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In Beaver and Wally's bedroom, they get into a fight, which sends Beaver's new computer flying out the open window. Wally grabs the wire and tries to pull it in, but the wire breaks, and it crashes on the ground and smashes into pieces. This results in Ward completely losing all of his patience and grounding Beaver and Wally.
Here's Beaver! New York : Berkley, 1961. Berkley Medallion book [10] Beaver and Wally New York : Berkley, 1961. [11] Juvenile books Leave It to Beaver by Lawrence Alson New York : Golden Books, 1959; Leave It to Beaver: Fire by Cole Fannin Racine, Wisconsin; Whitman Publishing Company 1962 [12] [13] There was also a novelization of the 1997 film:
Beaver wants the bigger boys to notice him so he tells a fib about a real, live Indian fight that occurred across the street from the Cleaver house a hundred years ago. Beaver even bets Eddie Haskell a dollar fifty that it really happened. The bigger boys dig for artifacts in the field and find garnets. They dream of becoming "jillionaires".
The movie ticket company Fandango is reaching the digital streaming market too with the Vudu app, a movie app that offers rentals, purchases and free movies for streaming. Powered by ads, Vudu ...
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
Doris Packer (May 30, 1904 – March 31, 1979) was an American actress, possibly best known for her recurring role as Mrs. Cornelia Rayburn, Theodore Cleaver's elementary school principal in the television series, Leave It to Beaver. Packer portrayed the mother of millionaire playboy Chatsworth Osborne, Jr. on CBS's The Many Loves of Dobie ...
Fafara left Leave It to Beaver in 1960 and stopped acting professionally in 1961. Fafara returned to acting in 1983 with an appearance as the adult Tooey Brown in the television reunion film Still the Beaver. [2] He reprised the role in the follow-up sitcom The New Leave It to Beaver, from 1983 to 1987.
After East Coast businessman Jay Randolph Lattimore approves the designs for a new gymnasium he is donating, he discusses with his attorney and an associate how he has recently undergone a complete personality change: Susan, the widow of Lattimore's son Tom, who was killed in the war, confronts the gruff, bitter Lattimore with the news that she and her six-year-old daughter Joan will no longer ...