If you are a fan of candies and you have a lot of candy wrappers piling up, do not throw them away. You can do a simple recycling project wherein you can use the candy wrappers to make a bag. Not only will you be able to get rid of all the candy wrappers, you will also have a new accessory to use. Follow the simple steps that are provided below to know how you can make a bag out of candy wrappers. Materials that you need. The materials that you need for this project are transparent contact paper, lots of candy wrappers, transparent tape, paper puncher, scissors and a string or ribbon that you want to use as a handle for the bag. Clean the candy wrappers. Make sure that you clean the candy wrappers before you start working on them. You can wipe off the candy or wash it under running water. Don't worry about getting it ruined since candy wrappers are made of plastic. Make sure that you get out all the sticky substances so that your bag will not attract ants. Allow the candy wrappers to dry. Cut jagged edges. Use your scissors to cut the jagged edges off of the candy wrappers. You don't have to use exact measurement when cutting. You just have to get rid of the jagged edges since it can make your bag look messy. Create your design. Now you can make your bag. Get a piece of contact paper and determine how big and how wide you want your bag to be. Afterwards, peel off the paper from the adhesive and then lay down your candy wrappers on the contact paper according to how you want them to appear on your bag. It might be easier if you arrange the wrappers first so that you can just stick them on the contact paper. Cut the contact paper. Cut the contact paper for the parts of your bag. You will need a base, 2 side panels and 2 panels for the back and front of your bag. All in all, you should have 5 pieces to work with. Connect the pieces together. Connect the pieces together using the transparent tape that you have. Use the tape to connect the edges and the base. Place some tape on the inside of the bag too. Make sure that the pieces are well connected to each other so that the bag doesn't rip open easily. Add the handle. Now the bag is done. All you have to do is add the handle on. To do this, punch some holes on the top portion of the bag. Use the string and tie a knot to create the handles. If you want to make the bag sturdier, you can add a piece of cardboard to the base and to line the insides of the bag. 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Michael Stutes (3 1) got the win by working a scoreless fifth inning in relief, and Jonathan Papelbon pitched the ninth for his 29th save in 36 chances. It the second triple digit loss season in Marlins history, joining the 108 defeat year in 1998. Mike Redmond, the first year Marlins manager, was a rookie on that team, playing in 37 games. don think we going to lose 100 games next year, Marlins left fielder Christian Yelich said. one thinks that way. starter Henderson Alvarez (4 6) allowed five hits and struck out five in seven innings. Justin Ruggiano had two hits for Miami, one of them an RBI double where he was thrown out at third. It was the 44th time this season the Marlins (58 100) have scored less than two runs. They 2 42 in those games. was trying to come up with something clever to say, when you lose your 100th game of the season, Redmond said. I could come up with is, at least it was by one run. gave up a one out double to Jimmy Rollins in the first, then walked the next three batters Chase Utley, Domonic Brown and finally Ruf, the last two of those free passes coming on 3 2 pitches, and the one to Ruf allowing Rollins to score. Frandsen ground ball brought in Utley, and Alvarez got another grounder to escape without more trouble. The Marlins answered in the second with a run off Miner. Giancarlo Stanton singled to start the inning, and scored on Ruggiano double to left center. But the relay from Brown to Rollins to Freddy Galvis caught Ruggiano trying to get to third, and the potential for a bigger inning ended there. was big at the time, Phillies manager Ryne Sandberg said. runner would have been in scoring position, that came in handy. Jimmy got the throw right down there on the bag. Good alert play. left after working four innings, giving up four hits and striking out three. He also got the second big league hit of his career after an odd sequence he fouled one off the backstop in the second inning and nearly hit teammate Cesar Hernandez, then lined the next pitch right up the box, narrowly missing Alvarez. For the Marlins, the 100 loss mark was one that they were on pace for pretty much all season proved to ultimately be unavoidable. wasn sure what to expect coming in as far as the players and how many games we would lose, whatever, Redmond said. nobody wants to be a part of that. I guess if there was anybody who was prepared for this season out here, it was me since I been through it. Marlins finished 52 games back in the standings. Five years later, the franchise won its second World Series. we grow as an organization and get better and improve, we always remember where we started from, Redmond said. something I remember from Sandberg is now 19 18 as Philadelphia manager. Phillies