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Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing is a children's novel written by American author Judy Blume and published in 1972. [1] It is the first in the Fudge series and was followed by Otherwise Known as Sheila the Great , Superfudge , Fudge-a-Mania , and Double Fudge (2002).
Peter believes Sheila is a real know-it-all. She was the "Queen of Cooties" even when she was in 4th grade. She gives up cooties sometime between the fourth and seventh chapters of the first book. She is incredibly bossy, which is especially evidenced when she tries to run a report committee (which Peter and Jimmy were also in) by herself.
Book reports may be accompanied by other creative works such as illustrations, "shoe box" dioramas, or report covers. [3] Individual components of the book report can also be made into separate artistic works, including pop-up cards, newsletters, character diaries, gameboards, word searches, and story maps. [2]
The post-2002 reprints of the book have some lines edited and a bit of new content added to update the technology use in it (for instance, record players are replaced with CD players, and the summer camp's copy machine keeps malfunctioning, which is why Sheila must use a mimeograph machine, whereas the original had them already still using ...
The Cereal Box Mystery: 1998 66 The Panther Mystery: 1998 67 The Mystery of the Stolen Sword: 1998 68 The Basketball Mystery: 1999 69 The Movie Star Mystery: 1999 70 The Mystery of the Pirate's Map: 1999 71 The Ghost Town Mystery: 1999 72 The Mystery in the Mall: 1999 73 The Gymnastics Mystery: 1999 74 The Poison Frog Mystery: 2000 75 The ...
Melis based his cereal box viewer design on NASA's. George Melis, a sophomore at Clarkstown South, shows the items needed to build a cereal box eclipse viewer at Cornell Cooperative Extension in ...
The definitive history on breakfast cereal toys and the industry itself was written by Craig L Hall in the book Breakfast Barons, Cereal Critters and the Rosenhain & Lipmann Legacy 2002. [1] This was a first history of the industry based upon original research and interviews with the cereal company employees and plastics firm Rosenhain ...
Morning Funnies is a fruit-flavored breakfast cereal produced by Ralston Cereals in 1988 and 1989. The name of the cereal was based on the assortment of newspaper comic strips featured on the box. Innovative packaging allowed the back flap of the box to be opened revealing additional comic strips, different on each edition of the cereal box.