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PM Teacher's Guides provide a structured Guided Reading lesson plan for each PM title within that level
Sean O'Reilly is in his final year at Bunnalong High School where he captains the football team. Everyone calls him 'Pencil' because he's long and wiry and draws the ball to him wherever he goes on the field. Pencil plays for local club, the Gippsland Power, where he's won the best and fairest award for the past three years. Everyone expects him to be drafted to a team in the city. Essendon is his club of choice. His grandfather played there. The scouts are out in the bush as usual and a few of them spot Pencil in action. There's a bit of interest from the Bombers. 'We want you to come to town with us when school's over,' they tell him. In the grand final, Pencil is everywhere on the field: ...
Patricia Edgar has been named one of the ten most influential people in the development of Australian television production. Her candid memoir offers a rare behind-the-scenes look at the television industry and its politics. It also tells her own story-of how a young girl from Mildura became a leading innovator in Australian children's television production, and a voice to be reckoned with in a tough business. As a regulator and policy maker, Dr Edgar's take-no-prisoners style won her great fans and made her bitter enemies. Dr Edgar was the first woman appointed to the Australian Broadcasting Control Board. For ten years she fought for more locally produced, first-release children's drama on...
A collection of historical photographs of people, places, and events in the history of the Newport, Oregon area, where the Yaquina River flows into the Pacific Ocean. Each photograph is described in captions and brief introductory remarks at the beginnings of each chapter place the entries in the chronology of area history.
Provides a balanced view on the many issues relating to the treatment and care of Australian dogs.
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Jack was born in Stratford, Ontario, Oct. 17th, 1928. He spent his growing up years on the old farm on the Mitchell Road near the village of Motherwell, Fullarton Township, Perth County, Ontario. In 1942 at the age of 14 he contracted scarlet fever, which destroyed his hearing and any chance of a normal life or to further his education. Unable to find steady work because of his hearing loss he was encouraged to become a barber by Dickie Thorne, the local shoe store man in his home town of Mitchell. For over forty years Jack cut hair in south London. This is the story of the life and times of Jack the Barber, Getting By In A Silent World.
Step into another world where the rules of reality bend and twist as Jim Howes tells you stories that might make you choose to leave the lights on when you go to sleep...Billy wants to get hold of some extra cash and takes a job as night manager of a small gallery. When he sees an opportunity to make more money than he ever thought possible and get away with it, the idea seem too good to be true...and it just might be.Chester is so far into computer games that e lacks the basic social skills to carry out most normal things of daily life. When he takes a selfish turn, his life is suddenly filled with strange characters who seem intent on hunting him down. Chester has no idea where they came from, what they want or, most importantly, how to stop them!
Praise for Gerald Astor "No one does oral history better than Gerald Astor. . . . Great reading." -Stephen Ambrose on The Mighty Eighth "Gerald Astor has proven himself a master. Here, World War II is brought to life through the hammer blows of their airborne triumphs and fears." -J. Robert Moskin, author of Mr. Truman's War, on The Mighty Eighth "Astor captures the fire and passion of those tens of thousands of U.S. airmen who flew through the inferno that was the bomber war over Europe." -Stephen Coonts on The Mighty Eighth "Oral history at its finest." -The Washington Post on Operation Iceberg "Quick and well-paced, this will please even the most jaded of readers." -Army magazine on Battl...