An evening of people-watching is complicated by a stranger asking the question no one wants to hear.
I walked Shannon to the subway, trying to hide the tension in my stomach. What if she had hidden the money and said that I had stolen it? I felt vulnerable as I hung my head to keep a low profile on the normally breezy two-block walk to my apartment. I imagined a meth lab hidden in the woods, run haplessly by the cast of “Deliverance.” She leaned in close to me and whispered, “I have a hundred-thousand dollars cash in these bags.” Her eyes widened, awaiting my impressed reaction. Then, just as Shannon and I stood up, the persistent vibration of my phone rattled the metal park table. I had a drink,” the woman confessed to Shannon. When I asked if he lived on the north side of the park, his assault continued: “I don’t know what the north side of the park is. I explained that I was just a stranger whom she had asked for directions. Now I was in my 40s and excited to host Shannon in my Brooklyn neighborhood for a pint of goat cheese and red cherry ice cream. Her brown hair had gone mostly gray, but she had every bit of the energy and snappy wit I remembered. I presumed that she was tired from shopping all day in Manhattan and anxious to relax at her brother-in-law’s apartment.
Andrea Stevens, a Times editor, died this month at 83. She was a loved and feared presence in the theater world. In an essay, Ben Brantley explores her ...
I trusted her to take the full measure of what I was doing, what I was trying to do and what I hadn’t yet done.” [Arthur Laurents](https://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/06/arts/arthur-laurents-playwright-and-director-dies-at-93.html), the acid-tongued librettist of “Gypsy” and “West Side Story,” wrote of her in his memoir “Original Story By”: “Andrea loves the theater like a woman who knows everything about her faithless lover but loves him anyway.” [Al Hirschfeld’s immortal caricatures](https://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/21/theater/al-hirschfeld-99-dies-he-drew-broadway.html) into the Sunday Times, who arranged the interviews with leading actors and playwrights that appeared in the newspaper. From an email she sent to Jason Zinoman in 2010, not long before she left The Times:“As the culture diffuses further, as distractions grow, as internet toys increase, it’s not going to be about taste,” she wrote. I figured ‘suggestions’ meant a couple of contacts, maybe a paragraph about the theme. Nonetheless, when I picked her up at her apartment building the next day, she was wearing freshly picked flowers, with leaves, in her hair. Peter Marks, now the chief theater critic of The Washington Post, recalled being assigned to write a piece when he was working in The Times’s Long Island bureau in the early 1990s: “‘I’ll send you some suggestions for the story,’ she said, managing somehow to sound at once encouraging and deeply skeptical. After discoursing briefly on the lot of serfs in feudal times, she concluded: “The majority of politicians are today’s priests in the temples. “It was exhilarating to be edited by Andrea,” said Margo Jefferson, the Pulitzer Prize-winning essayist and former Times writer. Okay, the golden calf now wears a necklace of flowers, a nod to the natural world. She could be relied upon to be unfailingly supportive and rigorously demanding of any writer she worked with, whether journeyman reporter or laurel-wreathed dramatist. “And wouldn’t you know,” she wrote.
The recently opened Bacchanalia serves a feast inspired by ancient Rome in an unabashedly luxurious setting that Nero would have loved.
Given the fate of the Roman Empire, the role comes with a tricky edge. (Job requirements: “gorgeous hands” and a “basic grasp of Greek and Latin.”) Hundreds applied for the job, and all were disappointed. At the bottom are runners — the men and women who deliver the food — who dress in workaday togas, and jobs rise in status from there, segueing to chic western attire for those at or near the top. He seemed acutely aware of the chasm between the festivities he’d orchestrated and the misery everywhere else. In the run up to its opening, the restaurant announced that it was looking for “London’s first grape feeder,” which was advertised in a full-page ad in The London Times. The original was meant by Couture as a rebuke to the Romans, who look bored and exhausted by their orgy and whose empire is doomed. Caring concurred in remarks that he made on opening night, before and after he mingled with attendees, while being trailed by a large man with an earpiece. [Emma Thynn](https://www.vanityfair.com/style/2018/04/viscountess-weymouth-emma-thynn), the Marchioness of Bath, the fashion designer Harris Reed and the model Naomi Campbell. Around 2005, he segued into the hospitality business and today owns an empire of mid- and high-priced restaurants here, many of them better known for buzz and snazzy décor than quality cuisine. The lobster paccheri pasta, with black truffle and creamy bisque sauce, costs $162 and a cocktail called Freddo, made of Don Julio Blanco and Don Julio 1942 Tequila, cocoa butter, coffee and banana, is $31. You can either recoil at the cartoonish debauchery of it all, or surrender to this immersive production and snap some selfies, along with everyone else. Guests are greeted there by women in dark red togas wearing gilded arm cuffs, looking like they just walked off the set of “Ben-Hur,” the 1959 Hollywood epic about the Roman empire and chariot races.
