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Puzzle solutions for Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2025

Puzzle solutions for Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2025

Yahoo29-01-2025
Note: Most subscribers have some, but not all, of the puzzles that correspond to the following set of solutions for their local newspaper.
Play the USA TODAY Crossword Puzzle.
Play the USA TODAY Sudoku Game.
Jumbles: CROON FLUKE MUTTON AROUND
Answer: The former male model's calendar photos were − OUT-OF-DATE
(Distributed by Tribune Content Agency)
"Meals begin at the supermarket, so shop with ... reusable produce bags. .. Find them at ecobags.com." - Sara Gilbert
(Distributed by Andrews McMeel)
IT CAN ONLY BE TRUE LOVE WHEN YOU ENABLE YOUR OTHER HALF TO... BE THE PERSON THEY'RE DESTINED TO BE. − MICHELLE YEOH
(Distributed by King Features)
WHEN ALBERT EINSTEIN PASSED AWAY, I WONDER IF PEOPLE EVERYWHERE OBSERVED A MOMENT OF SCIENCE.
(Distributed by King Features)
IOWA IDAHO KANSAS ALASKA ARKANSAS
(Distributed by Tribune Content Agency)
PETITE, EINSTEIN, NIECE, ECONOMIC, COMMON
(Distributed by Andrews McMeel)
SHUNNED
POLE
EXAM
MAILBOX
EWING
BRIGHTFEST
LORIKEET
(Distributed by Andrews McMeel)
We are mindful of waste
(Distributed by Creators Syndicate)
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Online Crossword & Sudoku Puzzle Answers for 01/29/2025 - USA TODAY
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Dire wolf meet-up: Watch Colossal's female wolf frolic with older brothers
Dire wolf meet-up: Watch Colossal's female wolf frolic with older brothers

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Dire wolf meet-up: Watch Colossal's female wolf frolic with older brothers

Colossal Biosciences created three dire wolves using genetic engineering. Now that the wolves have gotten older – the two males are approaching one year old – they are being assimilated into a pack. Those cute dire wolves are forming a pack. If you remember, Colossal Biosciences, the company seeking to bring back the woolly mammoth, revealed in April 2025 it had successfully birthed a trio of dire wolf puppies. Using dire wolf DNA extracted from fossils – yes, dire wolves aren't just the stuff of "Game of Thrones" fiction, they existed tens of thousands of years ago – the Colossal researchers created dire wolf genomes. They used those as a guide to editing a gray wolf genome to express dire wolf traits. The resultant fertilized dire wolf eggs were implanted into and born by surrogate dog mothers, resulting in the successful resurrection of an Ice Age-era species. Two male dire wolves, Romulus and Remus, born in October 2024, are approaching their first birthday – each weighed more than 90 pounds at six months old, significantly larger than standard gray wolves, the Dallas, Texas-based biotech company says – while a female, Khaleesi (named after the "Game of Thrones" character), is about six months old. Home delivery: A meteorite crashes into a Georgia home. Turns out it's older than Earth. 'She's completely been accepted into the pack': All in the dire wolf family Recently, the Colossal team thought it was time to introduce the brothers to their sister. "We're working through the socialization and the introduction of Khaleesi into the pack," Colossal CEO and co-founder Ben Lamm told USA TODAY. "They're starting to behave more and more like wolves," he said. "We don't want them to be lap dogs." You can see Khaleesi come into a grassy, fenced six-acre section of Colossal's 2,000-acre ecological preserve where she first gets to meet Romulus, in a video posted Aug. 12 on Colossal's YouTube channel. "At first, she was a little like, 'Whoa, he's right there," said Paige McNickle, manager of animal husbandry at Colossal and manager of the team that takes care of the dire wolves. The older male wolf, Romulus, came up to Khaleesi, and they smelled each other and then she took off on a run and he followed her. "They were playing with each other. Their ears were up the entire time, which is a good, happy, calm, wolf behavior that we were hoping to see," McNickle said. After a bit, Romulus is ushered away and Remus is brought into the area. "They were both excited. Everybody was so good in play, but Remus is almost more gentle than Romulus," McNickle said. "Romulus is just a little bit bigger, and Remus did really good. We saw lots of play behaviors," she said. 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Colossal is planning to engineer two to four more dire wolves over the next year, Lamm said. Rather than let these wolves breed, the researchers want future pups from "a couple different cell lines," he said. "We will actually get more genetic diversity." And wolves of different ages, as they are adopted in the pack, will grow up "in some kind of social hierarchy." As of now, Remus, the smaller of the male wolves, appears to be emerging as the leader, having exhibited Alpha male characteristics. When the dire wolves were first introduced to the world, Remus "kind of became the star," Lamm said. "Remus really has this take-charge attitude. … Romulus has always been bigger and I just thought, natural selection, the biggest and strongest." Recently, Romulus and Remus began receiving larger carcasses for feeding – from rabbits to deer legs and cattle portions, beyond their regular menu of ground meat, meat chunks, and other foods – so they would learn important social skills. Colossal is currently working with Grizzly Systems and Yellowstone National Park's Wolf Project, deploying audiovisual recording devices to understand pack behavior and wolf populations. Artificial intelligence software helps identify "specific wolves in that setting and then begin to understand how we can estimate population size based on how many times we count the same wolf," said Matt James, Colossal's chief animal officer, in another video on the company's YouTube channel. Those devices will eventually be deployed in Colossal's reserve to monitor its growing dire wolf pack. Those tools will make it "so that we can just be observing them in a more passive manner," Lamm said. "This is just the next chapter in their story." Colossal continues other projects amid dire wolf controversy Critics have argued that the pups are not truly dire wolves, but genetically-modified gray wolves. 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Mike Snider is a national trending news reporter for USA TODAY. You can follow him on Threads, Bluesky, X and email him at mikegsnider & @ & @mikesnider & msnider@ What's everyone talking about? Sign up for our trending newsletter to get the latest news of the day

