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She lives with the twins and has gray hair tied in a high bun. In early Arthur books, Mrs. Tibble is a human; however, many newer books and the cartoon depict her as a bear. Miss Tingley is Principal Haney's secretary and the assistant principal of Lakewood Elementary School. One time she was afraid of Miss Sweetwater's singing and Mr. Haney's ...
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 brings a cake Mr. Read made to a party in Mr. Ratburn's class celebrating Galileo's birthday. Everyone enjoys the cake, so Arthur brings in even more desserts to build his school popularity, unaware of the work he is imposing on Mr. Read until he sees that he made him fall behind on a crucial order for Ed.
Arthur is determined to win a year's supply of his favorite breakfast cereal, Crunch, by composing a jingle, but he cannot come up with any ideas. He hears D.W. singing a song about Nadine and copies it. Arthur feels guilty, so he mails the song with D.W.'s name instead of his, and it wins the contest, much to D.W.'s confusion.
Most commonly, the meaning of "DW" in text is "don't worry." (Doctor Who or Arthur fans everywhere may disagree.) This meaning applies to social media platforms such as Facebook and Instagram as ...
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.
Luckily, both explain their sides of the story: Arthur claims that D.W ran too fast into the kitchen and bumped into the table, while D.W claims that Arthur pushed her into the table. Mrs. Read figures out that the truth was a combination of the two stories, and they make amends by helping their father make a new soufflé.
At the ripe old age of 30, Heather Locklear thought she was too old to be on Melrose Place. “I was, like, 30. Or almost 30 or something like that,” Locklear, 63, continued. “And you guys ...