A serial bank robber busts out of prison with a federal cop as an accidental hostage. |
|
He became, after Nollekens, the most successful sculptor of portrait busts in England. |
|
Sculptures, moulds, busts, dentures, imprints and masks of Washington's face and body will be scanned with lasers. |
|
Although he made some figures in his earlier idiom, his later sculptures were mainly portrait busts. |
|
The room was decorated with fine eighteenth century art, sculptures and busts of previous political figures. |
|
His architectural sculpture and terra-cotta portrait busts of leading citizens were much admired in their day. |
|
When this drug comes across a clot or a fat deposit it busts it clean away. |
|
At least once a week, Cory Schlesinger must have his face mask replaced because he either snaps the posts or busts the welds. |
|
Then one night, a soldier busts my front door in, drunk from the victory parties. |
|
One wonders how an ad might read when the relationship inevitably busts up. |
|
A soldier busts out of an outpost and you gun him down before he can do the same to you. |
|
Likewise recessions or economic busts are set in motion if people suddenly change their psychology and stop spending. |
|
Your correspondent is old enough to have actually participated in the economic booms and busts of the last 40 odd years, housing included. |
|
She says immigrant women would be reluctant to trust an agency that accompanies police on busts. |
|
There have also been big busts, however, in Egypt, Ghana, Kenya, Morocco, Malawi, Nigeria and Tanzania. |
|
The current rash of raids and busts on bars that showcase objectionable entertainment is making some of our tourists itch. |
|
A suspected drug dealer was arrested during a dawn raid on his house, the latest in a series of weekly busts by Merton police. |
|
And isn't it true that some of the biggest busts have related to people who exchanged this type of material via email or through websites? |
|
There is no pressure for him to succeed, for the consensus is that he's one of the biggest first-round busts in recent memory. |
|
Between 1990 and 2000, 12 of the 21 quarterbacks taken in the first round were busts, by my definition of the term. |
|
|
There are also a couple of portraits and self-portraits, as well as busts sculpted of bronze. |
|
There were marble craters and candelabra, statuary, busts, reliefs, column capitals and bases, and 60 to 70 marble column shafts. |
|
His work ranges from busts to monumental castings commissioned by civic, church, or corporate clients. |
|
He blows harder and harder, everybody laughs in anticipation, and the balloon busts with a big bang right in his face. |
|
Later in her career she also did numerous portrait busts of distinguished sitters. |
|
The British economy has suffered greater booms and deeper busts than the eurozone economies over the past few decades. |
|
Lab busts have soared since last fall when Wright, a former narc, took over the county's 13-man drug task force. |
|
The lintel is carved in only one lithic piece and we can see four busts and the nobiliary coat of arms. |
|
It is not unusual to see busts or heads serving as lugs for lids of large funerary vessels, especially among the Kwahu subgroup. |
|
Once picking up hot scent, he bores in and busts birds out of the cover to provide the gun a shot. |
|
The busts, as well as the silver and parcel-gilt decorations, are by the Augsburg goldsmith Ludwig Schneider. |
|
But Ghirlandaio does not depict busts or statues, his figures are shown as though alive within an illusionistic setting. |
|
The incomers were principally craftsmen, carving ships' figureheads and occasional portrait busts. |
|
And I can give you details of drug busts on musicians that were thrown out of court because the police made a lousy job of the fit-up. |
|
The system, while certainly not immune to boom and busts, at least had a mechanism of self-regulation and correction. |
|
Those with fuller busts should opt for swimwear which offers maximum support. |
|
The number of busts for hard drugs within the British army has doubled in two years and now easily exceeds positive tests for cannabis. |
|
They were in a high-ceilinged room, the walls covered in carved wooden panels with a number of marble busts set on shelves projecting from them. |
|
A still greater number have copied the busts and limbs and the groups of Greek art. |
|
Its rococo entranceway was lined with larger-than-life busts of his children, which had been painted in life-like colors. |
|
|
A jabot, splashy or bold prints, round and low necklines, or long ties on a scarf make busts look larger. |
|
This figure's weak chin, hunched shoulders and humble demeanor contribute to the poignancy and humanity of the busts. |
|
Then, Carter busts the lid off the song, and achieves a rush of sound, Carter's reeds screaming, the percussion a rattling thunderstorm. |
|
And unlike most real estate busts, this one will reverberate around the world. |
|
In the days of the baby boomers and baby busts, the keepers of reflection were the tops of their prime. |
|
Almost all manias, be they tulips, railways, Japanese real estate, have ended in busts. |
|
As if all this were not enough, she also works with tulle, making all kinds of parasols and mantilla decorations for figurine heads and busts. |
|
