Problem: Article: Leave your pan in the freezer so it gets cool to the touch. While your pan freezes, work on mixing your other ingredients. By the time you're done with other ingredients, your pan should be cold enough to use. Place all your ingredients in a large mixing bowl. Use a spoon to mix the ingredients together or use your hand mixer. Mix the ingredients together until the sugar dissolves. Remove your pan from the freezer. Transfer the ingredients to the pan and place it back in the freezer. Freeze the ingredients for about 20 to 30 minutes. The mixture should be kept in the freezer until the edges just start to freeze. Beat the mixture with the hand mixer until it develops a smooth, creamy texture. Times will vary depending on how cold your mixture got. When you're done, the mixture should have a smooth and creamy texture. At this point, it should have a consistency very similar to ice cream. Place the mixture back in the freezer and freeze it for an additional 20 to 30 minutes. Then, use the hand mixer to beat your mixture until it's smooth. Repeat this process until your ice cream is frozen throughout. It is now ready to eat. The number of repetitions needed depends on the temperature of your freezer. Warmer freezers will take longer to freeze your ice cream.
Summary: Place a 13 by 9 inch (about 33 by 23 cm) pan in the freezer. Stir your ingredients together. Freeze your mixture for 20 to 30 minutes. Use the hand mixer to mix your ice cream. Repeat this pattern until the ice cream is firm.

Problem: Article: To ensure your doorknobs don't get primed or painted during this process, you should remove handles and any other features, like clothes hooks, from your door. If you do not plan on removing these from your door, you might: Prevent hardware from being painted by taping around the edges of fixtures, or even taping the entire fixture. Use fine grit sandpaper, between 180 and 220-grit, while stripping old, flaking paint and smoothing rough edges. A power sander or coarse sandpaper might cause scoring in your door, leaving unsightly notches or lines in its surface. Your door may have accumulated some dust or grit in the sanding process. Take a clean rag or paper towel and wipe your door free of any dust, dirt, or grime. Do not use water. If water soaks into the material of your door, it can have a negative effect on how the primer and paint bond to the surface. By tackling your door one side at a time, you accomplish two goals at once. Your careful attention to one side at a time will help ensure evenness and consistency for the whole door. This will help you achieve a professional looking finished product. Primer helps to prepare the surface of your door for the actual coat of paint. Some surfaces, especially those that are rough or absorbent, can be difficult or expensive to paint if unprimed. You'll certainly want to prime your door if:  Your surface is unfinished. Your door is made of bare or stained wood. You want to paint the door a color lighter than its current color. The specific brand of primer that you bought should have instructions for how long you should let your primer dry before applying paint. Follow these directions for best results, but when in doubt, allow 48 hours to pass before applying your paint. But first, you should give it a once over to make sure that it is clean. Dirt or dust that might have been on your sawhorses could have rubbed off on your door. Using a clean rag or paper towel, wipe any dust or grit off the door before priming. Be sure not to get your door wet. Wetness on the door can prevent your primer and paint from bonding with its surface.
Summary: Remove or tape around the edges of fixtures. Sand the door lightly. Clean your door, if necessary. Repeat sanding and cleaning on both sides. Prime your door. Allow your primer to rest. Prime the reverse side of your door.

Problem: Article: That's right. You can strengthen your mind simply by hanging out with other humans and enjoying each other's company.  In fact, our brain's health requires that we have a strong social support system. Believe it or not: the more social your life, the slower your memory will decline with age. There are plenty of ways to up your social interaction. Start volunteering with an organization the works on issues you care about, or simply call up an old friend you haven't spoken to in a while and catch up. If you realize you've been taking life a bit too seriously, think about something you've done recently that you could have handled more calmly. Here's the kicker: laugh at yourself for being so darn high-strung sometimes!  Forcing yourself to confront ways in which you sometimes behave humorously without realizing it will also help you start to change those behaviors. Further, laughing immediately reduces stress, thus contributing to a healthy, happier brain.  Perhaps the best way to find something to laugh about is to hang around fun people.  The more someone laughs in your company, the more likely you'll catch the giggles yourself. Children, in particular, are a consistently reliable source of laugh-inducing statements and behaviors. Place reminders to lighten up where you'll see them often.  Hang a doll from your rear view mirror, put a meme on your computer's background, or put some laugh-inducing photos of you and your friends on your desk.  Seeing these throughout the day will help keep your mind at ease. Expose your mind to emotional and social extremes from the safety of a book. Authors like Jane Austen and David Foster Wallace are capable of spinning webs of intrigue that can stimulate and expand your mind.  Further, they create realistic social environments than you can learn from and experience from the comfort of an armchair. All of this helps ultimately helps improve your social skills, and can even generate connections between the emotional and social parts of your brain.
Summary: Hang out with your friends. Allow yourself to laugh. Read classic literature.

Problem: Article: What facts did it consider and how did it apply the law to those facts? Walk the reader through the Court's reasoning, one-step at a time. Organize your brief. Present a systematic play of the Court's logic. Your analysis should be organized so that the reader can follow the Court's reasoning from beginning to end. Why the Court ruled the way it did is the most important part of the case, and the reader must be able to understand it by reading your brief instead of the case, especially in the case of an appeal. Oftentimes a Justice who is not in agreement with the majority will write a dissenting opinion or case analysis. Sometimes a Justice who is in agreement with the majority will write his or her own case analysis. If there is a dissenting or concurring opinion, a summary should be included in your case brief. Your analysis should avoid simply repeating the Court's words, except in cases where the exact language is important. In those cases, use quotation marks, and make it clear that you are quoting the Court. Use citations. Your analysis should include all relevant citations to other cases, statutes, and rules the Court considered when arriving at its decision. More often than not, all of the citations contained in the opinion are relevant and should be used in your brief. If you are unsure, include it. Here's your chance to present another way of interpreting the case, whether you're doing it for school or for real. What's another way of interpreting the rule of law? What conclusions might the Court come to regarding this case? If this is for a law school assignment involving an old case, consider how the case may be decided today. What newer measures are in place that might have kept the trunk from being searched? Are there any? Presenting an alternate method of interpretation is the key to the brief.
Summary:
Describe how the Court arrived at its decision. Describe any dissenting or concurring opinions. Use your own words. Consider alternatives.