First make sure that you are in Page Builder view. To 'unpin' a link you'll need to click the red pin icon next to that link. You won't be able to delete a link or a section without 'unpinning' it first.To delete links or entire sections, find the toolbar of icons that controls it and click the X.
To move the links where the pin links were previously, you can click the up arrow icon or the down arrow icon to move the up or down one space, respectively. To move it to the top or the bottom of the list, click the button with the double arrow.To drag a section or link with your mouse, you'll need to click and hold the hand icon. The section will then pop out and a dotted line will show where it will be placed if you released the click there.
Clicking the arrows will also move it up or down in its respective column.To see what those icons mean, you should click the + next to "Legend" on the Page Builder menu. To 'pin' something where it was, simply click the pin icon again. Also check out the How to Build a Mahalo Page and the How to Update a Mahalo Page for more help.
Hope this helps!
Interesting bug, I've gone ahead and unpinned them for you. Lets see now if you can pin something new, and unpin it again. I wonder if it just had something to do with those particular pins or if its every pin?
If you are having trouble getting it unpinned, just click it again, wait about 30 seconds then reload the page and try again. This is one of the bugs they are working on this month. It should work just as @danno described it.
The X for deleting unpinned sections should work fine though. Hadn't heard of it giving anyone problems... if it persists... add it to the bug thread. =).
For this I will suggest you that you have to take help of mahalo.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.