INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Turn the oven to 400 °F (204 °C) and wait for the preheating indicator light to come on or for your oven to beep. Doing this will ensure an even cook on your squash. Prepare the other ingredients while your oven preheats. Mix all of the dry ingredients in a bowl until they are well incorporated. This mixture will act as a dry rub that will infuse a sweet and spicy taste to your squash. Sprinkle the slices with the dry rub that you created. Make sure to get even coverage over all of the squash for an even flavor. Put 1.25 teaspoons (6.2 ml) of soy sauce and 2 tablespoons (30 ml) olive oil, avocado oil, or melted coconut oil onto the slices. Get an equal coverage of the wet ingredients onto all of the squash. If you are using coconut oil, you can put it in the microwave for 15 seconds to melt it. As the squash cooks, it should turn golden brown. Once they have cooked for 15 minutes, flip them over with tongs or a spatula so that the other side also browns. If you fail to do this, one side of the squash may be soggy. Adding the sugar to the other side of the slices will let them caramelize. If you want your squash to be sweeter, use more sugar. Remove the slices from the oven and let them cool for 5 minutes in the container before you serve them. They should be aromatic and caramelized.  Eat the squash with a fork. Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days in your fridge.

SUMMARY: Preheat the oven to 400 °F (204 °C). Combine the sugar, cayenne pepper, and other dry ingredients in a bowl. Coat the squash slices with the dry spices. Pour the soy sauce and oil over the slices. Bake the slices in the oven for 15 minutes and turn them over. Sprinkle the slices with more sugar and cook for another 15 minutes. Remove the slices from the oven and serve.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: In the Navigation Pane on the Tools menu, click Rules and Alerts. If you have more than one email account in your Outlook profile, click the Inbox in the Apply changes to this folder list to which you want the rule to apply. To start, click New Rule . Click Start from a blank rule . Click Check messages when they arrive . This is under Step 1: Select when messages should be checked . Click Next . These are found next to each condition that you want the incoming message to match, under Step 1: Select condition(s) . Under Step 2: Edit the rule description , click the underlined value that corresponds to the condition, and then select or type the necessary information. Click Next. Select the forward it to people or distribution list  check box under the  Step 1: Select action(s) .  Click  people  or  distribution list  Under  Step 2: Edit the rule description   Double-click the name or distribution list to which you want to forward the messages, and then click  OK . Click  Next  twice Type a name under  Step 1: Specify a name for this rule . Click  Finish

SUMMARY: Launch Microsoft Outlook. Determine to which account the rule applies. Create a new rule. Determine when to check the messages. Select the appropriate check boxes. Edit the description. Select recipients. Finish up.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Many writers stick to the “four u's” when writing their headlines; they write them to be unique, ultra-specific, useful, and to convey a sense of urgency. Write your headline along these lines to more effectively lure in readers.  You can easily make your headline unique by making it a little unusual. For example, you might write an article on cost-effective travel methods and use the headline “4 ways to see the world even if you can barely afford that avocado toast you know you want.” In addition to being unique relative to your competitors, your headline should be ultra-specific so that readers can know whether the content is targeted to them. An example of an ultra-specific headline might be “7 Amazing Methods for Dunking Your Double-Stuf Oreos in Whole Milk.” Headlines should be useful in the sense that they communicate the value of your content to potential readers. It's helpful to think of your headline as “selling” your actual content this way. An example of a useful headline would be “How you can turn your Instagram photos into cash!” An urgent headline would be one that communicates potential negative consequences for readers who don't read your content (e.g., “Avoid THIS Common Wedding Mistake!”). This is the trickiest “u” to implement and it ultimately may not be applicable to your content. Avoid using technical jargon or words that are hard to understand. Readers will be turned off by words that are bland, uninspiring, or generally unknown.  Aim to write your headline, as well as the following copy, at a grade 7 reading level. Use language that is simple yet powerful and that calls reader to action. For example, include action verbs like “try” or “click” and address the reader as “you.” At the same time, don't insult your reader's intelligence. People won't appreciate being talked down to. Your headline should set clear expectations for your readers and do so in an efficient way. If your headline sets up readers' expectations in a way that your article doesn't deliver, you can upset your readers and damage your and your product's brand.  For example, instead of saying “5 Clothing Brands That Every Celebrity from Jennifer Lawrence to Johnny Depp Loves,” try simply saying “5 Clothing Brands That Celebrities Love.” When it comes to headline writing, you should always aim to respect the reader's experience. If you're overly wordy, confusing, or dishonest, you're creating a bad experience for the reader. Avoid writing "Blind Headlines" that reveal nothing about your offer. A headline must stand entirely on its own merit, without the reader being forced to read on to discover what the headline was meaning. Readers don't relate to facts and figures as much as they relate to stories. When the reader identifies with the “main character's” dilemma, curiosity will carry the reader forward past your headline and into your article. Describe in your headline what your product or content of your writing is, what problem it addresses, and what benefit it brings.  For example, if you're writing a headline for an advertisement about scar removal cream, consider describing in your headline how the cream removes people's “unsightly blemishes” and leaves them feeling more confident as a result. The knack of skillfully weaving a story through an advertisement helps to greatly engage both the reader's imagination and excitement. A great headline should contain a leading benefit that triggers some level of excitement and appeals to your readers' emotions. These can include overcoming a fear, meeting a need, want, or desire, or satisfying their curiosity.  Use emotional adjectives to describe how your article will solve a reader's problem. Examples include “effortless,” “painstaking,” “fun,” and “incredible. Follow the “5 Ws and H” rule for understanding your audience: identify the “who,” “what,” “when,” “where,” “why,” and “how” of your content, decide which of these factors is most relevant to your audience, and emphasize that factor in your headline. Questions are a great way to attract potential readers' attention; they create a so-called “curiosity gap,” a need to know more. Use a particularly strange question in your headline to pull people in. For example, if you're writing an article about domestic cats' natural hunting instincts, you might consider starting your headline with “Does your cat want to kill you?!”

SUMMARY: Follow the “Four Us” rule when writing your headline. Keep it simple and easy to understand. Be as accurate and concise as you can. Tell a story with your headline. Try to connect to your reader's self-interest on an emotional level. Ask a strange or funny question to pique readers' curiosity.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Add another small oval at the tip of that "hook."    On its body, add four pairs of zigzag lines for its legs.  Again, add an oval on each of their tips.

SUMMARY:
Draw a small diagonal oval near the center of the paper. From the center of that oval, draw a large curved line resembling a hook. Back at the main oval, draw two small ovals--one on each side of the main one. Make another curved line (shaped like the letter C) and draw it in a way that it passes through the lined-up ovals. At both tips of this new line, draw a small oval each. By now you have a line skeleton of the body, tail and claws of the scorpion. Start tracing the outline of this scorpion. Add details. Erase unnecessary lines. Color the drawing as desired.