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Jan 7, 2017
01/17
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CSPAN2
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in front of those as you may know him dr. seuss. we take you as we learn more about the san diego favorite. see mac i think some of the first things that come to mind when people hear the words dr. seuss are the amazing range of book titles that they probably have read to their children possibly had read to themselves by their parents and what a whimsical person he probably was. theodore was not born in this area a course he was born in massachusetts started coming to san diego on visits and the late 1920s eventually moved to san diego continued to live there for over 40 years. they continue to reside there today. the two of them were very active when they began which was not until 1960. they were very involved with the medical school and then eventually and this is after ted died mrs. guys out has been very much involved with the university library here now called guys a library. thinking he would be a writer. majored in was literature. he happened to be very adept at dried and did lots of drying for the jack-o'-lantern and the new
in front of those as you may know him dr. seuss. we take you as we learn more about the san diego favorite. see mac i think some of the first things that come to mind when people hear the words dr. seuss are the amazing range of book titles that they probably have read to their children possibly had read to themselves by their parents and what a whimsical person he probably was. theodore was not born in this area a course he was born in massachusetts started coming to san diego on visits and...
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Jan 28, 2017
01/17
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CSPAN
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i think dr. seuss is very important to history. his children's works are very popular throughout the world and have been transported for many, many languages. i think sometimes that throws -- does not transfer too much in translation because it throws the rhymes off but i think his genius will endure. >> in my book i tell the story of i was at the university of connecticut, i was a first-year professor. ph.d. from d my connell university. i thought wow, i've made it and i was looking through this book of cartoons and there's this cartoon, and it's in the book. i think it's a british magazine. phillips-starks humor magazine and it's a sleeping mexican, or a sleeping spaniard. doesn't matter, the joke works for english people who hate spanish, it works for angelos who don't like mexicans in panel one he's asleep outside on the street. what we do, right? and his aurm alarm clock goes off, i think in panel three. he turns it off, goes back inside and he sleeps on his bed. [laughter] this guy is so lazy. he sleeps on the street. his ala
i think dr. seuss is very important to history. his children's works are very popular throughout the world and have been transported for many, many languages. i think sometimes that throws -- does not transfer too much in translation because it throws the rhymes off but i think his genius will endure. >> in my book i tell the story of i was at the university of connecticut, i was a first-year professor. ph.d. from d my connell university. i thought wow, i've made it and i was looking...
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Jan 7, 2017
01/17
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CSPAN2
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in front of those as you may know him dr. seuss. we take you as we learn more about the san diego favorite. see mac i think some of the first things that come to mind when people hear the words dr. seuss are the amazing
in front of those as you may know him dr. seuss. we take you as we learn more about the san diego favorite. see mac i think some of the first things that come to mind when people hear the words dr. seuss are the amazing
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Jan 8, 2017
01/17
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CSPAN2
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. >> i think some of the first things that come to my when people hear the word dr. seuss are the amazing range of book titles that they probably have read to their children, possibly have had read to themselves by their parents, my friends, whatever. and what a whimsical person he probably was. theodor seuss sky so was not born in this area of course. he was born in massachusetts, started coming to san diego on visits in the late 1920s. eventually moved to san diego, continue to live there for over 40 years. .. at that time he actually used his own name. he had, he and some of his friends had a little run in with the dean once because face drank a bit too much and he was banned from working on the papers so started using the name seuss so that he could get his cartoons into the paper. well, seuss was actually his middle name. he is theordoe geisel and suze was his mother's maiden name. he became more interested in drawing and one of the things we have in the collection is his notebooks from oxford university and i think as you took a look through it, as other people have
. >> i think some of the first things that come to my when people hear the word dr. seuss are the amazing range of book titles that they probably have read to their children, possibly have had read to themselves by their parents, my friends, whatever. and what a whimsical person he probably was. theodor seuss sky so was not born in this area of course. he was born in massachusetts, started coming to san diego on visits in the late 1920s. eventually moved to san diego, continue to live...
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Jan 8, 2017
01/17
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. >> i think some of the first things that come to my when people hear the word dr. seuss
. >> i think some of the first things that come to my when people hear the word dr. seuss
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Jan 6, 2017
01/17
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KTVU
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dr. seuss's death. no one wants to hear it. why, die. why did he die? old, told. i was told he was old. penny is not the reason i didn't pursue that idea. oh, really? since meeting her, what have been your greatest accomplishments? koothrappali: easy. sleeping with penny.
dr. seuss's death. no one wants to hear it. why, die. why did he die? old, told. i was told he was old. penny is not the reason i didn't pursue that idea. oh, really? since meeting her, what have been your greatest accomplishments? koothrappali: easy. sleeping with penny.