RHP Roy Halladay, who left Monday game with arm fatigue, was not experiencing any pain Tuesday. dead arm. It happens, Sandberg said. LHP Cole Hamels (8 14, 3.62) makes his final start of the season for the Phillies on Wednesday against Miami LHP Brad Hand (1 1, 2.92). The Phillies haven had a pitcher lose 15 games since Mark Leiter in 1997. Marlins RHP Kevin Slowey (right forearm discomfort) threw a bullpen session that was intended to serve as a confidence booster heading into the offseason. He hasn pitched in a game since July 25. Cameron Rupp got his second start of the season at catcher for the Phillies. Wmns Nike Free 5.0 Wolf Grey Pink Force White Quilted,Scientists spend their time working to find funds instead of cures Rachel Clemens Grisham has wanted to be a scientist since high school, when she and her science club classmates collected water samples from ponds and tested them for pollutants. A college biology degree led to a doctorate program in molecular biology (Clemens Grisham will defend her dissertation this month). For the past five years she has worked as a researcher in the lab of Oregon Health Science University associate professor Teresa Nicolson, investigating how proteins move from one area of a cell to another. If you had asked Clemens Grisham five years ago where she was heading, she would have said she was looking forward to a career as a university faculty scientist. She would pursue her own research, probably something to do with neurobiology, with graduate students assisting her. Talent isn a problem. Nicolson says Clemens Grisham has the skills to be productive in the lab and to become a fine scientist, conducting her own studies some day. Talent also isn a problem for Maureen Hoatlin, who co chairs OHSU rare disease consortium. In 2011 Hoatlin was awarded a patent after discovering a new way to screen compounds that block or amplify molecular pathways involved in cancer. Hoatlin believes that in time her discovery could help lead to a breakthrough in cancer research. But her research stopped when her funding from the National Institutes of Health disappeared last year. works, but we have to stop working on it, Hoatlin says. still looking for money on that. Nobody but me is going to pick it up. Hoatlin and Clemens Grisham have been pursuing basic research, traditionally performed at universities where faculty members get government grant funding through the National Institutes of Health. Basic research is less concerned with producing a new drug or therapy than with filling the scientific pipeline with new ideas that others might use. But in recent years NIH funding has declined in terms of real dollars. And this year federal sequestration budget set off a dramatic shift in the world of science. Basic research grants are increasingly hard for even established scientists such as Hoatlin to secure. The most devastating result of the reduced funding, say scientists in Portland and around the country, might be the impact on future scientists. Clemens Grisham recently applied for a job as a forensic scientist in Washington state. She thinking about a government job advising on science policy. Science writing appeals to her, too. And she consider an industry job, working for a pharmaceutical company. For the past five years, Clemens Grisham says, she has been watching the faculty principal investigators around her spend more of their time trying to secure funding than actually doing experiments. Eventually, she saw too many of the faculty members lose the NIH funding that had been sustaining their experiments for years. Research science no longer promised Clemens Grisham, 35, a stable career, so she looking elsewhere. will lose an entire generation of scientists as a result of this, and I don think I am exaggerating, says Mary Stenzel Poore, senior associate dean for research at OHSU. are absolutely dropping out of the workforce. Talent looks elsewhere The number of research projects funded by NIH has declined every year for the last decade. researchers in their labs, down from an average of 10 when funding levels peaked in 2008 and 2009. Hoatlin has employed between four and six lab scientists since 1997. With her most recent NIH funding applications rejected, her lab stands empty. see lab spaces that used to be teeming with people that only have a couple of people now, Hoatlin says. Hoatlin understands how the NIH cuts appear to young researchers such as Clemens Grisham. students and trainees see how my life is, Hoatlin say. they think, don want that life. They say, don think I can sit in my office and continuously write grants that are unlikely to be funded. researchers she worked with are continuing on the track toward full time scientific research. Dr. Jeffrey Kaye, who moved to OHSU in 1989 to head the Aging and Alzheimer program, says in his field of Alzheimer research the NIH has opted to fund three expensive studies at the expense of a wider range of research. Those three studies are looking at drugs that might affect production of a protein called amyloid the popular model for looking at Alzheimer a big bet, Kaye says. say that doesn work. Then what do we do? Do we wait another 20 years to develop a new