The star of Thank You Bear returns to make a new friend, as well as a wonderful discovery. When Caterpillar tells Bear that he is making a cocoon, Bear is worried. Will Caterpillar be safe? Will he be warm? Will he stay dry?
Added by: Piotr Borowski | Karma: 0 | Audiobooks | 4 September 2013
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Type in your worry . . . Is anything bothering you? Problems in class or at home? Don't know where to turn for help? Log on to the Worry Website! Type in your worry and wait for the good advice to flow in. At least that's the plan when Mr Speed sets up his super-cool new Worry Website for the class. Holly, Greg, Natasha and the rest feel that they've got shedloads of worries but, as they find out, sometimes the best advice comes from the most unexpected place. A fabulous collection of linked short stories from the bestselling, award-winning Jacqueline Wilson. Reuploaded Thanks to wepr and RainbowEU
Is a loved one missing some body parts? Are blondes becoming extinct? Is everyone at your dinner table of the same species? Humans and chimpanzees differ in only 400 genes; is that why a chimp fetus resembles a human being? And should that worry us? There's a new genetic cure for drug addiction--is it worse than the disease?
Its Easy Being Green: Simple Ways to Save the Planet
This book provides a short introduction to what "being green" means, and identifies the key steps that make the most difference for the least effort and cost. Do these easy things first and worry about the hard stuff later.
Tiger Economies Under Threat: A Comparative Analysis of Malaysias Industrial Prospects and Policy Options
Southeast Asian tiger economies feel threatened by competition from other countries and worry that their growth momentum might be flagging. Even though their growth rates are above the average for the world and for developing countries, they fall short of yesterday s economic performance. The underlying worry is that they presage the beginning of a downward trend, the harbingers of which are lower rates of investment, persistently low rates of total factor productivity and low levels of innovativeness. The South East Asian tigers worries motivate three questions: