Q: For the juice, you’ll need 2 green apples, 2 stalks of celery, 2 large kale leaves, 1 medium cucumber, ¼ cup (15 g) fresh cilantro, and half a peeled lemon. To make it easier to run them through the juicer, use a sharp knife to cut the apples into eighths and the cucumber into quarters. It’s not necessary, but you can also roughly chop the kale and fresh cilantro if you prefer. After you’ve cut the apples and cucumbers, run each ingredient through the juicer separately according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Make sure that you have separate containers for each juice. Once you’ve juiced all of the ingredients, pour all of the juices into a large measuring cup. Use a spoon to stir all of them together so they’re fully blended. If you like, you can chill the juice after you’ve mixed them together. When the juice is fully mixed, pour it into a large glass. Drink the glass at room temperature or chilled depending on your preference.
A: Cut the apples and cucumber. Process each ingredient through the juicer separately. Pour the juices together and stir well. Serve the juice immediately.

Article: Type the author's last name first, followed by a comma and a space. Then type the author's first name. If the author's middle name or middle initial are included on the title page for the book, include those as well. Place a period at the end of the author's name.  Example: Gleick, James. If the book has 2 or 3 authors, separate authors' names with commas, using the word "and" before the last author's name. Only the first author's name is inverted. For example: Gillespie, Paul and Neal Lerner. If the book has more than 3 authors, use the first author's name, followed by a comma and the Latin abbreviation "et. al." For example: Wysocki, Anne Frances, et. al. Type the title of the book using title case, capitalizing all nouns, pronouns, verbs, adverbs, and other words with more than 4 letters. If the book has a subtitle, type a colon and a space at the end of the title, then add the subtitle. Place a period at the end. Example: Gleick, James. Chaos: Making a New Science. Type the name of the publisher of the book, followed by a comma and a space. Then type the year the book was published. Place a period at the end of your citation.  Example: Gleick, James. Chaos: Making a New Science. Penguin, 1987. If you used an ebook rather than a print edition, list the type of ebook as a "version" or "edition" of the book, before the publisher's name. For example: Gleick, James. Chaos: Making a New Science. Kindle ed., Penguin, 1987. Whenever you paraphrase or quote from the book, place a parenthetical citation at the end of the sentence, inside the closing punctuation. Include the author's last name and the page number or page range where the material can be found.  For example, you might write: "While weather can be expressed in averages and statistics, the reality of nature is that nothing ever happens exactly the same way twice (Gleick 12)." If you use the author's name in the body of your paper, only include the page number or page range in your parenthetical citation.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Begin your Works Cited entry with the name of the author. Provide the title of the book in italics. Include the publisher and year of publication. Use the author's name and page number for in-text citations.

Q: There are a variety of different targets you can use to learn how to rope.  A post A plastic steer head secured to a post or stand A roping dummy A box This gives you ample room to swing your lariat without accidentally catching the target before you throw it. Lean your weight on the balls of your feet, as if you are sitting on a saddle with your feet in the stirrups. The size of the loop depends on personal preference.  Run the end of the rope through the honda, which is the eye in the rope that slides the loop open and closed. Some ropers prefer to start with a small loop and allow it to grow in size while they twirl it overhead. Other ropers prefer to start with a large loop of approximately seven feet in diameter and keep it that size while twirling. When you start twirling the rope overhead, you do not want your hand to be too near the eye so that the loop moves freely.  However, do hold a bit of the excess slack in the same hand as your loop. This helps you to keep the loop open. This stretch of the rope is called the “spoke.” Leave enough slack to give yourself room to lift the loop above your head, twirl it, and throw it.  At least six feet of lariat between the two hands is recommended. Hold the coils in such a way that they will easily slip off of your hand when you throw the lariat. The twirling of the lariat is the hardest part to master, because many people have a hard time learning how to make the twirl happen with their wrist.  Move only your wrist, not your whole arm. Think of your wrist as an axle, as if the rope was a wheel revolving around your wrist.  Correctly twirling the lariat with the wrist allows the rope to slide through the eye a bit so that the loop widens. This is especially necessary if you choose to start with a small loop. While you are twirling, you do not want to let go of these two things. They should already both be held in the same hand, per Step 4. Your grip can be loose enough to allow the loop to widen, via excess slack rope sliding through the eye, if you start with a small loop and need to make it bigger as it twirls. A loop that moves too slowly overhead will lilt and fall, and you will not be able to control where it goes. This is important as you prepare to throw the lariat at your target. Although you twirl the rope with your wrist, the throw is completed with your arm. There is an ideal time to throw the rope. Wait until your swinging wrist makes its way from back to front; as it is doing so, take a step forward. Bring your hand forward and down to shoulder height, with your hand facing the target and your palm facing down. Extend your arm to its full length, and release the loop to soar at the target. It is best to do this with the same hand that threw the rope, as your other hand is holding the excess rope (or, in some cases, your reins, if you are on horseback). Do this by turning your throwing hand over the rope, grasping it with your four fingers, and sticking your thumb out toward your body. Then pull the slack taut back toward your body.
A:
Set up your target. Stand 15-20 feet (6.1 m) away from your target. Create a loop in your lariat and hold it in your dominant hand. Slide your hand away from the eye by at least 18 inches. Hold the excess coils of lariat in your other hand. Raise your dominant arm overhead, holding the loop, and begin to swing. Maintain your grip on the loop and the spoke. Twirl the loop at a speed fast enough to allow you to control its direction. Choose the correct moment in the swing to throw the lariat. Jerk the lariat taut after it lands on the target.