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Jan 28, 2017
01/17
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FBC
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lost money in the iron business is in the company and henry ford failed completely the first time dr. seussfailed and tried again. where you can write the script of your own life in america. [applause] so when a pessimist like me says bearden some government regulation i hope you will ignore me to prove me wrong. that is the show for tonight from loss biggest and freedom fest. go live the american dream. [cheers and applause] in the meantime, here is through dobbs. have a great weekend. [♪] lou: president trump and mexican president pen yea -- talked forr over the phone after the mexican president canceled his meeting with mr. trump. >> the united states cannot afford to lose vast amounts of baines companies and millions of people losing their jobs. lou: lou: it's been a packed week for
lost money in the iron business is in the company and henry ford failed completely the first time dr. seussfailed and tried again. where you can write the script of your own life in america. [applause] so when a pessimist like me says bearden some government regulation i hope you will ignore me to prove me wrong. that is the show for tonight from loss biggest and freedom fest. go live the american dream. [cheers and applause] in the meantime, here is through dobbs. have a great weekend. [♪]...
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Jan 29, 2017
01/17
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FBC
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lost money in the iron business is in the company and henry ford failed completely the first time dr. seussas rejected by 27 publishers an old pro was fired from her first job they called her an unfit for television. [laughter] they all failed and tried again. where you can write the script of your own life in america. [applause] so when a pessimist like me says bearden some government regulation i hope you will ignore me to prove me wrong. that is the show for tonight from loss biggest and freedom fest. go live the american dream. [cheers and applause] have a great morning. >> see you tomorrow. dagen: the dow hitting 20k as president trump continues to sign away. hi, everybody, i'm dagen mcdowell in for brenda, this is bulls&bears, stocks skyrocketing, many aimed at boosting american jobs, dow 20,000 a mayor milestone. why are some of the media trying to downplay it? the bulls and bear this is week, john, along with morgan, welcome to everybody. gary, the dow 20,000 predicting good things to come,
lost money in the iron business is in the company and henry ford failed completely the first time dr. seussas rejected by 27 publishers an old pro was fired from her first job they called her an unfit for television. [laughter] they all failed and tried again. where you can write the script of your own life in america. [applause] so when a pessimist like me says bearden some government regulation i hope you will ignore me to prove me wrong. that is the show for tonight from loss biggest and...
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Jan 11, 2017
01/17
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KYW
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there are rumors that dr. seuss had a kink where he liked to be slurfed with a durf in his glurf.e glurf. legally, i can't show a glurf on cbs. but i think we all know what the glurf is. you know what a glurf is. you're an adult. >> jon: uh-huh. yup. >> stephen: that's how they make babies in whoville. >> jon: oh, that's right. >> stephen: they stick it up your whereville. just trying to keep it light before the world ends. just trying to keep it light before they take our nukes. i'm just trying to keep it light. another big revelation-- brown told a reporter, "i don't especially like children." no surprise there. after all, she let a child sleep in a room with an unattended fire. but the biggest surprise is that the characters in "goodnight moon" are bunnies. and according this biography, brown was an avid rabbit hunter, which explains why the old lady was whispering "hush." margaret wise brown was headed over with a shotgun! shut your mouth or it's "goodnight, everybody!" ( laughter ) ( applause ) well, in light of these revelations, we at "the late show" have acquired an early
there are rumors that dr. seuss had a kink where he liked to be slurfed with a durf in his glurf.e glurf. legally, i can't show a glurf on cbs. but i think we all know what the glurf is. you know what a glurf is. you're an adult. >> jon: uh-huh. yup. >> stephen: that's how they make babies in whoville. >> jon: oh, that's right. >> stephen: they stick it up your whereville. just trying to keep it light before the world ends. just trying to keep it light before they take...
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Jan 22, 2017
01/17
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FBC
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oprah winfrey, steve jobs come the author of dr. seuss.ome argue that they were fueled by failure. that's the title of a new book by jeremy bloom. bloom has been a success. you were once an olympic level skier andy played pro-foot all for two nfl teams and yet you say you were fueled by failure? >> my biggest dream in sports was to win an olympic gold medal. my dad is the biggest olympic fan you could ever imagine and when i was 10 years old i was watching the olympics and he would be wiping the tears off his face when a u.s. athlete would win a gold medal. i wanted so badly to give him that feeling. john: and you were favored. >> i was the number one ranked skier in the world. i won more consecutive world cups than anybody in the history of the sport and one inch was the difference. one engine train of italy was the difference between realize that 23-year-old dream for me. that was my first experience with major failure. john: and then you tried football and said some collegiate records but the ncaa turned you down. >> the ncaa wouldn't a
oprah winfrey, steve jobs come the author of dr. seuss.ome argue that they were fueled by failure. that's the title of a new book by jeremy bloom. bloom has been a success. you were once an olympic level skier andy played pro-foot all for two nfl teams and yet you say you were fueled by failure? >> my biggest dream in sports was to win an olympic gold medal. my dad is the biggest olympic fan you could ever imagine and when i was 10 years old i was watching the olympics and he would be...
