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"caldron" Definitions
  1. a large deep pot for boiling liquids or cooking food over a fire

185 Sentences With "caldron"

How to use caldron in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "caldron" and check conjugation/comparative form for "caldron". Mastering all the usages of "caldron" from sentence examples published by news publications.

After that, it was in the caldron of Dodgers vs.
But Guangdong is a caldron of manufacturing and urban growth.
Her relationship with Mr. Ortega began in the caldron of war.
To be thrown into that caldron was almost an impossible task.
Disheartened voters can quickly become a caldron of resentment and discontent.
That's the caldron that will define 2019 and 2020, in my opinion.
To ready themselves for this caldron, the Jets blasted noise at practice.
Out in the field, Vietnam was a caldron of heat and humidity.
Then it was Mr. Nicolau's turn to enter that caldron of tension.
Let's see how Rose copes in the Knicks' one-of-a-kind caldron.
Cruz lit the caldron at the 2007 Pan Am games in Rio. 1.
The gun tincture often spends an hour and 20 minutes inside the caldron.
Springsteen's part Scots-Irish, part Italian family was a caldron of these bubbling forces.
The caldron will be lit at Maracanã Stadium during the opening ceremony on Aug.
Then as now, the internal politics of Congress were roiling the caldron of reform.
And they had built within themselves a caldron of anger, resentment and oh, yeah?
Instead we ripped Mr. Hussein's iron hand off the bubbling religious caldron that is Iraq.
The fleet remains strong enough, analysts say, to turn the Baltic into a deadly caldron.
It came bubbling in a black caldron, and satiated my lust for piquant, porky comfort.
Mr. Trump's legal team has been a caldron of rivalry and intrigue since the beginning.
The B.J.P. seeks to permanently consolidate Hindus against Muslims and keep the social caldron simmering.
It would be a burnout caldron under even the most predictable and disciplined of presidents.
The witch may collect natural elements to feed her caldron, but what emerges is supernatural.
In 1996, he was trembling and nearly mute as he lit the Olympic caldron in Atlanta.
Let's see if we can forecast which Brazilian athlete will light the caldron in Rio. 2800.
Like other viewers, he wondered which Brazilian would get the honor of lighting the Olympic caldron.
She has expressed no new ideas to deal with the boiling caldron that is today's Middle East.
"We're not in the caldron we were in before," he said, now that both men have families.
No trace of a social media caldron was bubbling when Kevin Martin reached the N.B.A. in 216.
"I plunge myself into this endlessly swirling caldron, and I see what's new," Futrelle told me recently.
He gained fame for ingenious designs like his torch for the 2012 London Olympics, known as the Caldron.
In the center of the caldera was the pit crater, a smaller, glowing, caldron of sulfur and smoke.
The classic peristyle archways that give the Coliseum its distinctive look are still topped by an Olympic caldron.
It was just the latest deadly episode in the caldron of tensions that the border area has become.
Sitting within the Bay of Naples in southern Italy is Campi Flegrei, a vast and restless volcanic caldron.
At The New York Times, I wrote a magazine piece about coming-of-age in Birmingham's racial caldron.
Such epithets denote a permanent trait, the editor explained, and people in the caldron of politics were mutable.
Some, like Jackie Gleason's Brooklyn bus driver, Ralph Kramden, the human caldron of "The Honeymooners" (1955-56), had jobs.
Spice things up by adding some eye of newt, leg of frog and Devil's broth into a large caldron.
"Sound & Fury" is an album full of songs fired in the caldron of that new success: resentful, agonized, seething.
Give Bayern credit for being able to dominate for an hour in the Italian caldron without its core central defenders.
Landlocked between Albania and Serbia, Kosovo was the last of the nations to congeal in the caldron of old Yugoslavia.
Four years ago, we predicted that the five-time gold medalist rower Steven Redgrave would light the caldron in London.
Ninety-nine pitches in the caldron of October can feel different from the same amount in a blowout in June.
But the Astros have countered their strengths and could be poised for a knockout in the caldron of the Bronx.
