Fans of the card commemorates the birth of Theodor Seuss Geisel, better known to generations of young readers, and even that young children's author "Dr. Seuss" - fantastic talents who proudly says he is finished monotonous reign of "Dick & Jane "Books.
In his hometown of Massachusetts is Springfield Museums activities and favorite son, became the father of his beloved cats at his home in longtime La Jolla, UCSD welcome "The Cat in the Hat". - The main repository in the world of all things Seuss, with over 10,000 items - is the symbol in the library to honor hostage.
And multiplexes, the animated feature "Dr. Seuss' The Lorax" was opened, the Bar-ba-loot-and swans Swomee and poor Humming-Fish to try to win the weekend box office Hollywood bulldozers relatively smooth landscape in early March. (Reviews of the nation the movie 3-D CGI score a just-in-mediocre Post critic Michael O'Sullivan was not-so-good.)
Friday is the 108th Birthday hostage, the man who died Belly Sneetches and our Star Thneeds besocked, the foxes and the Grinch Whoville High in La Jolla in 1991, at the age of 87
Second March is read across America day, like "The Lorax" stars like Zac Efron, Danny DeVito, Betty White and Taylor Swift serve as co-chairman of the National Education Association event (albeit with Mazda SUV promotional tie-in - what rhymes with to "irony")?. The NEA encourages people to "see the trees" by cracking the links to "The Lorax" Seuss '1971 cautionary tale about the care of the environment.
In his movie trailers, "The Lorax" credits "the imagination of Dr. Seuss." In truth, as the author of the invention without borders, oh the places he went.
Often the images and memories of his childhood supplement in Springfield (including the real, Mulberry Street), Dr. Seuss has created worlds of oblique views and winding waterways as a whole is no different. With them came the strange words, unusual rhymes that make his works a playground Sonic - the better to engage the reader, while sometimes slipping into a serious moral tale.
Creative, a hostage his own way in the early stages of Dartmouth (working title for the campus humor magazine), then a move to Oxford before the first "Seuss" signed cartoon appeared in the Saturday Evening Post. He worked in advertising (his bugs on the pesticide Standard Oil is a clear artistic precursor flutter for some of his later characters) and wrote his first popular book, "And to think I saw it on Mulberry Street."
When his feelings were inflamed by the Second World War, began drawing sharp hostage, anti-isolationist political cartoons - as he has worked remarkably furbearers in the art of newspaper over the Nazis. Soon he joined the army to work on animated films presented the training, the Private Snafu.
Hostage for over 40 illustrated children's books books - including "Green Eggs and Ham" and "Horton Hears a Who!" - If more than 200 million copies sold, helped the Emmy-award winning hostage here, many animated specials. , Including the perennial holiday "How the Grinch Stole Christmas!" with another legend and longtime friend Chuck Jones. And after his death, Hollywood movies with Mike Myers generated Seuss ("Dr. Seuss' The Cat in the Hat") and Jim Carrey ("How the Grinch Stole Christmas," which won an Oscar for makeup.)
Geisel also won a special Pulitzer Prize for his life's work performance - referred to earlier by my colleague, Pulitzer Prize winner Jonathan Freedman. (Speaking of living in San Diego, in fact - including UCSD -. It was impossible to spend much time in the city without high Seuss' My first boss in journalism, Neil Morgan, literally wrote the book [with Judith] by Dr. Seuss / Ted Geisel and as soon as I an article about Audrey Geisel's widow, the Cadillac, you can assign to see on the road thanks to its vanity plate: .. "Grinch")
Then there's one last anecdote:
A former colleague, columnist Don Freeman, San Diego, met hostages once the home of the author of La Jolla. Freeman was one of his small son in tow. Geisel, who never had children of their own, then a little hesitant about the child who - ironically, not in a position to understand how to maintain it - hostages offered him a cookie. Whenever the boy reappeared, hostage - still unsure of what they say - his only option was to play, simply: Enter the quiet young man another cookie.
As a hostage, according to legend, told the children: "They have 'em - I'll entertain' em."
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