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Jan 12, 2017
01/17
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FOXNEWSW
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i was the dr. seuss figure. >> sean: and you hadn't even taken office. what did you think of the press conference today? >> i think there are a couple of big lessons here that i think sean spicer is going to look at very carefully. in baseball, hockey, basketball, if certain players behave inappropriately, you kick them out of the game. in hockey, it is fairly common to bench them for a certain amount of time.e i think the way acosta behaved for cnn, have him suspended for 60 days. send someone else. to all the other reporters, they are going to be real limits. when you get beyond those limits, you ain't going to be there. they shouldn't put up with this. it's bad for the country. i also think that dan coats, the dude who nominated the director of national intelligence will go in and bring in a couple of outsiders and really dig through howg politicized, how intellectually corrupt and dishonest the senior levels of the intelligence community have become. i mean, in my lifetime, i can't remember as a public documentav that the intelligence community produ
i was the dr. seuss figure. >> sean: and you hadn't even taken office. what did you think of the press conference today? >> i think there are a couple of big lessons here that i think sean spicer is going to look at very carefully. in baseball, hockey, basketball, if certain players behave inappropriately, you kick them out of the game. in hockey, it is fairly common to bench them for a certain amount of time.e i think the way acosta behaved for cnn, have him suspended for 60 days....
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Jan 29, 2017
01/17
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CSPAN2
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this is dr. seuss in the 1940s on the last-- let what you have is provided of the peacenik. this this is actually from 1940 and no matter how many countries the germans actually go after they will leave us alone because they will be tired or even more shocking the illustration on the rights where the world chewed up the children and spit out their bones, but those were foreign children and it did not really matter. northwestern has a distinguished journalism school. it's actually named after a man who is the editor of the chicago tribune in the late 19th century and a vicious opponent of irish immigration to the united states, so the laundering of names that goes on in culture , but this mcdill school of journalism had a class that met january, 1939. these are journalism students and they met in 1939 and asked to assemble a list of the 10 most significant historical events of 1938. this is like a sherlock holmes story about the dog that did not bark. what's not on the list? the burning of the synagogue, the attack on the jews of germany was front page on the chicago tribune
this is dr. seuss in the 1940s on the last-- let what you have is provided of the peacenik. this this is actually from 1940 and no matter how many countries the germans actually go after they will leave us alone because they will be tired or even more shocking the illustration on the rights where the world chewed up the children and spit out their bones, but those were foreign children and it did not really matter. northwestern has a distinguished journalism school. it's actually named after a...
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Jan 29, 2017
01/17
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WRC
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. >> here's how dr. seuss would write it. "and then nate got an idea. a wonderful, devious idea." in a way, isn't it? >> yes. >> reporter: what if nate arranged the schedules so that martha ann and chuck had their appointments at the very same time? who would get in the wheelchair then, he wondered? >> what happened? >> a conniving couple caught in a trap. >> this can't be should you. >> and martha ann's son is about to launch an investigation of his own. . thanks for loading, sweetie. ...oh, baked-on alfredo? ...gotta rinse that. nope. no way. nada. really? dish issues? throw it all in. cascade platinum powers through... your toughest stuck-on food. nice. cascade. up together. that's just what happens when cats call the shots. new friskies tender and crunchy combo. tasty textures cats gotta have. friskies. for cats. by cats. >> reporter: va investigator nate landkammer had set a trap. he knew martha ann and chuck had just one wheelchair as they faked disability, so he set up appointments for them at the social security facility at the same time. >> so they arrived at the facility
. >> here's how dr. seuss would write it. "and then nate got an idea. a wonderful, devious idea." in a way, isn't it? >> yes. >> reporter: what if nate arranged the schedules so that martha ann and chuck had their appointments at the very same time? who would get in the wheelchair then, he wondered? >> what happened? >> a conniving couple caught in a trap. >> this can't be should you. >> and martha ann's son is about to launch an investigation...
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Jan 19, 2017
01/17
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KQED
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. >> and he has dr. seuss books. >> "sam-i-am. that sam-i-am, that sam-i-am! i do not like that sam-i-am!" >> what conservatives wanted at that time was a fight. even if it didn't make strategic sense, even if there wasn't a clear plan. >> "i do not like green eggs and ham." >> narrator: cruz was making the first move in a larger strategy: to shut down the government if obamacare was not stopped. >> i sincerely hope that senator reid and president obama do not choose to force a government shutdown simply to force obamacare on the american people. that would be a mistake. >> narrator: cruz was trying to rally the republican insurgents, tapping into tea party anger that boehner and the establishment hadn't kept their promise to repeal obamacare. >> ted cruz recognizes the state of the republican party and the frustration of conservatives in the republican party that's been welling up, you know, from sarah palin time, tea party time, all through this period. and he was going to be the embodiment of that grassroots anger. >> obamacare is a cancer. it's a cancer un
. >> and he has dr. seuss books. >> "sam-i-am. that sam-i-am, that sam-i-am! i do not like that sam-i-am!" >> what conservatives wanted at that time was a fight. even if it didn't make strategic sense, even if there wasn't a clear plan. >> "i do not like green eggs and ham." >> narrator: cruz was making the first move in a larger strategy: to shut down the government if obamacare was not stopped. >> i sincerely hope that senator reid and...