You see — New Orleans is truly a city of many nations, a melting pot, a bubbling caldron of many cultures.
When she sang about unrequited love, adversity or pride in the Romany culture, her voice was a caldron of emotions.
The one to the right has an orange ember smoldering at its center, representing fire heating a caldron of whale fat.
The bubbling caldron was the final step in a three-month baking saga that was as maddening as it was gratifying.
His family is also a frightful caldron of mental illness, which further colored his self-image until he received his diagnosis.
The crowning moment of any opening ceremony: the final leg of the torch relay and the lighting of the Olympic caldron.
For Kershaw in October, the ballpark might as well be a haunted mansion, the mound a bubbling caldron of witch's brew.
But the city — birthplace of the Black Panther movement — is a bubbling caldron of creative energy worth exploring on its own.
Mr. Maher is taking the past-as-prologue approach based on his own experience in the Trumpian combat caldron in 2013.
"I call it the 'fashion week caldron,'" said Imran Amed, founder and editor of Business of Fashion, an industry news website.
This is Chicago, after all, or at least an idea of that city as a caldron of corruption and ethnic rivalry.
Though he did not get a gold medal, he could get an even rarer honor: lighting the Rio caldron on Friday night.
This could mean serving dishes traditionally grilled in a Middle Eastern mangal, an Italian spiedo or even a basic cast-iron caldron.
For a president who repeated his determination to withdraw from the caldron of the Middle East, the strike that killed Maj. Gen.
"I Got My Eyes on You" emerges from a roiling caldron of organ and guitar, like early Santana, to pledge unswerving love.
Richard H. Evans, the chief executive of Madison Square Garden, proclaimed his intention to turn the Garden back into a caldron of winning.
He showed up — body stiff, face frozen and left hand shaking out of control — to light the caldron at the 1996 Atlanta Games.
A city at hip-hop's center that has no center of its own, it's a bubbling caldron of new sounds, ideas and approaches.
He preferred Greenwich Village, where he eventually bought an apartment, but Harlem was a symbol: a caldron of black diversity and cultural production.
To convey this caldron graphically and vividly, The New York Times turned to the most innovative technology of the era: the rotogravure press.
The war, he said, "sucked the whole country into a violent nightmare" as soldiers, mostly ill-trained conscripts, were thrown into the caldron.
Our character was formed a million summers ago, in the caldron of the game's first afternoons and on the innumerable afternoons that followed.
Next, I descended rock steps to the misty bottom of a tremendous waterfall, the 262-foot-tall Pailón del Diablo, which means devil's caldron.
She was a 21948-year-old sprinter when she made history by lighting the caldron at the Summer Games in Mexico City in 280.
But whoever it is, the person who lights the caldron at the opening ceremony is given one of the highest honors at an Olympics.
The California Democratic Party has always been a bit of a caldron, filled with some of the most activist, liberal Democrats in the state.
She knows what it takes to perform in the caldron of competition, and her resting state is cheerful, both ideal qualities for a caddie.
Still others concentrate discomfort into a violent but circumscribed period of time, like being boiled in a caldron, as a kind of psychological purgative.
Once filled, it's a caldron, aswamp in melted cheese and either mayo-ketchup or garlicky béchamel, with your choice of meat in the depths.
" He put the onus for that on "a media culture and a political culture — and a larger culture — that is a caldron of outrage.
Since 1945 Southeast Asia had been a caldron of conflicts created by the complex combination of decolonization, the Cold War and longstanding local rivalries.
It featured a black man, often dressed as an "African savage" with a jungle backdrop, perched above a tank that sometimes resembled a caldron.
Misha made hot dogs over an open fire in a steel caldron on the ice while we waited for the sauna to heat up.
And she wrote not in the caldron of New York or glitzy Hollywood, but in her suburban home in Rosemont, on the Philadelphia Main Line.
She fell nearly 21910 feet, hurtling toward the caldron of rocks and raging water below, all in hope of landing in a far richer future.
The Dawg Pound was a kind of cultural caldron, and the people who occupied its bleacher seats were pioneers of a new form of fandom.
