The snowball cookie dough is a made with your classic dough ingredients flour, butter, sugar and nuts. Many snowball recipes call for almonds to be the nuts in the dough, but my snowballs are Southern snowballs and in the South we use pecans! A Southern snowball cookie dough is made with flour, butter, sugar and pecans. Southern snowballs are super sweet and more nutty in flavor, which comes from toasting from the pecans.

I have done the snowball activity in my classroom of 6th graders last year. We used it as a review activity with colored paper. Which ever color they picked up they had to go find that math problem and solve it. The kids loved it and I did too! ? I might try it as an ice breaker as well!


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The students will have the whiteboards at their desks before we start ( paper and pencil work too), then I will pass out the problems (usually 2-3 per person) and they will wad them up if necessary. They have the fight for approximately 30 seconds, then I tell them to stop and work out their problems. I am free to walk around and check understanding while the students work on their problems. After a few minutes, the answers are revealed on the board, and students collect more snowballs and we repeat. At the end of class the students put the snowballs in a basket to be reused for the other classes. Your students could write on the snowballs, but then you would be limited to the number of times you could solve problems.

I did something similar to this last year for a test review. Students worked a several problems on a blank sheet of paper, crumpled it up threw the balls around for a minute then we stopped picked up a snowball and graded it. Snowballs were then returned to the original owners so each student could review and ask questions if needed. The students loved it, however I noticed two small negatives: we had trouble locating all of the snow balls and after more than one round of problems the crumpled papers were too hard to read. The kids love it though!

High school students take turns talking about what they learned from Operation Snowball and what they enjoyed about the event at Kadena High School on Kadena Air Base, Japan, March 22, 2014. The students spent their Saturday learning about making healthy choices, effective communication and sexual assault prevention. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Marcus Morris)

The core issue with social anxiety is that nervous thoughts can accumulate and build upon themselves. This process can be explained by an official psychological term: rumination. Psychologist Ryan Howes explains that rumination is defined as the compulsive tendency to overthink. The idea is you get one anxious thought, which leads to another, and a snowball effect occurs.

Lisa found Snowball pawing at a secret door in the house. She followed him then Snowball started speaking to her. Snowball started talking about how the cat was the symbol of intelligence before getting distracted by the light of Lisa's flashlight. Snowball then showed Lisa to her other family, who had buttons for eyes. Later, Snowball took Bart to the other family, and Lisa revealed to Bart that Snowball could talk. Later, he told Homer that he had lost his family, and that he could speak on the non-button side, he just didn't like to as it made Santa's Little Helper feel inferior.[1]

A snowball is a spherical object made from snow, usually created by scooping snow with the hands and pressing the snow together to compact it into a ball.[1] Snowballs are often used in games such as snowball fights.

A snowball may also be a large ball of snow formed by rolling a smaller snowball on a snow-covered surface. The smaller snowball grows by picking up additional snow as it rolls. The terms "snowball effect" and "snowballing" are derived from this process. The Welsh dance "Y Gasseg Eira" also takes its name from an analogy with rolling a large snowball.[2] This method of forming a large snowball is often used to create the sections needed to build a snowman.

The underlying physical process that makes snowballs possible is sintering, in which a solid mass is compacted while near the melting point.[3] Scientific theories about snowball formation began with a lecture by Michael Faraday in 1842, examining the attractive forces between ice particles. An influential early explanation by James Thomson invoked regelation, in which a solid is melted by pressure and then re-frozen.[4]

When forming a snowball by packing, the pressure exerted by the hands on the snow is a determinant for the final result. Reduced pressure leads to a light and soft snowball. Compacting humid or "packing" snow by applying a high pressure produces a harder snowball, sometimes called an ice ball, which can injure an opponent during a snowball fight.

Temperature is important for snowball formation. It is hard to make a good snowball if the snow is too cold.[1] In addition, snowballs are difficult to form with a dry powdery snow. In temperatures below 0 C (32 F), there is little free water in the snow, which leads to crumbly snowballs. At 0 C (32 F) or above, melted water in the snow results in a better cohesion.[5] Above a certain temperature, however, the snowball too easily becomes slush, which lacks mechanical strength and no longer sticks together.[6] This effect is used in the rule that, in skiing areas, there is a high risk of avalanche if it is possible to squeeze water out of a snowball.[7]

On this day, three years ago, Senator James Inhofe (R-Okla.), chair of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, appeared with a snowball on the Senate floor to demonstrate, once and for all, that climate change is a hoax.

Davis, C. (2011, March). Using snowball discussion. Paper presented at Lilly Conference on College and University Teaching, Lilly West: International Alliance of Teacher Scholars, Pomona, CA. (March 2011).

Assuming that policy/guideline/essay articles should also be in SE, this article probably needs to exist under a new name. A snowball's chance in hell is an interesting and humorous idiom but not really germane to the purpose of the essay, and I see no grounds for a trade-off that discourages participation by limited-English users in the interest of a fun little Wikipedia inside joke. - Regards, PhilipR (talk) 07:09, 9 January 2010 (UTC)Reply[reply]

OKLAHOMA CITY - U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Tulsa, who often points to cold weather to refute global warming, brought a snowball (real Washington DC snow!) to the floor of the U.S. Senate on Thursday afternoon and tossed it before delivering remarks about how President Barack Obama and environmentalists keep talking about global warming but it keeps getting cold.

The town of Wausau, Wis., feels it's gotten a bum rap from the media. Several news outlets reported that the place just wasn't fun because it had enacted anti-snowball fight legislation. Well, actually, the law was instituted way back in 1962 and is now being revised to exclude snowballs. And to make the point, the town taped a snowball fight between some Wausau cops, the mayor and the deputy chief of police.

FADEL: Yeah. Well, thank you for joining us. And, honestly, I don't know what people are talking about. Wausau looks pretty fun to me. Can you tell me a little bit about that original ordinance and how this all started?

MIELKE: Well, this got started back in 1962. And to be honest, most communities, from what I understand, including anybody around ours in the upper Midwest where there's snow, have the same type of law in their book. Really, it has not been enforced, as far as snowballs, for years. But really, it's to cover different things because we've had issues, as far as people using crossbows, or arrows get stuck in their neighbors' houses or trees. We've even had a gentleman that was throwing sandbags from park - top of one of our parking structures. It's really designed for something like that.

And I - from what I understand, I think the police have only ticketed somebody with a snowball throwing - and that's because it was thrown at cars - I think twice in the last 15, 20 years. So, I mean, it's not something the cops are looking for.

FADEL: So the law covers, as you said, any kind of projectile. And snowballs kind of got lumped in there. And the reaction Wausau got when news organizations improperly reported about it - talk to me about that.

But that Thursday, I woke up, and I was talking with our chief of police, Ben Bliven, who's a great guy, and we kind of share the same sense of humor. And we were just kind of talking back-and-forth. You know, we should do something fun and positive with this but try to get our point across, too. And he came up with the idea as far as a snowball fight. I was surprised when I got hit. I guess I'm up for a best supporting actor because I acted like I got dinged on the head pretty good.

In this case, we're talking about desperation, and the Cardinals had none of it. John Brown and Rob Housler failed to catch touchdown passes. Michael Floyd was a non-factor. Ted Ginn Jr. was a detriment. The offense was defined by dropped passes and a lack of playmaking, a condition that affected so many that it had to be a lack of overall focus. ff782bc1db

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