Each day, Inside The Times Times Insider editors scour the newspaper for the most interesting facts to appear in articles. Here are facts that surprised, ...
[‘The Crown’ and the Appeal of a Royal TV Interview](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/15/arts/television/the-crown-royals-television.html) [Jacques Pépin, in Search of Lost Cars and Cuisine](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/05/business/jacques-pepin-french-cars-cuisine.html) [Can’t Talk, I’m Busy Being Hot](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/16/style/self-care/hot-girl-megan-thee-stallion-tik-tok.html) [When Motherhood Is a Horror Show](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/12/arts/motherhood-horror-movies-tv.html) [Cooking Online, Arab Women Find Income and Community](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/05/dining/arab-women-youtube-cooking-videos.html) [two million people annually — a 500 percent increase since 1970](https://www.aclu.org/issues/smart-justice/mass-incarceration). Wright](https://kellywright5.wixsite.com/raciolinguistics). [A Two-Year, 50-Million-Person Experiment in Changing How We Work](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/10/business/remote-work-office-life.html) [one in three American adults](https://www.ncsl.org/research/labor-and-employment/barriers-to-work-individuals-with-criminal-records.aspx) have criminal records. [California Air Resources Board](https://ww2.arb.ca.gov/our-work/topics/lawn-garden-landscape-equipment). [In Glitter and Leotards, They Took a Stand: Carnival Must Go On](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/03/world/americas/brazil-carnival.html) I leave you with that.” [Oscars Rewind: When Rita Moreno Made History and Thanked No One](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/11/movies/rita-moreno-oscar-west-side-story.html)
Some of the highest-profile complaints show how America's culture wars are affecting the nation's children.
McSwain unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for governor of the state last year and came under fire during his campaign for [calling a middle-school gender and sexuality alliance group](https://www.inquirer.com/news/bill-mcswain-pa-governor-candidate-gender-sexuality-school-20220310.html) “leftist political indoctrination.” [heightened visibility of the population](https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/23/us/transgender-teenagers-how-many.html) and the backlash over laws that are designed to protect them. student, but said in a statement that the district “takes allegations of discrimination very seriously,” and is conducting its own investigation. complaint](https://www.smore.com/6xyu5-the-central-bucks-board-note?ref=email) as a “partisan, political tool” and announced the board had hired a high-powered legal team led by Bill McSwain, a former Trump-appointed U.S. Among the programming they asserted violated the laws was a [“Families of Color Playground Night”](https://www.reuters.com/article/factcheck-denver-elementary/fact-check-denver-elementary-school-says-families-of-color-event-was-open-to-all-families-idUSL1N2T1207) in Colorado and an advertised “Students of Color Field Trip Opportunity” in Illinois. Another [complaint](https://www.aclupa.org/sites/default/files/field_documents/cbsd_administrative_complaint_-_final_10-6-22_redacted3.pdf) filed by the state chapter of the A.C.L.U. “But I was concerned that I would be complicit if I became aware of this information and allowed it to sit.” “At the same time, the scope and volume of harm that we’re asking our babies to navigate is astronomical.” “We cannot underestimate the normalizing of intolerant behaviors,” said Liz King, the senior program director of educational equity at the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, a coalition of more than 200 civil rights groups. “It reflects the confidence in the Office for Civil Rights as a place to seek redress,” Ms. In both cases the reforms included educating students to recognize and report discrimination, and training school staff in how to respond to it. The surge reversed the decline in complaints filed to the office under the Trump administration, which
Short people don't just save resources; as resources become scarcer owing to overpopulation and global warming, they may also be best suited for long-term ...