And so the mostly white law enforcement regime rolling through the caldron of smoke and rubble was determined to restore order by any means necessary.
The heaving caldron that is T-Mobile Arena thumps during warm-ups, with showgirls distracting the opponent and the music cranked high, and never relents.
On Thursday, Queensbridge — the largest housing project in the United States, and a social caldron a generation ago — marked its 365th day without a shooting.
And in the video, she's manhandled like dough by a gaggle of chefs, then covered in vegetables before getting dumped in a caldron and basted.
With Donald J. Trump stirring the caldron, fear of terrorism is combining with nativism to produce a strain of xenophobia as virulent as any in decades.
That inner world, a ceaselessly seething caldron of past and future, actual and counterfactual, is the theater for our most intense pleasures and our keenest pains.
DiGiacomo owns with her husband, Brian DiGiacomo, 18943, a lawyer, has three fireplaces, one with a built-in bread oven and a caldron to boil water.
Mild-mannered off the ice — equally happy discussing musical interests, favorite cars or latest fashion trends — Lundqvist morphs into a caldron of intensity on the ice.
He emphasized that flexibility also had to be part of his tool kit heading into the caldron of playoff games where nuances can make the difference.
Here, for $7, is a caldron of dusk: thenthuk, a Tibetan soup tinged by crushed tomatoes, a scrum of chiles and ginger releasing its muted sweetness.
The complaint described the working environment at Bridgewater as a "caldron of fear and intimidation," noting that all meetings are recorded and security guards patrol the facilities.
Each part is added separately, according to its own cooking time, and, at some point, a stewing hen or capon is usually added to the caldron, too.
Add to this caldron of gloom a peppering of oddball locals obsessed with all things Wright, and you've got a recipe for over-the-top paranormal activity.
He named it after a mythical bottomless caldron at the base of Shawinigan waterfall that leads straight to hell (he wrote his business plan on set during breaks).
The last time the Braves and the Cardinals faced off in the postseason, a seemingly routine pop-up transformed Turner Field into a caldron of rage and confusion.
On July 12, 1957, the 17-year-old Caliph Washington drove home from a double date in Bessemer, a poverty-forged caldron of corruption, vice, violence and racism.
The whole world gasped in shock early yesterday when Ali suddenly materialized on that platform at the far end of Olympic Stadium, the perfect choice to light the caldron.
In this podcast, he provides pregame insight into not-to-be missed events, the biggest pregame scandal, the big question of who will light the Olympic caldron, and more.
Yet to anyone following the process from outside the caldron of British politics, the question is whether there ever was a formula that the British could have agreed on.
Even under the most intense pressure France could generate, even in the caldron the stadium had become, Rapinoe was perfectly unfazed, her calm, and that of her teammates, absolute.
On the flip side, slowing outflows can be a welcome sign, and in 212 the biggest shift for the better came in that caldron of anti-rich hostility, France.
That was how the Stanley Cup finals started, with a Las Vegas-worthy display designed to turn T-Mobile Arena into a caldron of support for the Golden Knights.
American cinephiles accustomed to the movies of Andrey Zvyagintsev and Yuri Bykov, among others, are used to seeing Russia portrayed as a dour caldron of corruption, desperation and suppression.
Into this literary caldron steps Peter Kimani, a Kenyan poet and novelist, who was born in 1971 and is a graduate of the University of Houston's creative writing program.
Mr. Heatherwick, though not a licensed architect, was well known internationally for the British pavilion at the 2010 World Expo in Shanghai, and his flaming caldron for London's 2012 Olympics.
LOS ANGELES — After a temperate early summer and a balmy Fourth of July, Southern California residents abruptly found themselves in a caldron of triple-digit temperatures and wildfires this weekend.
At steel mills around the country, the answer is simple: Throw them into a giant caldron, heat them up to 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit and liquefy them into an orange ooze.
Deep beneath the dining room of Del Posto, the palatial Italian restaurant on 10th Avenue, stands a 50-gallon steel caldron that is employed for a single purpose: making chicken soup.
