Q: Once everyone is in the water the Shark yells, "Sharks and Minnows!" or "Shark attack!" at any time to start “tagging” players. When the Shark yells this, the Minnows' goal is to reach the other end of the pool without being tagged by the Shark.  If the Shark tags a Minnow, that Minnow becomes a Shark and joins the Shark's team. They now begin tagging Minnows to turn them into Sharks. When the Minnows have made it to the other side of the pool without being tagged, they wait. The Shark calls “fishy, fishy...” again and they try to return to the other side of the pool. The original Shark calls, "Shark Attack" and the process repeats. The last remaining Minnow is the winner. This player becomes the Shark in the next round. It becomes harder as more and more Minnows become Sharks. The game lasts until there is only one Minnow left. If you started out with more than one Shark, the last two Minnows become the next Sharks. Begin the next game with the winner from the last round, the new Shark. They now stand in the center of the pool and the Minnows line up on the pool deck facing the Shark. Let the game begin.
A: Avoid the Shark. Play until there is a winner. Start with a new Shark.

Article: After changes to your fish tank, such as a large water change, a thorough cleaning, or medicating your fish, a bacteria bloom can occur. If this describes what led to the cloudiness in your tank, then be patient. The bacteria will balance out in a few days, and the water should clear on its own. If your filters are not working properly, then the water can become cloudy. There is bacteria in your filtration system that consumes byproducts like ammonia and keeps things clean. If the filters stop working, the bacteria can build up in the water, making it look cloudy. If you had recently added new fish to your aquarium, make sure the tank set up can handle the additional fish. For example, if you just added a larger fish to a tank that had smaller fish, it might be too much for the filtration system. Add a different filtration system, or lessen the amount of fish in your tank. Overfeeding your fish can cause cloudiness in the water. Fish need to be fed sparingly. Feed them an amount of food once a day the size of their eye, and give them one or two fast days a week. Sometimes, cloudiness can be caused by decorations. Make sure to wash all decorations carefully before adding them to the tank. Check all decorations in your tank to make sure they are designed for aquariums and purchased at good pet stores. Check for melting or misshapen decorations, softening or loosening decorations, or flaking paint or discolorations on decorations. Toxic blue-green algae clings to the sides of the tanks and sometimes to the decorative items in the tank. A good time to scrape algae from the sides is right before you change the water. Use a soft plastic squeegee or a clean toothbrush to gently scrape the side, then rinse under water to clean before taking another swipe. Remove all the ornaments and scrub in the old tank water to prevent shock in your fish.  Make sure your tank doesn’t get too much light because that can cause algae growth. Don’t place your tank close to a window and only keep tank lights on for 8 to 10 hours a day.  It is important not to overfeed your fish, as leftover food can contribute to algae growth and an ammonia spike.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Look for bacterial blooms. Check your filters. Adjust for additional fish. Refrain from overfeeding your fish. Be mindful with decorations. Control algae.

Q: You can use this method to restore search engines, website-specific settings, and download preferences, which do not usually cause bugs. Your saved passwords, bookmarks, browsing history, and cookies should be restored automatically. If these are missing, you may still be able to retrieve them using these instructions. If you want to restore your add-ons or settings, change them manually instead of using this method. Restoring them from the backup will most likely recreate your old bugs. Enter about:support in the address bar, or click ≡ → ? → Troubleshooting information. You can find the folder containing your profile data by clicking a button near the top of the page. Look for the following words, depending on your system and Firefox version:  Windows: Show Folder Mac: Show in Finder Linux: Open Directory Firefox 13 or earlier (any OS): Open Containing Folder Your old data from before the reset should be saved in a folder on your desktop. If you can't find it, search your computer for a folder called "Old Firefox Data." On Windows, you may need to show hidden files. You should always close Firefox before you change its profile settings. Open "Old Firefox Data" and choose a file you wish to transfer. (See below for how to identify them.) Right-click the file and select Copy. Open your new profile folder. Right-click on any blank space inside the folder and select Paste.  On a Mac, hold down Ctrl and click the file to "right-click." If prompted, choose to replace or overwrite existing files. It's best to move as few files as possible, since one of them could be responsible for the bug. Here are some suggested files to transfer:  search.json — your added search engines permissions.sqlite — preferences for which websites are allowed to store cookies, open popup windows, etc. mimeTypes.rdf — preferences for handling downloaded files (which program opens which file type) Firefox attempts to restore the items below automatically. You do not need to restore them yourself unless an error occurred during the reset. places.sqlite — bookmarks and browsing history key3.db and logins.json — saved passwords formhistory.sqlite — autofill information for online forms
A:
Check for missing data. Open your troubleshooting page. Open your profile data. Find your old data. Quit Firefox. Copy files into your current profile. Choose which files to transfer.