Problem: Article: Before you die, you will have chosen a facility or program and filled out the necessary paperwork. After you die, someone will contact the facility or program which will usually collect your body. Once they have your body, several things could be done with it. Donated bodies are used for testing new medical tools and equipment, testing car safety products, studying stages of advanced decay, studied for anatomy purposes, and testing new surgeries, among other things. Understand the pros and cons of each. With donating your organs, your family can still have hold a service for you and you can specify in advance which organs you'd like to donate. With body donation, your family may not get the chance to say goodbye before the body is collected. You also won't be able to specify how it is used. Decide how much control you'd like to have over what happens to your body after your death.  Consider the great need for donated organs. Every day about 79 people receive an organ transplant while 18 die waiting for a donor. One organ donor can save 8 lives. Most programs want a complete body donation. Other programs request that you pre-register any planned organ donations before donating your body. Some programs will not accept very obese bodies and most will not take bodies with certain medical conditions, like Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, hepatitis, HIV, or tuberculosis. Bodies that suffered extensive trauma or advanced decomposition won't be accepted either. Look at programs for willed body donation within your state. When you do this, you should keep in mind what's important to you. Here are a few of the things to consider when comparing available programs/facilities:  Costs: Some programs will pay for body transport to the collecting facility, while others will charge. Find out what your family will be responsible for paying. Funeral or memorial options: Most programs will require almost immediate transportation of the body to the facility. You may want to find out when your cremated remains will be available to your family, if planning a service. They may be available several years after your death. Assistance from the program: Some programs perform a memorial service after the body has been used and before it's cremated. The program will complete the death certificate and might give information for an obituary. Type of program: Some programs and facilities only use donated bodies for anatomical study. Others might use them as forensic tools to solve crimes, such as studying advanced decay. Make sure you're comfortable with what the program will do with your body. Medical school or body broker: You have the option of donating to a for-profit corporation that sells your body parts, called a "body broker," or you can donate to a university medical school. Since the advent of the broker corporations, schools are having a shortage of tissue they need for research.
Summary: Understand what happens when you donate your body to science. Choose between donating your organs or donating your body to science. Understand when body donation is not accepted. Research programs and facilities.

INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Take a bag of purchased grated ube and measure out 1 cup (250 g). Put the grated ube into a steamer basket over a few inches (5 cm) of simmering water and put the lid on. Steam the ube for 15 minutes. It should become completely soft. You can also buy whole ube and prepare it yourself. Wear kitchen gloves to peel the ube, since it can make your hands itchy and use a box grater to grate the ube. Take the lid off of the steamer and remove the steamed ube. Transfer the ube to a small bowl and use a fork to mash the steamed ube until it's smooth. Get out a medium saucepan and measure 1 cup (240 ml) of whole milk and 2/3 cup (145 g) of sugar into it. Turn the heat on to medium and stir the mixture until the liquid barely starts bubbling. Turn off the heat. Heating the milk and sugar should make the sugar dissolve. This will give you smooth ube ice cream. Add 1½ cups (360 ml) of heavy whipping cream and the steamed ube to the saucepan. Carefully place an immersion blender into the saucepan and turn it on. Blend the mixture until it's totally smooth. If you don't have an immersion blender, you could pour the ice cream mixture into a blender. Puree the mixture until it's completely smooth. Set a mesh strainer or sieve over a medium mixing bowl. Slowly pour the ice cream mixture through the strainer, so the liquid is transferred to the bowl. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and chill it in the refrigerator for at least 2 hours. It needs to be completely cold before you freeze it. You can throw away the solids that end up in the strainer. Set up your ice cream maker according to the manufacturer's instructions. Remove the chilled ice cream mixture from the fridge and pour it into the frozen part of the ice cream maker. Turn the maker on, so the machine churns the ice cream. It should take about 10 to 15 minutes for the ice cream to form. If you prefer more of a soft-serve texture, you can serve the ube ice cream right out of the ice cream maker. For a firmer ice cream, freeze it for a few hours in the freezer before you serve.

SUMMARY: Set up a steamer and steam the grated ube. Mash the steamed ube. Heat the milk and sugar. Blend in the ube and heavy whipping cream. Strain and chill the ube ice cream mixture. Freeze the mixture in an ice cream maker.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Use a pencil to draft your message on the sign. If you have images or symbols on your sign, layout the text so that there is space for images. Try to use large sized fonts so that people will be able to read it from a distance.  You could design your sign in Microsoft Word or Adobe Illustrator, print it out and use the printout as a guide when writing the message on the sign. If you have to start writing the letters really small on the edge of the sign, people are unlikely to read it. Start by outlining the text. Then, fill in the text with darker colors that contrast with the background color or imagery on the sign.  Paint markers work great for writing text on protest signs. You can get paint markers at art supply stores. Repeat this process on the other side of the poster board. If you are expecting your protest to receive any form of media attention, you should design a double sided sign. Some of the best protest signs use font colors that reinforce the message they are trying to convey. Dark colors are often used to emphasize the gravity of a message. A rainbow of colors can be used to represent diversity, such as the use of a full rainbow of colors to represent the diversity within the LGBTQ+ community and pride parades. Consider your font or text color in relation to the background design of your poster. For instance, you may want to use black text against a white background or blue text against an orange background, as opposed to yellow text against an orange background. The writing should be reinforced by the image or symbol used on the sign and vice versa. Some of the best protest signs use imagery that supports the text written on the sign, such as the use of the symbol for female alongside a text saying ‘Women’s Day March.’
Summary:
Layout your text on the sign. Outline the words with paint markers. Design the font color. Use a strong contrast between font color and the background design. Make a connection between the text and the image.