She jogged around the track, climbed 90 carpeted steps and dipped the torch into a massive metal caldron, igniting gas burners and officially starting the Games as some 100,000 spectators roared.
We've got 29 percent of our sports desk at the Games — they're carrying 210 bottles of bug repellent — and all eyes will be on the athlete selected to light the caldron.
And on sale day, it seemed no sound — no midway ride, no crackling caldron of frying oil, no turkey's gobble — rose above the cries and pleas of a short-sleeved auctioneer.
Family Meal is the stone soup children's tale of restaurant life — you just stand there stirring that caldron of water, and by the end you have a rich and fragrant meal.
Under Mr. Diller, the plan grew to encompass an elaborate recreation and cultural site designed by Thomas Heatherwick, the British architect known for his innovative design for the Olympic caldron in London.
He served as a gatekeeper for Ali at times, fielding requests for his services, most notably when Olympics officials wanted him to light the caldron at the 1996 Summer Games in Atlanta.
In 21968, anti-Communist South Vietnam was a caldron of overlapping rivalries, precipitating and reinforcing the political chaos consuming the country after President Ngo Dinh Diem's 21971 assassination during a military coup.
On the wall is a mural of three goats surrounding a woman who seems to be having a bad day; she is in a caldron over a fire, and the goats look hungry.
Hal Robson-Kanu, a Wales attacker, took a pass with his back to the net and, even in the caldron of a European Championships quarterfinal match, delivered himself, and his team, into history.
Rice is browned with meat — usually lamb or mutton — then stewed in a caldron called a kazan with onions, garlic and carrots, and spiced with cumin, coriander, barberries or raisins, marigold and pepper.
Ms. Pirro, the prosecutor-turned-politician-turned-television personality who hosts a weekend show on Fox News, has been friends with Mr. Trump for decades, their careers forged in New York's tabloid caldron.
They told East Germans that they were the anti-fascist victors — guilty of nothing — and that West Germany, a caldron of old Nazis, was just a scaled-back version of the Third Reich.
The Olympic caldron will be extinguished, and the flag will be passed to the mayor of Tokyo (where the 2020 Summer Games will take place) in the closing ceremony, broadcast from the Maracanã stadium.
And in recent weeks, leaks of allegations and investigations large and small have gradually dripped out in Israel's competitive media caldron, with the attorney general announcing a new and potentially damaging inquiry last month.
And if you think Yankee Stadium is hyperkinetic in October, try stepping into the caldron of youth sports, with its overbearing parents, grating coaches and emotionally burdened children under the lights on Saturday nights.
You go to any corner, whether it's in Qatar, whether it's in Saudi, whether it's in Morocco, and start speaking football, and you will find a very, very deep caldron of passion and knowledge.
Those attracted little public attention for Mr. Bush's failed White House bid, but the experience gave Mr. Muzinich a taste of doing thankless work in a political caldron and managing big personalities under pressure.
While the Coliseum had the loud caldron-like charm it had when the Islanders won the Stanley Cup four times in the 1980s, it lacked the amenities of Barclays Center, which opened in 2012.
Europe remains Russia's most important interlocutor, despite the Kremlin's multifaceted attempts to undermine European Union solidarity and to depict the region as a caldron of anarchy and economic problems and as lacking traditional values.
In the novel's most gripping scene, the doctor imagines he's chained inside a large caldron of sunflower oil resting above a fire — he is going to be boiled alive, while a jeering crowd looks on.
A 20-year-old member of the Mexican track and field team, she created a stir in the international press after she was selected to light the Olympic caldron and greeted the honor with aplomb.
But Basilio and the Australian sprinter Cathy Freeman, who lit the caldron at the Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia, in 2000, are the only two to ignite the flame at the Summer Games by themselves.
From the governor, Andrew M. Cuomo, to the mayor, Bill de Blasio, to an intersectional grass-roots movement that includes Muslims, gays, Latinos and immigrants, among others, New York has been a caldron of unrest.
On another visit, my companion, who grew up in Nigeria, said that the jollof rice tasted as if it had been made in a giant caldron in someone's backyard, the way it was meant to be.