Sandra Bullock offers rare comments about Jennifer Aniston friendship
Sandra Bullock offers rare comments about Jennifer Aniston friendship

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Sandra Bullock offers rare comments about Jennifer Aniston friendship

Sandra Bullock is breaking her silence. The ultra-private Oscar winner opened up about her friendship with "Friends" alum Jennifer Aniston in a Vanity Fair interview published Monday, Aug. 11. "We were from that time in the business where no one wanted the ladies to be friends — it was about pitting everyone against each other," Bullock told VF. "We were told we weren't supposed to do that — meaning like and respect and honor each other." Both Aniston and Bullock broke out the same year: The "Morning Show" star as Rachel Green when "Friends" premiered in September 1994 and the latter when the thriller "Speed" was released earlier that year. Jennifer Aniston says 'Friends' cast was already mourning Matthew Perry before death The pair bonded 15 years ago at a mutual friend's wedding with drinks and conversation flowing: "We were just like, 'Oh my God, we need to meet and cut loose.' And we did," Bullock said. The hangover was strong, according to Bullock, but their friendship is stronger. "I think her superpower is that she could very easily be hard, but she's incredibly open," Bullock said. "People want to know about her and understand where she is in life and want her to be happy." The pair have bonded over their love of interior design, humor and the fact that they both dated "The O.C." actor Tate Donovan. Now, the friends share holidays together, spring break trips and numerology readings. "You write down your birth date and, whether you believe in it or not, we're all scribbling down our thoughts and in it together," Bullock told VF. "Nothing is for her alone ever. Everything she does is for everyone else included." Despite her A-list status, Bullock lives a lowkey life compared to other Hollywood stars, rarely offering fans glimpes into her personal orbit. In August 2023, her longtime partner Bryan Randall "passed away peacefully" at 57 after a three-year battle with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS, his family confirmed at the time in a statement to USA TODAY. The mom to son Louis and daughter Laila is set to star in her first film since 2022 in next year's "Practical Magic 2." The interviews for Vanity Fair's September issue cover story mention fellow celebs that Aniston counts as good friends, ranging from Bullock, Jason Bateman and Jimmy Kimmel to her ex-husband Brad Pitt's fellow ex Gwyneth Paltrow.

Alyson Stoner was 'terrified' of Demi Lovato's team during 'Camp Rock' substance abuse
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