's rights as a loss of Americans ' rights , thus implying that this is a novel way to look at the matter .
2 Listening to the new recording was ‘ like being in the living presence of the orchestra ’ wrote Howard Taubman , chief music critic of The New York Times .
3 Eliot Fremont-Smith , normally the book critic of The New York Times , wrote that , ‘ All involved deserve laurels .
4 Howard Rosenberg , TV critic of the Los Angeles Times , said : ‘ Just look at the re-runs of the old western series .
5 I mean I remember when I was at the New York Times and I wanted to use Cheltenham wide for a headline , Cheltenham bold well sort of bold wide , but it 's just called Cheltenham wide in the book , and because Cheltenham was always part of the New York Times library , whatever you call it , in the composing room .
6 Mind you , there was one right blarney when Mains decided that a rugby writer of the Otago Daily Times had harmed the Otago rugby cause , and there was a bitter no-speaks stand-off until good sense later prevailed .
7 Gerstner is a colleague of Akers on the board of The New York Times Co , and he is also said to know former IBM chief executive Thomas Watson Jr , who lives in the same Greenwich , Connecticut suburb as Gerstner .
8 Gerstner is a colleague of Akers on the board of The New York Times Co , and he is also said to know former IBM chief executive Thomas Watson Jr , who lives in the same Greenwich , Connecticut suburb as Gerstner .
9 The cricket correspondent of the Otago Daily Times reported that ‘ rumours are flying about dangerously at street corners that the local authorities have approached J.N. Crawford with a view to securing his services as a coach . ’
10 The Medical Correspondent of the UK Sunday Times reported in May 1990 that the anti-oestrogen drug , tamoxifen , used for several years to treat women actually suffering from breast-cancer , is now to be tested on 30,000 human subjects over a period of five years to assess its potential as a preventative of the disease in healthy women .
11 One was Mergenthaler 's Linotype , which made it possible to produce a newspaper quickly and in large volume ; the other was a social innovation , modern advertising , invented by the first true newspaper publishers , Adolph Ochs of the New York Times , Joseph Pulitzer of the New York World , and William Randolph Hearst .
12 In the United States , the Supreme Court held in the great case of The New York Times v Sullivan that no libel action could succeed if the plaintiff was a public figure and the allegation was honestly and diligently made .
13 ‘ What intrigues me most of all is how you managed to get someone like the editor of the New York Times to agree to back up your cover story . ’
14 I do n't know who you 're really working for but it must be a pretty influential organization to have the editor of the New York Times over a barrel . ’
15 It happened with me , when at the age of 18 , I took up pen and paper to make a reply to the readers ' letters column of the Glasgow Evening Times , in answer to a man who supported the rise of Nazism in Germany .
16 A notable convert to their point of view was Harrison Salisbury of the New York Times who argued that American withdrawal from the South would not produce a takeover by the North .
17 Walker and Amsler ( 1986 ) compared the words found in Webster 's Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary ( W7 ) ( G. & C. Merriam , 1963 ) and an 8 million word sample of the New York Times News Service ( NYTNS ) .
18 I endorse what my hon. Friend said about the excellent efforts of the Glasgow Evening Times in drawing the matter to our attention .
19 Dempsey defended his title only six times in as many years and constantly snubbed black challenges , one interesting one appearing in the pages of the New York Times from a certain Prince Mohammed Ali Ibrahim of Egypt whose special weapon was a ‘ pyramid punch ’ ( 4 March 1924 , p. 14 ) .
20 Yet even within the elite group there is no consistency of opinion ( the flock of hawks in the editorial pages of the New York Times excepted ) .
21 I flash upon my own family ; the way I have to think a moment before deciding who to include in my family , whether to include the step-parents or the siblings on my father 's side whom I would not know should I see them on the street , the hastiness of Mom and Larry on Sunday swirls between galleries and sushi , untapered by excess or sentimentality , busy with books and foreign films and the Sunday supplement of the New York Times , the wisdom of Ivy Leagues and schedules too dense to live by , to wake by , to sleep and breathe by .
22 Then , on May 6 , 1990 , Seth was reborn on the front page of The New York Times book review .
23 It was on the front page of the New York Times — surely you must recall , Jean-Paul ? ’
24 By the time he had got to suggesting that 126 card-carrying Communists were on the staff of the New York Times Sunday supplement , Matusow 's credibility was fraying , and , in 1956 , after a series of volte-faces he found himself on the wrong end of a five-year sentence for perjury .
25 Siege at Waco ( July , £4.99 ) is written by Richard Valdemar , cult and ritual crimes specialist for the Los Angeles County Sheriff 's Department , and Rob Eshman of the Los Angeles Times .
26 As publisher and chief executive of the New York Times , he is bashed about the ears by almost everybody he meets .
27 First , Frank Rich of the New York Times announced that Crazy for You — a glitzy new Gershwin review , quite without personalities — had grabbed the musical back from the British .
28 ABC television memorably noted that " Sarah Brightman could n't act scared if she was on the New York subway at four o'clock in the morning " ; while Frank Rich of the New York Times — the feared " butcher of Broadway " — remarked that she " simulates fear and affection alike by screwing her face into bug-eyed , chipmunk-like poses " , and that Lloyd Webber 's score was " long on pop professionalism , and impoverished of artistic personality and passion " .
29 A few weeks ago Roberta Smith of the New York Times wrote an article expressing a certain degree of ennui over the new decade 's proliferation of ‘ installation art ’ — but it does n't seem to have done much to stem the tide .
30 Philpott was sitting up in bed , his face hidden behind a copy of the New York Times .
  Next page