Create a Web page about one of your hands. If you are right-handed, make it about your left hand; if left-handed, make it about your right hand.
1. Make a title for your page, centered and 24 point.
Save it as I:MyHand
2. Type your name below the title, centered, 18 point.
3. Do a Ctrl-S save every time you add an element or
every 5 minutes, which ever comes first.
3. Create a 2-row, 2-column table that is centered on
your page. Deselect "Equal column width". Make sure there is a blank line
between your title and your table.
4. Put a picture of your hand on the left and describe
it on the right.
(What do you use that hand for that you don't use your other hand for? How strong or coordinated is that hand compared to the other? Are you glad you are right- or left-handed, or would you like to be ambidextrous?)5. Find a picture of a right or left hand on the Internet, depending on which one you are making your page about and put it below the first picture. Describe it on the right.
Below is an example of how your page should look:
Left Hands
Hulda Nystrom
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My left hand is often my "other" hand: I am right-handed. My left hand is mostly a helping hand. It doesn't do lots of things as well as my right hand, like writing, cutting things or throwing balls. But my left hand is better at holding things that my right hand works on. So it all works out. It's a good thing I have both hands and that both of them work! |
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The "Blinde Kuh" (Blind Cow) Web site explains how to play guitar. Shown is the left hand, which presses the strings to make chords. Left hands are important! |