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Arthur and his friends discover a snake hidden in the woods and sneak it into Arthur's room with a shoe box. However, the snake goes on the loose and Arthur realizes that keeping snakes in the house is against the rule. To make matters worse, the kids cannot remember if it is a venomous coral snake or the similarly-colored, but harmless ...
Arthur, Buster, and Ladonna suspect that an old doll is haunting their tree house. Meanwhile, Francine meets an elderly woman who claims to have encountered a golem, Binky finds himself in Mr. Ratburn's haunted house, and Muffy and her butler Bailey get stuck in the cemetery.
Binky has an adopted baby sister from China named Mei-Lin. He is a bully and a member of the Tough Customers, a group of thugs and bullies, but has a soft side and is close with Arthur and his friends. In the episode "Binky Barnes, Art Expert", he tries to help Arthur and Buster [clarification needed]. In the episode "Big Horns George", he ...
In 2010, Barnes was interviewed at Florida State Prison by German filmmaker Werner Herzog as part of his television series On Death Row. Six weeks later, Barnes sent a letter to Herzog confessing to the unsolved murders of Chester Wetmore and Brenda Fletcher. He said that he wished to resolve the unresolved crimes he committed before he died. [3]
The second season of the television series Arthur was originally broadcast on PBS in the United States from October 20, 1997, to April 17, 1998, and contains 20 episodes. [1] [2] [3] This season, like seasons 1 and 3, was released on DVD in Europe only; due to the fact that this was actually two production seasons (the first ten episodes encompassing the first and the last ten encompassing the ...
Arthur and Buster play a Dark Bunny video game, and when the game breaks, both of them accuse each other of sabotage and break up. Meanwhile, the rest of their friends choose sides and split into "teams" even after Arthur and Buster get over the fight. Together with Binky, they hatch a plan to squash the feud between their classmates.
“And if my death could … change what I did, I would gladly die.” Underwood also apologized to the victim’s family and his own family. “I can’t believe I did those things,” he continued.
The number of death row inmates changes frequently with new convictions, appellate decisions overturning conviction or sentence alone, commutations, or deaths (through execution or otherwise). [2] Due to this fluctuation as well as lag and inconsistencies in inmate reporting procedures across jurisdictions , the information may become outdated.