Word: clangings
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...lawn in front of his house, George Foreman contemplates the same idea. "I'd like to be a veterinarian," he says, "and I can't wait forever to get started." Fighters often talk that way between matches. Then the sound of the bell and the clang of the cash register remind them of who they are and what they do for a living. At 3 a.m. next Wednesday in Kinshasa, two of the best will earn their...
...their own style and history ("The last time an editor is a free spirit is the day he puts to press volume one, number one"). Publishing economics is an ever larger concern ("Somewhere in the background can be heard the ring of the cash register, or else the clang of an alarm bell over the cash register's silence"). He insists that newsmen keep their heads even when dealing with mind-boggling events ("Journalism, like a teapot handle, is presumed to be able to remain cool while transmitting...
Hours later, the huge amphitheater, which once resounded to the agonies of the 1968 Democratic Convention, is quiet except for the occasional clang of a dropped wrench or the grunts of car owners as they push their treasures up the ramp into their trailers. An old porter pushes a broom through the thick litter of the International Speed Custom Cycle Auto Show...
Even into the 1960s, the Jesuit seminarians at Maryland's Woodstock College seldom left the leafy campus overlooking the Patapsco River Valley. They rose at 5:30 a.m. to the clang of a seminary bell, attended compulsory early Mass, skittered around the campus in long black cassocks. They ate their meals silently while a prefect read from learned books. But neither its cloistered atmosphere nor its age (founded in 1869, it was the oldest Jesuit theologate in the U.S.) prevented Woodstock from being the nation's most dynamic institution of Roman Catholic theology...
There are artists who remain boy wonders in the public eye until the gates of the geriatric home clang shut behind them. This threatens to be the fate of David Hockney. He was still a 25-year-old student at London's Royal College of Art when his work began to attract notice in 1962. In the decade since then he has remained one of the most conspicuous figures in the English art world. The Clairol-bleached thatch, the Yorkshire accent and the owl-like stare through horn-rims the size of old Bentley headlights have become almost...