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How Do I Get Rid Of The Magazine Style Yahoo Homepage And Go Back To The Old Style

How do I get the old Yahoo homepage back? I HATE the new one!!!!!!!?

Instructions for "resetting" your home page to the old Yahoo! web page vs. the "new and improved" version.

1. Open your browser and go to a non-Yahoo web page.

2. Go into your options and clear your cookies.

3. Block the following cookie: m.www.yahoo.com

4. Close your browser (just for giggles).

5. Open your browser. You should be able to get the old Yahoo! web page even after you log back into your Yahoo! account.

This works for me using Mozilla FireFox 3.

What are some ways of getting the old Yahoo homepage back?

First, visit:Digital Library of Free Books, Movies, Music & Wayback MachineIn the top box, type in the address and click the buttonChoose a date and look at the site in all its archived glory. The site will be mostly broken though.Other than that, no. There is no way “to get back” the old Yahoo homepage.

Will the Victorian or Edwardian fashion come back again?

Probably not - not fully, anyway. Pieces of it have actually come back into fashion, such as choker necklaces, crochet gloves, some hat styles, button-up boots, and so on.
The women's suffrage movement destroyed the usage of corsets, a piece essential to Victorian and Edwardian women's fashion, and affected dress length as well (though that was changed more by the war efforts and periods of economic hardship). Today, I don't think it would be practical or in line with our beliefs to go about wearing the same dress styles they did during the Victorian or Edwardian eras - and that is the reason why such fashions will never totally come back, unless our way of living and way of thinking undergo some dramatic alteration.

I do admit that I like some styles of those times... but the men's are better than the women's by a mile. I'm happy that I am living in modern times and wearing 'breeches.'

If L'Eggs Pantyhose company started advertising in teen magazines, would pantyhose come back into style?

L'eggs advertising in teen magazines could only help, but it might not be enough. The pantyhose bashing of the last 15 years has truly changed our culture. L'eggs could have and should have approached Beyonce, Jessica Alba, and Zooey Deschanel and asked them to endorse Sheer Energy. These 3 young women are stars, they are hip, and they wear pantyhose regularly. If one or all of these ladies endorsed L'eggs, then they could appear in teen magazine ads. That would work better than ads with unknown models.

L'eggs blew their teen chances with the 2 Scooby Doo live action movies. The character of Daphne in the original cartoon wore pink pantyhose. Daphne is unique; she is a "cartoon pantyhose icon". When the first movie was under production, L'eggs could have made Sheer Energy in pink, shown them on the legs of the screen Daphne, sold them in movie theaters, and advertised them in teen magazines next to articles about the movie. But L'eggs (and the entire hosiery industry) dropped the ball, and instead the screen Daphne was bared legged instead. Sad.

The good news: hosiery as fashion appropriate have been on an up swing since 2006, when every USA fashion magazine declared black tights as "in". Starting in 2007, sheer pantyhose back to once again appear on fashion runways. In 2008 & 2009, the runway sightings increased. In spite of this, mainstream USA has not caught up with the fashion world. You see more pantyhose being worn, and tights are seen in much greater quantities, but the numbers are still small compared to their peak years (70's & 80's for pantyhose; early 90's for tights).

We salute you for keeping the pantyhose flame alive. Good luck to you.

TRAINING AT 51 YRS OLD?

Yes, muscles will respond to training at any age. The muscles that you already use to move around will increase their size, or power, or strength, or stamina, if they receive the right stimulation.

The advice you can get from magazines is fairly unreliable; right now, there is a 'fashion' for leaving a week between bodypart sessions, regardless of your age. It isn't necessary to stick to a particular routine in that way, and the right programme for YOU won't necessarily follow current fashions.

For experienced bodybuilders of yor age, training hard enough to need a week of recovery is probably a good option, but if you are not used to working out in an 'anabolic' way, it is probably a good idea to start out more gradually.

Your muscles will grow (stronger, more powerful, or bigger, according to the details of how you 'challenge' them) in response to movements that 'resist' their activity strongly. So training against springs, rubber bands and tubes, weights attached to bars, and your own bodyweight are all good options.

The easiest training to start out with uses bodyweight. Pressups, squats, pullups, l-sits and handstands will all make a difference to your physique if you are not used to performing them already.

If you are good at all of these, you will respond better to other, more specific, muscle group exercises. But if you are not already good at performing 'calisthenic' type movements, you should probably avoid heavy gymwork until you have developed some of these skills.

Going straight into a focused bodybuilding programme is likely to injure you at any age, but if you gradually introduce your body to challenging levels of resistance training (start with things you can do every day, like a target of 50 pressups in a row, increasing weekly from 3 sets of 'whatever you can do now'), it will gradually adapt so that you eventually become able to withstand the physical demands of very heavy gymwork.

While you are starting this long-term process, you can also make gradual changes to your diet, so that it gets better at supporting the training you do as that training programme also develops.

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