INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Your back should be pressed against the backrest, and your bottom should be as far back in your seat as possible. Avoid driving with your body scorched forward; if you can’t reach the pedals or steering wheel, adjust your seat, not your body. Imagine the steering wheel is the face of a clock. Place your left hand where 9 o’clock would be on the clock. Place your right hand where 3 o’clock would be on the clock. Maintaining this grip will give you the most control over the wheel. Always drive with both hands on the wheel. Driving with one hand twists your spine, which can lead to back pain. If you’re driving a manual car, only move your left foot when you’re using the clutch. If you’re driving an automatic, you should never move your left foot from the footrest. Keeping your left foot flat on the footrest will help support your back and pelvis while you’re driving. Don’t wear the strap that stretches across your lap over your stomach. In case of an accident, you want the strap to catch onto your pelvic bone, not your stomach.

SUMMARY: Sit with your body all the way back in your seat. Hold the steering wheel at a “9 and 3” position. Keep your left foot on the footrest when you’re not using it. Wear your seat belt so the strap goes across your pelvis.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: The Battle Pike is a large pike designed in the image of a Seviper. Inside it are 21 rooms, grouped into sets of three. Going through 14 rooms in a row clears a set. Using 3 of your Pokémon, you must choose one of the rooms in a set in order to proceed. Based on your choice, you may encounter Trainer battles, wild Pokémon, having your Pokémon healed by the maids on duty, or a Trainer whose Pokémon will inflict a status problem to your Pokémon. The Battle Pike tests your luck in making decisions. Before you select a room, there is a maid standing near the rooms. If talked to, she gives a hint as to what to expect in one of the rooms. By heeding her advice, you can save yourself from unnecessary battles or have your Pokémon healed frequently. The main nuisance of the Battle Pike is to be afflicted by status ailments such as poison and paralysis, so it is recommended that you either carry useful berries (such as Pecha or Cheri Berries), or carry Pokémon that are immune to certain status ailments. For example, carrying a Steel-type Pokémon will avoid poisoning, as Poison-type moves do not affect Steel-type Pokémon. The Frontier Brain of the Battle Pike is Lucy, also known as the Pike Queen. She is encountered after you go through 27 and 139 rooms in a streak. This means that Lucy will be in the final room of the 2nd consecutive pass through the Battle Pike for the Silver challenge, and  in the final room of the 10th consecutive pass for the Gold challenge. Upon her defeat, she will award the Luck Symbol.

SUMMARY: Know your facility. Pay attention to advice offered. Carry berries that can cure status problems. Defeat Lucy.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Place a large cast iron skillet on the stove over medium high heat. Give the pan 1 or 2 minutes to heat up.  If you don't have a cast iron skillet, any nonstick frying pan should work adequately well. Ideally, you should not add any oil to this pan before or after it heats up. If you need to add some type of nonstick coating, apply a light layer of nonstick cooking spray to the surface before heating the pan. Place three dough patties on the hot skillet. Cook the dough for 1 minute, flip, then continue cooking for another minute.  Arrange the dough patties on the skillet with at least 1 inch (2.5 cm) of space between them. You should cook the dough patties until they brown and blister on both sides. This should be a quick process as long as the pan is adequately hot. Remove the sopes from the pan and allow them to cool for 30 to 60 seconds, or until they are cool enough to handle safely. Do not wait for the sopes to cool completely. If they cool too much, you won't be able to shape them. Use your fingers to pinch around the outer edge of each sope, forming a 1/4 to 1/2 inch (0.6 to 1.25 cm) rim around the entire circumference.  You should form this raised edge on the side of the sope cooked first to help protect your fingers from the hot dough. While not strictly necessary, you could also pinch a smaller ring around the center of each patty. Doing so may help prevent the sope from falling apart after you fill it. After shaping your first three sopes, continue shaping the remaining nine dough patties in the same manner.  Work with only three patties at once. If you try to do too many, the patties may burn or cool too quickly. Set aside the shaped sopes while working on the flat patties. Try to keep them warm.

SUMMARY:
Heat a cast iron skillet. Lightly cook the dough patties. Cool slightly. Pinch the edges. Repeat with the remaining dough.