6 // COASTWEEKEND.COM THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE CROSSWORD 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 19 PORTMANFAUX Answers on Page 14 1 9 14 19 20 21 22 24 25 26 27 29 30 31 34 36 37 38 39 42 46 48 49 50 51 52 58 59 60 61 64 67 68 69 70 ACROSS Era of ignorance Elevators in an office building? Houston squad, casually Eaglelike Mississippi River bottom feeder “Wouldn’t that be nice!” Satchel for a homicide detective? Joe of “GoodFellas” Something found at the top of many a Google search page Manufactured Baking soda has many of these Tush Danny Ocean’s ex-wife in “Ocean’s Eleven” Unseasonal wear on a winter vacation? Map Parisian waters Jewish mourning period Zoom, e.g. Baseball stats sometimes called 39- Down Jerk Static Swiss canton that was home to William Tell Variety of stud poker, familiarly Berry with two diacritics in its name “Get ____!” Late-morning meal for a TV family? Dorm overseers, for short Sports event with two diacritics in its name Cry after “Company” Who wrote, “In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king” One way to buy mustard cheaply? Like the number i, mathematically Burns writing Strong bond A pillar of Islam 71 Emails such as “Click this link to become an Apollo astronaut”? 77 Erie Canal city 80 ____ Spiegel, co-founder of Snapchat 81 “Darling, won’t you ____ my worried mind” (“Layla” lyric) 82 Peter’s chief of staff on “The Good Wife” 83 Down-on-their-luck sorts 84 Hit the hide off the baseball 86 Beauts 87 Backgrounds in theater 88 Tempur-Pedic rival 90 Seawater compound 92 Neophytes 93 Collection of Yule-centric posts? 98 Boxing venue 99 Nagy of Hungarian history 100 Wooded valley 101 Bird on Walden Pond in “Walden” 102 Like services covered by a health insurer 105 Drops 107 Utensil for eating some cured meat? 110 Link with 111 Brainpower 112 See to it 113 When a happy hour might start 114 Haven 115 Seizure cause 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Continued from Page 3 even without the family’s lat- er troubles — particularly the trouble with Harry, a man known for strange behavior and violent flare-ups. But Harry’s issues made her job so much harder. One senses a high-born, image-conscious fami- ly refusing to confront a disturbed relative and choosing instead to pretend the problem away, reframe embarrassing events to save face, or cast themselves as victims — even after Harry nearly killed Alec Josephson in 1983 by stabbing him in the belly, for DOWN Deaden acoustically Blue shade Kingdom in “The Prisoner of Zenda” Leg-pullers Div. for the Red 106-Down Secures with a band S.A.S.E., e.g.: Abbr. They require stitches What the rotator cuff rotates School extension? 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 20 23 28 32 33 34 35 39 40 41 43 44 45 47 49 53 54 55 56 57 62 63 64 65 66 67 70 72 73 74 Neutral shades Word from the Latin for “noose” One caught by a 12-Down Nurse Can-can dancing? Formula for slope in math Costa Rican president who won the 1987 Nobel Peace Prize Stuffed ____ Clay and oil, for artists “For heaven ____” Some ways on Waze: Abbr. Split personality? Branch of Islam Appurtenance for a cartoon Neanderthal Mannheim mister Delmonico steak cuts Document listing technical specifications TV network with a science-y name Prefix with puncture More sensible One is roughly the mass of a speck of dust Festoons with Charmin, for short Charged up Laura of “Big Little Lies” Confucian philosopher ____ Hsi Really trendy Hit just beyond the infield Hightail it, saltily Ocean froth “The Simpsons” bar Asian fruits used in Western alternative medicine Norwegian king near the end of the first millennium Non-____ (food label) Western powwow held every year or so “Come again?” Limit “Fancy that!” People like you which Harry was later convicted of first-degree assault. For Mary Louise, protecting the Flavel legacy didn’t just mean defending Harry but also keeping possession of her buildings — the mansion, and two downtown properties at Ninth and Commer- cial streets. She may have felt that to lose control of them would amount to losing her family’s roots in Astoria, Goodenberger said. But she let the buildings de- teriorate, and gradually sold them. For all the privilege and stature the Flavel name conferred upon Mary Louise and Harry, it was a mantle they could never get out 11 12 13 34 27 31 35 39 48 32 40 52 41 42 54 59 60 64 43 55 44 45 79 61 72 84 88 85 89 93 90 94 99 95 62 106 74 81 82 91 97 102 108 104 109 112 113 114 115 92 Holiday glitter 93 Flora and fauna 94 Plaster for painting 95 Animal used to guard sheep and goats 96 Spanish crockery 97 Munchkin 98 “____-Tikki-Tavi” 103 Misreckons 104 “It is a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, Mary Louise returned to Astoria for one of her brother’s trials almost 20 years ago. “I’m walking down the street with her, and people are coming out and shaking her hand and hugging her and welcoming her back,” Goodenberger said. He told her: “‘You see, Mary Louise — you could come back to this town and do something. There are people who are willing to move on.’” The town had changed since she’d left. Much of the old guard who’d experienced her family’s slights and scandals had relo- cated or passed on. Enough new 103 98 111 from under, one that changed during their lifetime from a bless- ing to a burden. The tragedy of Mary Louise’s life is not merely what happened, but what didn’t happen. Imagine the missed opportunities — the sharp intellect, profligate resourc- es and entire decades misspent as she worked to salvage her brother’s reputation and, finally, withdrew from her community. Even after a dark, reclusive pe- riod, her life could have ended on a high note. She could even have reclaimed some of the Flavels’ lost glory. Goodenberger recalled when 76 92 110 Orfeo in Gluck’s “Orfeo ed Euridice,” e.g. Not catch Crescent-shaped Italian pastries Piedmont wine town Alternatives to gelcaps Semiliquid stuff Neural junction So-so filler? Lunkheads 75 87 101 107 63 73 86 96 100 105 58 69 80 83 47 57 68 78 46 66 67 71 29 51 56 65 70 18 33 50 53 17 37 49 77 28 36 38 16 24 26 30 15 21 23 25 75 76 78 79 85 86 87 89 91 14 20 22 By Byron Walden and Joel Fagliano / Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz 10 inside an enigma; but perhaps there is ____”: Churchill 106 See 5-Down 108 Numerical prefix 109 Much Top 40 music now residents who didn’t know the Flavels’ history had moved to Astoria that she could feel safe returning. She could, Goodenberger suggested, come home, fix up her buildings, maybe rent an apartment. She still had time to re-enter Astoria’s arts community. The door was open for her if she wanted to walk through it. But for Mary Louise, “moving on” meant staying away from the town in which her last name car- ried a stigma. Given all she had to live up to, it’s a small wonder she failed to keep such a heavy name afloat forever. CW