Opinion articles provide independent perspectives on key community issues, separate from our newsroom reporting. Theodor Seuss Geisel, more commonly known as Dr. Seuss, was born on March 2, 1904. He ...
Read Across America Day was launched in 1998 by the National Education Association (NEA). It is a day to encourage children and teenagers to read and falls annually on March 2, which is also Dr. Seuss ...
Republicans criticized President Biden and progressives on Tuesday after Biden snubbed Dr. Seuss in his "Read Across America Day" proclamation amid a progressive push to cancel the legendary ...
BOSTON - Dr. Seuss fans might find their hearts growing three sizes this coming holiday season with the release of a sequel to the 1957 classic children's book "How the Grinch Stole Christmas!" The ...
Dr. Seuss dominates this week's USA TODAY Best-Selling Books list with "The Cat in the Hat" taking the No. 1 spot, the highest the title has appeared since the list's inception. Sales for popular Dr.
SCHENECTADY - When Theodor Geisel, aka Dr. Seuss, first envisioned a holiday story, he turned to his own disillusionment with the commercialization of Christmas. With a few strokes of ink and a vision ...
Dr. Seuss Enterprises, the business that preserves the author’s legacy, announced recently that six of his works will stop being published because they “portray people in ways that are hurtful and ...
UPDATE With Fox News going all in on today’s news that six Dr. Seuss books will no longer be published due to their offensive depictions of racial caricatures, White House press secretary Jen Psaki ...
Celebrated American children’s author Dr. Seuss is now considered too controversial for one of Virginia's largest school districts, a new report reveals. For over two decades, Dr. Seuss’s birthday has ...
Charis Granger-Mbugua graduated Cobb County Schools, where her young son is now a student. In this guest column, Granger-Mbugua, a National Board Certified teacher and Spelman graduate, discusses ...
Dr. Seuss, it turns out, is just another white racist who had, until March 2021, pulled the wool over our collective eyes for decades (including from the grave). Didn't you know, he was programming ...
The book, titled “Oh, the Places You’ll Boldly Go!”, hewed too closely to the original to be considered a parody under the “fair use” doctrine, a three-judge federal appeals panel declared. By Daniel ...
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