strategy? Reduced funding also has led to a more cautious attitude on the part of NIH officials, Kaye says. Until the last few years, grant applications were awarded or declined within about six months. His lab submitted a grant proposal 18 months ago that received an excellent score and likely will be accepted. But 18 months is a long time in science, he says. The study is supposed to use technology such as motion sensors to determine how seniors move about their rooms in retirement homes and then send that information back to nurses or activity directors in real time so that they can address problems before they worsen. But the sensor technology mentioned in the grant proposal has changed since the application was sent in. making the science obsolete by the time the awards come in, Kaye says. One bright spot Stenzel Poore estimates that research funding at OHSU is down about 10 percent. Even grants that NIH chooses to award are coming in for less than the amount requested. Stenzel Poore says there could be a silver lining in the cutbacks though, as she is forced to creatively manage lab space. She says both of the immunologists she oversees have had their funding cut about in half, which means they have been able to retain half as many researchers. To save on the $70,000 a year rent each researcher must pay OHSU for lab space, Stenzel Poore has combined the two teams so that they fit into one lab and share equipment. Maybe, Stenzel Poore says, these types of new lab accommodations will further scientific progress. idea is you actually do science better when you share thinking and rub elbows with people working on similar problems, she says. But it the long term that has Stenzel Poore most concerned. Those young researchers leaving OHSU will at the very least probably move out of Portland, she says, because there are few biotech companies here to offer alternative employment.
New Wmns Nike Free 5.0 Wolf Grey Pink Force White Quilted,Nike Roshe Run Women Black White SILVERSTONE, England Williams driver Pastor Maldonado was fined and accused of being "very dangerous" for Formula One after ending a rival's race for a second successive grand prix on Sunday. The Venezuelan was hit with a C10,000 ($12,300) fine and reprimanded by stewards at the British Grand Prix after a collision with Sergio Perez shunted the Sauber driver off the track and out of the race at Silverstone. Two weeks ago, Maldonado received a 20 second penalty at the European Grand Prix, knocking him out of the points, after crashing into Lewis Hamilton and sending the McLaren into a wall. The controversies have taken the gloss off Maldonado's first ever win, at the Spanish Grand Prix in May, with Perez demanding tougher action against him. "He is a very stupid driver. He ran Hamilton out of the race in Valencia," Perez said. Wmns Nike Free 5.0 Wolf Grey Pink Force White Quilted So this is kind of strange thing but my son is having weird toenail issues. He has always hated his toenails cut and it has always been a struggle to do, well in August I think around the end I noticed they looked like they were bubbled up and peeling on one big toe. I kept an eye on it and it kept becoming a bigger bubble and then I noticed it was on the other big toe too and finally it peeled off in little sections and now they are both replaced by thinner toenails and one has a strong crease in the middle of it. It happened on one of his second toes too and one of his pinky toes has a funky looking nail too. I called the ped and she said that sometimes it just happens, but to keep an eye on it and see a dermatologist in 6 months if it isn't cleared up. It never looked infected or like it was a fungal thing and I never saw him get hurt. I had read online that sometimes if they have nutrient deficiencies it can happen, but he eats well so I'm not sure. I wondered if anyone else had this? It seems to be getting better but the big crease in the toenail and how thin they look concerns me a little. Honestly if I were you, I'd see a dermatologist before your ped suggested. I waited over a year like my doctor suggested about my nail condition and I found out that I have psoriasis of the nails and not another nail condition. He told me to keep a close eye on my children and if I suppect that they even might have psoriasis to make them an appointment. Thanks guys I had been doing a gummi vitamin, but half the time he refused to eat it so then I kind of forgot about it. But I bought him Flintstone my first vitamins and he loves taking those each day so I'll see how that helps. I was talking to a neighbor yesterday and she said her granddaughter got a fungal thing from trying on shoes without socks. I had bought my son these Cars crocs at a consignment sale and although I thought I had througly cleaned them with lysol and what not maybe he got a little nail infection from those. He did wear them without socks sometimes this summer. He is going for his 2 year checkup in a couple weeks and I am going to have the doctor look at them and see her thoughts and if she can't give me something definitive then I think I am going to call a dermatologist to be safe as you suggested.
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