“It’s not the height in and of itself that determines the outcome.” The future I envision is different: I want my children’s children to know the value of short. “Everything is big,” he said, “the buildings, the businesses,” and went on to explain that parents reflect the mind-set that bigger is better when envisioning their offspring. “Don’t be overly confident when you are tall because you are probably going to die younger, have more health problems and you are polluting more.” On average, [short people live longer](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12586217/) and have [fewer incidences of cancer](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25991828/). Thomas Samaras, who has been studying height for 40 years and is known in small circles as the Godfather of Shrink Think, a widely unknown philosophy that considers small superior, calculated that if we kept our proportions the same but were just 10 percent shorter in America alone, we would save 87 million tons of food per year (not to mention trillions of gallons of water, quadrillions of B.T.U.s of energy and millions of tons of trash). “There are some short people who thrive and do phenomenally well and lead fantastic lives, and there are some tall people who are miserable,” Dr. I understand why they felt that way, given how short people are treated in our society — a song with the lyric “Short people got no reason to live” was No. Now I have twins who are among the smallest in their kindergarten class, but instead of preparing to medicate them because of an antiquated societal bias, I’m going to let them be as they are: tiny. There is an ongoing debate about the stature of a population and what it means for the prosperity and fairness of a nation, but I’m interested in shortness on an individual level. [tall candidates](https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/2020/02/19/in-politics-height-matters) assuming that they are better leaders and often choose tall people as partners with no definitive data that they make better spouses. Even if it did, in an era of guns and drones, being tall now just makes you a bigger target.
For over 80 years, researchers at Harvard have studied what makes for a good life. They found one surefire, scientifically proven predictor of happiness: ...
[Julia Moskin writes](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/30/dining/resetting-your-routine.html). [preside over his predecessor’s funeral](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/31/world/europe/pope-benedict-funeral.html)for the first time in modern Catholic Church history. [[email protected]](mailto:[email protected]). Or it [may not be remembered at all](https://klementoninvesting.substack.com/p/we-do-not-know-which-events-will), Joachim Klement argues on Substack. You can do something small and actionable today. And I told her how grateful I was. I did this once with my fourth-grade teacher, Roseann Manley. It’s in every realm of your life. It’s about the Harvard Study of Adult Development, which started during the Depression. Many of us on the Well desk had read “The Good Life” by Dr. It’s a relationship challenge that will help you address and improve different parts of your social universe with seven science-backed exercises. A team of reporters on The Times’s health and wellness desk, Well, developed a seven-day challenge to help you do just that.
Jump to: Tricky Clues | Today's Theme. MONDAY PUZZLE — Congratulations to Seth Bisen-Hersh, who is the first debut constructor of 2023! Mr. Bisen-Hersh has ...
in L.A.” is the clue for PST — Pacific Standard Time — as opposed to P.D.T., which would be the summer hours in L.A. For some reason the song was in my head, and I said to someone in my dream: “This could be a crossword theme!” Indeed, I’m such a workaholic that I often write songs in my dreams, but this is the first time I came up with a puzzle theme subconsciously. or a phonetic hint for repeated pairs of letters in 19-, 27- and 42-Across.” I blinked at the clue. And then, with the help of some crosses, I filled in IT HAD TO BE YOU. The “it” in the clue “It’s very unlikely to happen” refers to the entry itself. Here’s a bit of crossword fill that veteran solvers will have memorized and new solvers may be perplexed by: Clues that take the form “[season] hours in [place]” are generally asking you to identify a time zone in relation to daylight saving time. The clue “8-Across (AWARD) for some New York plays” is evidently a personal one for Mr. Feeling completely at sea, I read the clue for the revealer at 50A with no small amount of trepidation: “Classic song about a soulmate … It’s nice to see ASS clued in reference to something other than the beast of burden! [Today’s Theme](#link-177cfbd) [MONDAY PUZZLE](https://www.nytimes.com/crosswords/game/daily/2023/01/02) — Congratulations to Seth Bisen-Hersh, who is the first debut constructor of 2023! “___-backwards (utterly wrong, in slang)” is a fun clue for ASS. The thing that is very unlikely to happen is a BIG IF — which some solvers may recall was the theme of a different