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result(s) for
"Wilhelm, Doug"
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The revealers
by
Wilhelm, Doug
in
Bullying Juvenile fiction.
,
Internet Juvenile fiction.
,
Friendship Juvenile fiction.
2011
Tired of being bullied and picked on, three seventh-grade outcasts join forces and, using scientific methods and the power of the Internet, begin to create a new atmosphere at Parkland Middle School.
Alexander the Great : master of the ancient world
by
Wilhelm, Doug, author
in
Alexander, the Great, 356 B.C.-323 B.C. Juvenile literature.
,
Alexander, the Great, 356 B.C.-323 B.C.
,
Generals Greece Biography Juvenile literature.
2016
An introduction to Alexander the Great, who \"became king of Macedonia at age 20--but no kingdom could contain [his ambition]. He would carve a 12,000-mile path across Asia, defeating princes, satraps, and kings. Alexander, it was said, was the son of a god. He could not be defeated in battle. And he was destined to rule the world\"--Amazon.com.
THE YOUNG WRITERS PROJECT: ON WRITING
by
Wilhelm, Doug
in
Cold
2005
[...] producing a draft, and then revising it. About the Author Doug Wilhelm's 10th novel for young adults, \"The Revealers\" (Farrar Straus & Giroux, 2003), deals with bullying and has been, or this year is, the focus of reading and discussion projects in more than 70 Vermont schools.
Newspaper Article
New England Notebook
1989
FAYSTON, Vt.-- When Dave Lamont scouts a garage sale, he looks low to the ground.
Newspaper Article
Is Vermont losing its special quality?
1987
SOUTH NEWBURY, Vt.--For years, the state's own slogans--\"A Special World.\" \"The Beckoning Country\"--have promoted Vermont. Now, more and more Vermonters worry that their state has beckoned so successfully, luring such a swelling tide of growth and...
Newspaper Article
BORDERING ON THE LITERARY; LIBRARY CARD IS VISA FOR US-CANADA TRIP
1986
The fine old library was built of brick in 1901. It was commissioned by Martha Stewart Haskell, whose family were prosperous merchants in Quebec, and whose late husband's people were prosperous merchants in Derby Line. Mrs. Haskell and her son Horace left the library with a modest endowment and a constitution stating that it must loan books free to its neighbors on both sides, it must pay no taxes and its trustees must include four Vermonters and three from Quebec. That's how the arrangement still works.
Newspaper Article
Funeral for murdered officer to be held today
2006
Windsor police called in forces from other jurisdictions to police the city, freeing up local officers to attend the funeral. Since local police had no expertise in planning such a large funeral -- Atkinson's death was the only on-duty murder of a Windsor police officer in 120 years -- they called in the Toronto police service to help handle the details. Toronto alone will send several hundred officers, said Mark Pugash, director of corporate communications for the Toronto Police Service. Windsor Staff Sgt. Ed McNorton said other details include bomb- sniffing dogs because of the dignitaries in attendance and reminding American officers not to bring firearms across the border.
Newspaper Article
Thousands of police officers will honour memory of fallen comrade
by
Trevor Wilhelm and Doug Schmidt, with files from Amanda Ferguson, Sonja Puzic and David George-Cosh
in
Atkinson, John
,
McNorton, Ed
2006
EDS: Today in copy is Thursday
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