Here's what I wrote back in 2008: GONAÏVES, Haiti — Their cupboards were virtually bare before the winds started whipping, the skies opened up and this seaside city filled like a caldron with thick, brown, smelly muck.
" A friend in Paris, Sarah Cleveland, wrote to me: "It was strangely quiet and still, as if people were in a trance, watching the fire boil inside the shell of the cathedral walls, like a caldron.
While figure skating has a special place in South Korea's Olympic legacy — Kim Yuna, an Olympic gold and silver medalist, lit the caldron at the opening ceremony — it is short-track speedskating that gets South Korea excited.
But at Noods n' Chill, a Thai restaurant that opened in December in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, the bottomless vessel in question is not a pitcher of booze but rather a generous caldron of khao tom, a rice porridge.
At the center of the circle was a garbage can, fire-blackened inside, and I suddenly thought how cozy it might have been for Shakespeare's Weird Sisters, gathered around their caldron on a sunny late-summer day.
After a while it began to make sense: Of course, Mr. Trump craves a break from the White House caldron for the familiar escape to another hyperbolic campaign stop at an airport hangar full of zealous supporters.
"Brew" — the term used for the drug to which so many are addicted — is at the heart of Nesbo's novel and neatly straddles the murky world of Shakespeare's witches, with their caldron, and that of modern drug labs.
Who would have predicted he could stand in front of the world, his body slowed by Parkinson's syndrome, and hold a flaming torch and transfer searing fire to a contraption that would raise the fire to the caldron?
If it were a midweek night in mid-July, Gregorius might have delivered a strike and Altuve would have been out from here to Galveston, but on Saturday night — in the caldron of playoff baseball – Gregorius did not.
There is shooting and stabbing galore, a clever kidnapping-by-truck routine and breathtaking car chases, as well as a harrowing scene of our heroine sliding down a long conveyor belt that feeds a bubbling caldron of waste.
But it was in the caldron of racial hostilities and brutality and the drive for civil rights in the segregated South that Mr. Herbers — early in his career, in the 1950s and ′60s — made his most indelible mark.
As the primary process kicks into full swing, some Democrats are bypassing the kind of experienced Washington "wiseguys" who operated in the caldron of beltway politics — famous strategists like David Axelrod, James Carville and, more recently, Robby Mook.
"For those of us who grew up in Alabama in a time when our state was viewed as a caldron of hatred, Bryant told the rest of the nation that we could produce success and character," Maisel explained then.
In a fitting and moving gesture, Rio's organizing committee did a great deal to rectify this by selecting Mr. de Lima to light the Olympic caldron, providing him with his long overdue and well-deserved moment in the limelight.
The crowd was primarily made up of Brooklyn residents, excited as much by the prospect of selecting Halloween candy from a black plastic caldron as they were of winning a syringe-shaped pen for correct answers to trivia questions.
And she persists with Retrovirus, delivering a caldron frothing with tales of brutal heartbreak and deliciously hard living wrapped in a discordant blues wrapper provided by Weasel Walter on guitar, Tim Dahl on bass and Bob Bert on drums.
The convex shape of the sottukung, or grill plate, on each table is meant to mimic the lid of a gammasot, or caldron, which in traditional Korean kitchens was installed above a wood-burning stove that doubled as a fireplace.
As she develops these pieces, Ms. Kidambi may work to ensure that her solo music feels more like a caldron of activity and possibility — frightening listeners and beckoning them at the same time — like her music with Elder Ones often does.
Now, with 217 days to go before the next Olympics — the Pyeongchang Games, in South Korea — bleak ticket sales and the prospect of empty arenas have revived the excuse that has become almost as familiar as the lighting of the caldron.
In the center of this caldron is Mr. Moore, an unlikely and highly flawed hero for many conservatives, who have come to see him as a convenient scapegoat for Republicans in Washington who want to quash their grass-roots uprising.
