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Sunday Puzzle: Hidden human body sentences

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Sunday Puzzle: Hidden human body sentences

Sunday Puzzle

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NPR

Sunday Puzzle

On-air challenge: I’m going to read you some sentences. Each one conceals the name of part of the human body in consecutive letters. Every answer has five or more letters.
 

Ex. Jethro ate a pear.   —>   THROAT

  1. Take the fastest highway home.
  2. You might see a wolf in Germany.
  3. My office will compel visitors to show ID.
  4. Iowa is the first state to vote.
  5. Can a model with a mustache eke out a living?
  6. Fix your shirt before heading out.
  7. Last night I watched a “Sopranos” trilogy.
  8. You should erase your work if you mess up.
  9. Scientists in the lab do mental work
  10. You can get a skin test in Estonia

Last week’s challenge: Last week’s challenge comes from listener Greg Smith, of Roscoe, Ill. Think of a popular singer whose first and last names each have two syllables. Drop the second syllable from each name and you’ll be left with the piece of a toy. What singer is this?

Challenge answer: Dolly Parton —> doll part

Winner: Lauren Cusitello of San Deigo, Calif.

This week’s challenge: This week’s challenge comes from listener Lindsay Terrien, of Chicago. Name a part of the human body in seven letters. Add a B and rearrange the result it to get another part of the human body.

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Submit Your Answer

If you know the answer to the challenge, submit it here by Thursday, February 6th at 3 p.m. ET. Listeners whose answers are selected win a chance to play the on-air puzzle. Important: include a phone number where we can reach you.

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Say goodbye to boring tomatoes: Where to find the most unusual ones for your garden now

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Say goodbye to boring tomatoes: Where to find the most unusual ones for your garden now

In case you didn’t get the memo, March is Tomatozania-mania-party time in Southern California, when specialty growers offer pop-up sales of hard-to-find tomato varieties, rain or shine.

We’re talking serious exotics with a range of flavors from smoky to sweet and evocative names like Thorburn’s Terra Cotta, Cherokee Purple, Evil Olive Cherry and Brandywine Pink.

Cal Poly Pomona’s 28th Tomatozania plant sale begins Saturday, March 15, at the school’s Farm Store in Pomona, selling more than 150 varieties of tomatoes all grown by Cal Poly Pomona student employees (who are also plant science majors). Proceeds support the school’s plant sciences program and the students. Its annual Pepperzania begins in April at the store, with more than 150 varieties of peppers, and in May it offers the hottest of the hot peppers during its Ultimate Pepper Plant Sale.

Independently owned Tomatomania! is celebrating its 25th year of pop-up sales of tomatoes and peppers, offering more than 100 varieties of tomatoes at 13 venues between Santa Barbara to San Diego counties and Santa Ynez. Its first event began Feb. 28 at Roger’s Gardens in Corona del Mar (where remaining tomatoes are available through March, until they run out) and other Tomatomania events are scheduled well into April. Its venues for the remainder of March include Otto & Sons nursery in Fillmore (March 13-15), Tapia Brothers Fruit Stand in Encino starting March 21, Wachter’s Hay & Grain in Ojai on March 29 and Anawalt Lumber in Hollywood March 29-30.

And on March 22-23, Jo Anne and Alex Trigo are reopening Two Dog Organic Nursery just for the weekend to sell 44 tomato varieties — 12 more than last year — at their Mid-Wilshire home-based nursery from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. both days. The Trigos closed the daily operation of their nursery in 2021, “but there’s just something about sowing LOTS of seeds at the beginning of the New Year that I can’t seem to ‘retire’ from,” Jo Anne wrote in her email announcing the sale. And true to their nature, the Trigos also are offering a few companion plants, such as tomatillos, basil and Persian cucumbers.

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Get in on these sales as soon as you can, but before you plant, be mindful of the rain — which we badly need after a very dry winter. Depending on how much rain we get, your soil might need a few days to dry out before you start planting, said Tomatomania owner Scott Daigre. Tromping around in wet gardens can compact your soil, making it hard for tiny roots to grow and water to penetrate deep into the ground.

Daigre has a long list of general tomato growing tips on his website, as well as tips for growing tomatoes in coastal areas and in containers. (Two Dog Nursery has an extensive list of tips as well.) Here are a few important reminders:

  • Tomatoes love the heat and do best with at least eight hours of sun each day.
  • If you’re growing in containers, however, note that too much heat in a pot can stress out your plants, especially if they’re sitting on concrete or asphalt, so try to give them shade after 2 p.m. or so, especially in inland areas where temperatures regularly push 90 degrees during tomato season.
  • Containers should be at least 15 inches deep and 15 inches wide to handle deep-rooted tomatoes, and have plenty of drain holes so they don’t drown when they’re watered. “The best advice is buy a bigger pot,” Daigre said.
  • Choose smaller size fruits like dwarf or cherry varieties if you’re growing in containers. Large varieties like beefsteaks will take a long time to mature and produce only a few tomatoes.
  • Always remove the bottom leaves of your tomatoes so the plant doesn’t touch the soil. This helps increase air flow to the plant and reduce the chance of spreading mildew or other diseases.
  • If you want quicker results, buy tomatoes in 1-gallon containers, remove the bottom leaves and plant them pretty much as deep as they were in the pot. You don’t need to disturb the roots unless the plant is root-bound, Daigre said, which shouldn’t be an issue this early in the season.
  • Tall leggy plants with main stems more than 5 inches tall can be angled into the ground horizontally, to encourage strong root growth along the stem, but plants with 3- to 4-inch stems don’t need to be planted deep, Daigre said.
  • Some people like to add special things in their tomato holes — such as a banana peel for extra potassium as it decomposes — but at a minimum, Daigre said, be sure to work compost and organic fertilizer into the bottom of the hole to keep your soil and your plants healthy. Add a bit more fertilizer and compost on top of the soil once the plant is in the ground, so those nutrients will filter into the soil when you water.
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Spring 2025 Fashion Trends: Jackets, Shoes and More to Shop This Season

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Spring 2025 Fashion Trends: Jackets, Shoes and More to Shop This Season

Easy pants, wafer-thin sweaters, go-everywhere coats and more.