A note about the boys at our school, they like girls with big busts more than girls who don't have one at all. |
|
Casters make commemorative or memorial busts and figures specially ordered and designed by clients. |
|
Once known for hyperinflation and economic booms and busts, Latin America is now a place of sound finances and financial systems. |
|
Leonard has hung with cops, ridden in squad cars, sat in the courtrooms and precinct houses, seen busts up close. |
|
Combining information gained by officers with intelligence from the hotline, a series of busts were carried out in July, which resulted in 16 arrests. |
|
More than 70 marble, bronze, terracotta and plaster busts and life-size sculptures are on display together for the first time in nearly two centuries. |
|
We are all beautiful in our own way and don't even realise it, you don't have to be thin with big busts to make it in the world or even just to feel good. |
|
The hall was empty now, except for the busts of former presidents and a Steinway grand piano, probably the only instrument of its kind in the entire country. |
|
In 1849 he settled in Albany, NY, sculpting portrait busts and religious bas-reliefs in a style which tempered neoclassical idealism with growing realism. |
|
One is of a pair of figures from the shoulders up, looking at two sculpted busts that are, in shape and composition, an exact repetition of themselves. |
|
Personics flamed out in one of the biggest busts in venture capital history. |
|
Along with a colossal statue of Athena, bases for busts inscribed with the names of Homer, Herodotus and other noted literary figures were found here. |
|
Or will Brown continue to be one of the league's biggest busts? |
|
|
Before Banks, commissions for sculptures in Britain produced busts, public statues, church monuments and decorative reliefs for overmantels and overdoors. |
|
For fourteen years I chaired the Works of Art Committee and sought to add to our collection of historical statues, busts and portraits, and topographical works. |
|
It reminds one of those commemorative busts associated with Caesar's and Augustus's Rome, or of a statue made for a niche in a European manor house. |
|
Note that if the player busts he loses, even if the dealer also busts. |
|
Their gifts include paper currency, pamphlets, manuscripts, snuffboxes, portrait busts, cartoons, medals, and coverlets, but most notable in terms of volume, prints. |
|
I'm sure that two slightly dodgy copies of eighteenth-century portraits and casts of busts of Sir Walter and Napoleon would be quite safe in my keeping. |
|
The army of artisans have gone and all that remains to do before the public unveiling of a perfect 18 th-century time capsule is a quick polish of the family busts. |
|
These furnishings included carpets, curtains, louvres, rococo chairs, plaster casts of antique statues and busts, paintings, Chinese vases and diverse plants. |
|
Her earliest works were portrait busts and relief panels with religious and mythological subjects, for which she often used her family and friends as models. |
|
It was this picture that formed the basis for American sculptor Paul Granlund's busts of Ramanujan, created in 1987 for the Ramanujan Centennial Year. |
|
This pool of finance has over the years been increasingly funneled into speculative channels, fueling refashioned booms and busts around the globe. |
|
The booms will be boomier and the busts will be bustier and it's all happening closer together. |
|
With the arrival of Roman culture in the 1st century, various forms of art utilising statues, busts, glasswork and mosaics were the norm. |
|
The three people largely responsible for the founding of the National Portrait Gallery are commemorated with busts over the main entrance. |
|
Consequently, there are many excellent statues and busts of the first emperor. |
|
Millom Library and the John Rylands Library, Manchester, have bronze busts of Nicholson by Joan Palmer. |
|
These busts of the emperors and empresses are all very scarce, and some of them almost singular in their kind. |
|
Arty-crafty brewer Thornbridge has linked up with Waitrose and beer lovers can now spy three of its striking busts along the aisles. |
|
We live in a sue-happy society. If Santa slides off your roof and busts his tailbone, he could sue you, and probably will. |
|
I designed clothes for flowerlike women, with rounded shoulders, full feminine busts and hand-span waists above enormous spreading skirts. |
|
|
There was also a market for grave monuments and portrait busts. |
|
He cut letters in slate, carved in stone and produced bronze busts. |
|
There are three busts of admirals against the north wall of the square. |
|
The volume was the first in the Vespasian shelf section in the part of the library indexed by the names from a set of busts of the Roman Emperors on top of the shelves. |
|
On one side is a state portrait of Elizabeth by the miniaturist Nicholas Hilliard, on the other a sardonyx cameo of double portrait busts, a regal woman and an African male. |
|
The sixteen plinths intended for the statues now house busts of prime ministers who have sat in the House of Lords, such as the Earl Grey and the Marquess of Salisbury. |
|
As for Cunningham, it's been a whole lot of public unproductiveness and private whispering that he's another in a recent string of second-round busts by the Patriots. |
|