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"The Book Report" Hugh Beaumont: Dick Conway & Roland MacLane: April 18, 1963 () 16182: 226: 31 "The Poor Loser" David Butler: Dick Conway & Roland MacLane: April 25, 1963 () 16183: 227: 32 "Don Juan Beaver" Hugh Beaumont: Teleplay by : Joe Connelly & Bob Mosher From a Story by: David Levinson: May 2, 1963 () 16185: 228: 33
The second season of the American television situation comedy Leave It to Beaver premiered on October 2, 1958 and concluded on June 25, 1959. It consisted of 39 episodes shot in black-and-white, each running approximately 25 minutes in length.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts.
In 2007, The New York Review of Books published a positive review of Fieldwork from Hilary Mantel: [12] Early in Mischa Berlinski's gripping and entertaining first novel there is a piece of postmodern skittishness which points to a truth that novelists shy away from: their trade embarrasses them.
The World According to Beaver. TV Books, 1984, 1998. (ISBN 1575000520). Bank, Frank. Call Me Lumpy: my Leave It To Beaver days and other wild Hollywood life . Addax, 2002. (ISBN 1886110298), (ISBN 978-1886110298). Colella, Jennifer. The Leave It to Beaver Guide to Life: wholesome wisdom from the Cleavers! Running Press, 2006.
Fred is the head of the "Rancho Rutherford" household and is married to Geraldine/Gwendolyn. He is balding, and self-aggrandizing, the father of a son named Clarence (nicknamed "Lumpy" by everyone in town), played by Frank Bank, and a daughter named Violet, played by Wendy Winkelman and later by Veronica Cartwright.
Leave It to Beaver episodes (1957-1963) — an American sitcom television series. Pages in category " Leave It to Beaver episodes" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total.
"Leave It to Beaver" is the twenty-second and final episode of the first season of the American television series Veronica Mars. Series creator Rob Thomas wrote the story, and collaborated with Diane Ruggiero to write the teleplay. The season finale was directed by Michael Fields, and was first aired on May 10, 2005, in the United States on UPN.