Spring is a time of renewal. As temperatures rise, daylight extends and pollen froths in the air, wardrobes also undergo a turnover. Thick, woolly sweaters and heavy coats are pushed to the back of closets, making way for lighter layers, breathable fabrics and punches of color.

Those looking to refresh their spring wardrobe have no shortage of options to choose from, a fact that can quickly make shopping a daunting endeavor. To help, I spent more than 12 hours browsing websites to find worthy items in eight key categories of springtime attire.

These 48 products come from brands across the world. Some are big, but many are small, independent labels. They range in price from about $60 to $800, and were picked with a variety of body types and personal preferences in mind. Most importantly, they address a desire for simple clothing that is better than basic.

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Good news for those in constant search of comfort: Loose pants are still in style, and some of the season’s best come with drawstrings or elastic waists.

They include styles from high-end labels like Pleats Please Issey Miyake and mall chains like Gap. Deiji Studios, an Australian brand, offers a dark pinstripe pair and J. Crew has a sporty style with a stripe down each side. The patchwork look of a pair from Tigra Tigra, a label in Los Angeles, was achieved by working with artisans in India, while another pair, from the in-house line of the San Francisco store Reliquary, has the color and soft silhouette of a cloud.


Gossamer-like cardigans have been appearing more on runways and on the people who closely follow them. They are often worn as a sweet — almost ironic — foil to baggy low-rise jeans or slouchy pants that break and pool at the ankle.

The American label Eckhaus Latta, which specializes in knits and is considered by many to be at the forefront of cool sweaters, is offering several shrunken cardigans this season, including one in a coral shade called “langoustine” that was made to mimic a button-up shirt. Geel, an emerging label in Los Angeles, sells a cropped version with a hood and Guest in Residence, a label founded by Gigi Hadid, makes pointelle-knit cardigans in punchy colors like mint green and in neutrals like cream.


As the weather warms, having a polished overcoat that can be worn comfortably over a variety of items — a T-shirt, sweats, a lighter jacket or a blazer — can take some of the guesswork out of getting dressed.

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A number of small labels — Kule in New York, Mijeong Park in Los Angeles and Studio Nicholson in London among them — offer calf-skimming versions in neutral shades that evoke the all-weather coats by the heritage Scottish brand Mackintosh. Notable weather-resistant options include a sherbet-colored style from Land’s End and a Banana Republic coat that comes with a matching bucket hat.


The spring months could be described as a bridge to beach season. The same could be said for woven leather bags, which mimic the look of luxury versions by Bottega Veneta and marry the heft of a leather carryall with the carefree sensibility of a summery raffia bag.

Traditional basket weaving and other handicrafts inform the aesthetic of the Belgian brand Dragon Diffusion. Bembien and St. Agni, two labels known for sleek designs, offer versions in a range of sizes, including small cross-body bags and substantial totes. While many woven leather bags are stiff at first, they tend to soften with use.


Many new styles of cotton or linen shirts — collared or otherwise — are so oversize that they toe the line between casual and formal, making them more versatile. They can be worn untucked with a pair of jeans or paired with slim slacks for a more formal look.

The French label Charvet, founded in 1838, traditionally affixes mother-of-pearl buttons to each of its designs, which are produced in solids, stripes and other patterns. With Nothing Underneath, a brand in London, offers button-ups in a selection of pastels, and Flore Flore, a Dutch brand, produces its versions in Portugal using organic Italian cotton.

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Denim jackets are generally durable, easy to layer and give a dash of Americana to an outfit. These days, there are many that break from the garment’s classic trucker look.

Meals, a label in Los Angeles and orSlow, which was founded in Nishinomiya, Japan, offer coverall jackets with deep pockets and relaxed shapes that take inspiration from vintage work wear. Other versions include a pullover boat-neck style by Toast, a brand started in Wales, and a tailored jacket with an hourglass shape by Caron Callahan, a designer in New York, which has a square neckline and can be worn in lieu of a blouse.


Full skirts have long been a shoulder season wardrobe staple in countries like Japan and Italy, where they easily transition from being worn with coats and sweaters to being styled with T-shirts and sandals.

Standout versions now available include an army green skirt made with an iridescent ripstop Japanese cotton by 6397, a label in New York; a style made of Italian taffeta — and with pockets — by KasMaria, another a local brand; and an adjustable skirt that ties at the hip by Brooke Callahan, a designer in Los Angeles.


Newly released sneakers are embracing the proportions and details of ballet flats, moving a category long saturated with chunky shapes to a more delicate place.

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Embodying this daintier style is Ralph Lauren’s so-called Ballerina sneaker, which has a tapered toe and an elasticized heel, and a new tennis shoe by Repetto, the French pointe shoemaker, which is laced with ballet-pink ribbons. Both pairs have whisper-thin soles, as do other streamlined sneakers from Larroudé and Dries Van Noten, brands whose styles appear to take inspiration from 1970s footwear.


The ethics behind our shopping reporting. When Times reporters write about products, they never accept merchandise, money or favors from the brands. We do not earn a commission on purchases made from this article.


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Hollywood Celebs Hit The Town In Paris During Fashion Week

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Hollywood Celebs Hit The Town In Paris During Fashion Week

Paris Fashion Week
Hollywood Celebs Invade Paris …
H. Bieber, Zoë Kravitz, Sydney Sweeney, Hadids

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