Money is great, but if it's locked up in some inaccessible caldron of laws and legalese (ie: your 2000k or IRA), then accessing that money before you're ripe enough to retire traditionally might not be possible – at least not without penalties.
As in any caldron of attention seekers who live and work together in the same building, it's an atmosphere rife with cliquishness, jealousy, insecurity and the social hierarchy of high school, except everyone knows precisely how popular (or unpopular) you are.
And given Rodriguez's longstanding flair for the dramatic — he tied Willie Mays's mark of 288 in the caldron of Fenway Park and celebrated his 21973,242th career hit with a home run at Yankee Stadium — who wouldn't have expected something theatrical this season?
Still, despite all the times he played in Mexico as a member of the United States national team, he said, he never really saw or experienced much of the country beyond its airports and hotels and the infernal caldron of its stadiums.
He earned a doctorate at Princeton, where he immersed himself in an intellectual caldron of professors and fellow fledgling mathematicians including Oskar Morgenstern, Albert William Tucker, Thomas Whitin and John Nash, the future Nobel laureate, with whom he shared a dormitory suite.
After eight years of being kept afloat by loans from its European Union partners and the International Monetary Fund, Greece suddenly risks being swamped by waves caused by President Trump's unilateral stirring of the Middle East's caldron of tensions and conflicting interests.
But unlike those clashes, which played out before many voters had tuned into the race, their recent fights have taken place in the caldron of primary season, with media attention at a high point and their fate in the Iowa caucuses at stake.
But unlike those clashes, which played out before many voters had tuned into the race, their recent fights have taken place in the caldron of primary season, with media attention at a high point and their fate in the Iowa caucuses at stake.
In much the way that other male American writers, such as Hemingway, Baldwin and Edmund White, have chosen Paris as the place in which their lone protagonist can be tested and changed, Greenwell uses Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria, as his caldron.
But as his creation bubbles up from a caldron (with effects that are impressive even by today's standards), the result is a wild-haired, claw-fingered monstrosity with a style that is somewhere between a cave man and a member of the band Twisted Sister.
Collected, conserved and described on a wall label, the fatberg is made equal in value to the museum's other treasures — as worthy of our attentive gaze, as much a part of our urban lore as the ancient "London Stone" or the 2012 Olympic caldron.
The Cavaliers said that, as far as security precautions, pregame measures were "one step beyond" a typical regular-season game but well shy of the weekslong plan hatched in conjunction with the league and even federal authorities before the caldron James's return produced in 2010.
While the anger from Trump supporters who were fearful he would be denied the nomination appears to have diminished, masses of anti-Trump demonstrators are still expected to descend on Cleveland, a city that has been a caldron of racial tensions between the police and residents.
Held in the city's Maracanã Stadium and overseen by the director Fernando Meirelles ("City of God") and choreographed by Deborah Colker, the show is expected to feature samba and elements from traditional Carnival festivities, and perhaps Pelé lighting the caldron, though no one knows for certain.
By then, he'd become one of the most revered men in the world — "a universal soldier for our common humanity," in the words of Bill Clinton, who like many in the audience that day, wept watching Ali light the caldron, his hand trembling violently from Parkinson's disease.
This era is part of the caldron that gave birth to Run the Jewels, the duo of Killer Mike and El-P, which has become a leading light in a new hip-hop counterinsurgency, albeit one reacting to a very different time, with very different results.
And rightfully so: The South was the hotbed of race-based labor and sexual exploitation before and after the Civil War, and the caldron of a white supremacist ideology that sought to draw an inviolable line between whiteness and blackness, purity and contagion, precious lives and throwaway lives.
And when, in the middle of the shootout, Dzagoev urged the crowd to make yet more noise, to make itself heard out across the Black Sea and into Turkey, and in the caldron, Mateo Kovacic duly missed his spot kick for Croatia, it seemed that, once more, they were.
Books like "Dallas 1963," by Bill Minutaglio and Steven L. Davis, and "Nut Country: Right-Wing Dallas and the Birth of the Southern Strategy," by Edward H. Miller, have portrayed — not inaccurately — the witch's caldron of intolerance and hate speech that bubbled over in Texas during those years.
