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Beaver is allowed to select any book to read for a book report. Ward suggests Treasure Island but cannot find his copy; he loans Beaver his library card to borrow the book from the public library. Beaver and Larry go to the library and a conspicuously forgetful Beaver takes out the book. A few days later he reads his report to Wally.
The series comprises 234, full-screen, black-and-white episodes, excluding the pilot. The show was televised from October 4, 1957, to June 20, 1963. The pilot, titled "It's a Small World", aired on April 23, 1957. [1] It featured Casey Adams as Ward Cleaver, and Paul Sullivan as Wally Cleaver.
Shoshanna struggles to balance her academic and personal life throughout season 3 and discovers she is ineligible for graduation after failing a class. [20] While she eventually graduates, she finds the postgraduate career search more difficult than she expected. At the end of season 4, Shoshana meets Scott at a job interview and they begin dating.
While the majority of Leave It to Beaver's 234 episodes took a week to film, Mathers says that the series finale was shot entirely in one day.That's because "Family Scrapbook" was conceived as a ...
American Pie Presents: Girls' Rules is a 2020 American sex comedy film directed by Mike Elliott. [1] It is the fifth installment of the American Pie Presents film series, a spin-off of the American Pie franchise and the ninth overall installment. [2] It is the first film in the franchise to not feature Eugene Levy and also the first to contain ...
Miss Canfield is a fictional character in the American television sitcom Leave It to Beaver. She is portrayed by Diane Brewster. The character appeared in four first season episodes. Brewster then left the series without explanation. Sue Randall stepped in to play Beaver's teacher, Alice Landers, over the following seasons. In "Beaver’s ...
Martha Bronson is a fictional recurring character in the American television sitcom Leave It to Beaver. "Aunt Martha," as she is known in the series, appears in five of the show's 234 episodes and is mentioned occasionally but not seen.
Chevapravatdumrong was at one time the only female writer on Family Guy (a fact mentioned in the episode "Roasted Guy"), and also a co-executive producer. Her last name was used in its entirety in the episode "And I'm Joyce Kinney" as the real last name of Joyce Kinney. When asked why she changed her name, Joyce responds "because they would ...