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Terms: disney
Matches: 14    Displayed: 9


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  1. Discover Magazine (The Walt Disney Company)
      Provides science articles and science news.

  2. Children's Search Engine (Disney)
      Disney's Internet Guide (DIG) provides an index to child-safe sites, as well as a search engine.

  3. The Disney Channel
      Provides the Disney Channel. 10-09

  4. Games from Disney (DisneyChannel.com)
      Provides over a dozen games. 7-04

  5. Nutcracker (Thinkquest)
      Provides a brief history on Tchaikovsky's The Nutcracker ballet, music and dance involving toys and associated with Christmas. Made famous by Disney in a pioneering work that included animated characters.

  6. Clark, Ron - The 2000 Outstanding Teacher of the Year (Oprah.com)
      Provides an interview with Ron Clark, a hero recognized by the Disney 2000 Outstanding Teacher of the Year and Oprah Magazine's first "Phenomenal Man." 1-02

  7. -04-05-08 New Websites for Kids Growing Fast (US News)
      "Maybe it's the desire to protect our children from the ravages of unfettered Web surfing. Or maybe it's the $350 million that Disney paid last year to buy Club Penguin, a site popular with the preteen set. Whatever the motive, online sites and services aimed at tweens and younger are bouncing up faster than a 6-year-old on a sugar high." 04-08

  8. Hannah Montana and Miley Cyrus (Time.com)
      "Four years later, Cyrus is very publicly a ginormous teen star, with three best-selling albums (on Disney's record label), the memoir (on Disney's book label), a sold-out concert tour, a record-obliterating 3-D concert movie, enough merchandise to test the deepest parental pockets and, on April 10, Hannah Montana: The Movie." 04-09

  9. History of High-Speed Rail (UCSD.edu)
      "Japan opened the world's first high-speed rail line, between Tokyo and Osaka, in time for the 1964 Olympics. Shinkansen, or bullet trains, now travel at speeds up to 185 miles per hour over some 1,500 miles of rail lines across the country. Italy is credited with Europe's first high-speed line, opening between between Rome and Florence in 1978; today trains also race through Spain, Germany, Belgium, Britain and France at speeds up to 150 miles per hour or more — making most Amtrak lines resemble a Disneyland monorail in comparison." 01-10

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