In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: First, you need to wash your hair. You can prepare your hair by using a shampoo or conditioner that adds moisture or controls frizz. Remember that rinsing your hair in cool or cold water adds a nice sheen to your hair. Dry your hair so that there is no excess water dripping from the ends of your locks. Press your hair between the folds of the towel rather than rubbing the towel on your head. Sometimes it helps to pull your hair into a towel and leave it there for a few minutes while it sops up the water. By now you should have your products ready to go. Apply any texturizing products you may need to your hair. If you are using pomade or wax, work it into your hair from the roots first.  Some people prefer to apply their product after they blow-dry their hair. This is usually only done with lighter products like sea salt spray or anti-frizz spray. If your hair is fine you may need to tease the product into your roots. You can do this by pulling apart the top layer of your hair and running a comb or brush through it backward. Start from midway through the strand and comb to the root. Keep doing this until a knotted mess forms. Dry your hair using a blow dryer. If your hair is fine, flip your head upside down and blow-dry it from the roots first by massaging your fingers into your roots. This will help add volume to your hair. Unless you have curly hair you will need to curl it a bit before you tousle it. To curl your hair you have a few options, depending on how controlled or messy you want your curls to look.  If you want controlled curls you can use a wide barrel curling iron (½ inch to 1 inch wide). Curl sections of your hair, settings them aside as you go. When you have curled all your hair, spray the hair with sea salt or holding spray. Tousle it a bit by running your fingers through it and scrunching it. You can also achieve this using a flat iron as a curling iron.[1]  If you want more casual curls, spray a section of your hair with sea salt or holding spray. Twist the section until it twists into a small bun, and clamp it down while it dries (or dry it with your blow dryer). Do this until all your hair is clamped down. Release all the twists and run your fingers through them.[2]  If your curls are too controlled you can pull them apart with your fingers. This will create a looser look. If you are going straight for the tousled look, all you need to do is apply some texturizing spray or holding gel/spray and tousle your hair with your fingers. Sometimes it helps to flip your head upside down to do this.[3] If you want you can wear a headband, barrette, some pins, or pull the hair back into a ponytail. If you do not want to do any of that you can just leave your beautiful locks free flowing.[4]
Summary: Wash your hair. Towel-dry your hair. Apply any necessary product to your hair. Blow-dry your hair. Curl your hair. Tousle your hair. Apply hair accessories.

There are a lot of things you can do by just making some small changes and there are things that may take more effort as well as help from others.   This will tell you a lot more about what is really bothering them. Know the purpose and values of your organization and if you don't know them, find out from those above you, your peers and especially your staff. Write up and review it once a month or so and tweak it if needed.
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One-sentence summary -- Make a plan to address the issues. Make a plan and keep your goals in mind along with the vision, mission and goals that your organization has. Make sure, though, that you get input from staff about what they think will work and how it will work. Make sure you've done a good job of listening, especially, to feelings from your staff. List vision, mission and goals by yourself or with some outside help, get staff to start with goals and break those down to small attainable goals. Make sure everybody has a copy of the VMG in their employee's handbook. If communication is poor, assess as to why that is true and look for emotional baggage between staff, between management and staff or as a whole group. Bring in a consultant to teach communication and or send staff out to a communication class and make sure you follow up on what has been learned.

Q: Plug in a clothes iron and turn it on to the lowest setting. You won’t need a “steam” function for this. Alternatively, you could use a hair straightener on the lowest setting. Choose a large piece of parchment paper, about 1 foot (0.30 m) long. Fold the paper in half before placing it on the ironing board. If you don’t have an ironing board, cover a flat surface with an old blanket. Don’t substitute wax paper for parchment paper as the kief will stick to the wax. Carefully sprinkle kief on the bottom layer of parchment paper. Keep it toward the fold rather than the edge, and make sure it’s no more than 1⁄4 in (0.64 cm) thick. Fold the top half of the parchment paper over the kief. Use a T-shirt, a thin towel, or damp newspaper as your buffer and put it on top of the parchment paper. This will keep the parchment paper and kief from burning. Swipe your iron, set on low, over the buffer about 20 times, applying heat for no more than 3 seconds at a time. Flip the parchment paper over carefully every 5 swipes, placing the buffer back between the parchment paper and iron. The hash is done when it is compact and no longer sticky. You can smoke it in your preferred manner, or use it in tea or as a food seasoning.
A: Heat an iron to the lowest setting. Place folded parchment paper on an ironing board. Spread 1⁄4 in (0.64 cm) of kief between the folded parchment paper. Place a buffer over the paper. Iron in 3-second intervals, flipping the parchment paper frequently.

Problem: Article: This infection can be brought on by athlete’s foot (tinea pedis) or through other forms of contamination such as exposure in public places. The fungus also thrives in warm, moist environments and may enter your body through cuts or openings between the nail and skin.  Don’t share shoes, socks, or towels with anyone. Avoid walking barefoot in locker rooms, public swimming pools, communal showers, or gyms. Discard old shoes that may still be infected with the fungus. Wash your hands with soap after touching the infected toenail(s) to keep it from spreading to uninfected nails. Keep your infected foot dry by wearing open-toed shoes or wearing dry, clean socks. This infection can begin mildly, but spread into a more uncomfortable condition. The fungus may cause your nail to change color, disintegrate at the edge, or become abnormally thick. If it becomes bothersome, the condition should be treated.   Try a prescription medicated antifungal cream that’s rubbed into the nail after it’s soaked in warm water. Ask your doctor for prescription oral medication that should be taken from six to 12 weeks, in combination with topical antifungal treatments.  It may be necessary for your doctor to monitor your liver function while you are on these medications A few non-conventional treatments have been effective in treating nail fungus in some people.  Use tea tree oil, applied in a light coating to the affected nail(s) two to three times a day—use products that are 100% tea tree oil. Apply snakeroot extract, a treatment that has often proven as effective as conventional antifungal cremes.   Soak your infected nail(s) in white vinegar, which has natural antibacterial properties. After filing the nail (exposing a fresh surface), apply full-strength vinegar with a cloth, cotton ball, or cotton swab 1–2 times daily for several weeks. This may be necessary if the infected nail becomes extremely painful. The procedure involves removing the infected nail completely. The removal is often done in combination with treatment using antifungal medication in the nailbed. Rest assured that a new nail will grow back, but it may take up to one year.
Summary:
Avoid further contamination. Use conventional medications. Try homeopathic treatments. Consult a doctor about surgery in extreme cases.