The project, a decidedly disruptive and not entirely admired design by the architect Peter Zumthor, is testing all the social, political and fund-raising skills that Mr. Govan has acquired after 303 years of maneuvering in a West Coast caldron of art collectors, wealthy patrons, celebrities and government officials.
Then there's this striking example of how a river that once was so toxic that it bubbled and oozed like a caldron is producing edible marine life: the Ohio E. P. A. announced in March that fish from the Cuyahoga River, including catfish and common carp, are safe to eat.
Mr. Trump, apparently eager to get out of the Washington caldron and as far away from the impeachment debate as possible, plans to spend about two days in India, a country where the United States is eager for more business and looking to find a counterweight to the rise of China.
The worry, of course, is that the Lakers are relying too heavily on two players, but LeBron James and Anthony Davis look every ounce the dream pairing they appeared to be on paper — while Frank Vogel has stepped into a coaching caldron as gracefully as he could have hoped. 3.
Judge made his first trip into the Fenway Park caldron a memorable one on Wednesday night, hitting the first pitch he saw — from the reigning Cy Young Award winner Rick Porcello — for a two-run homer, then following that up by tumbling over a wall to make a highlight-reel catch.
"The Get Down," Mr. Luhrmann's 12-episode series for Netflix (six episodes will be available on Friday), is being promoted as "a comprehensive look at the art form's true origins" and an authentic evocation of late-'70s New York, that caldron of burning buildings, bankruptcy, cocaine and revolutionary forms of popular music.
At the end of the show we find a bronze caldron, made somewhere in the Greek world during the Augustan years: its basic form is old-style but from its surface a little satyr pops out like a jack-in-the-box, snaps his fingers and smiles a gleaming silver inlaid smile.
Big City A few months after Brett Kavanaugh graduated from Georgetown Prep, a school that some now view as a late 20th century caldron of moneyed degeneracy, in 12, "Risky Business" opened to become one of the 10 highest grossing movies of the year and an iconic entry in the library of American adolescent comedy.
He cheerfully tests some of the more exotic remedies, like floating in a curative Austrian lake while listening to pan pipes from underwater speakers, being palpated by a strong-handed masseuse, boiling in a caldron of herbs and hooking himself up to an IV drip of electrolytes, magnesium, calcium, phosphate, vitamins and anti-nausea drugs.
Gaskins scheduled this tattoo about three weeks ago, just after Mahomes threw for six touchdowns at Pittsburgh, which preceded a scrambling scoring toss against San Francisco, which preceded a fourth-quarter comeback in Denver's caldron of cacophony, where the Chiefs' go-ahead drive was extended on third-and-5 by a torrent of intuition: a left-handed flick by a right-handed passer.
Long-suffering Reince PriebusReinhold (Reince) Richard PriebusTrump blasts Scaramucci as 'incapable' Trump taps Sean Spicer to join Naval Academy board of visitors Trump's no racist — he's an equal opportunity offender MORE tried to keep the lid on a boiling-over caldron of scandals and embarrassments but finally got the boot in a Trump tweet from Air Force One announcing his successor as Priebus sat on the tarmac at Andrews Air Force Base in the rain.
These are reflected in Armajani's most prominent artworks from his promenade at Battery City Park with a railing etched with Frank O'Hara and Walt Whitman's poetry that frames a view of Ellis Island, to his sculptural bridge inscribed with a John Ashbery poem that connects the Walker Art Center to Loring Park in Minneapolis, from his "Gazebo for Two Anarchists" at Storm King Art Center to the caldron and bridge he designed for the 1003 Olympics.
Mr. Richards shared his memories of watching his mother fry small batches of perch in their home, which instantly transported me to the late-summer fish fries my grandmother hosted in the backyard of her small house in Norfolk, Va. I remembered the smell that would drift over the yard as whiting fillets coated in flour hit the hot oil, and I could see my dad's or uncles' hands (they cooked in shifts) using a spatula to retrieve the cooked fillets out of the cast-iron caldron over a fire in the hazy heat of late August.

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