“Which way does a tree fall?” asked the titular creature in Dr. Seuss’ 1971 book “The Lorax.” The answer — at least for the fabled “Lorax Tree” in La Jolla’s Scripps Park — is down. The 100-foot ...
In 2012, viewers were whisked away to a Seussian dystopia in Illumination Entertainment and Universal Pictures’ The Lorax. Based on the Dr. Seuss story of the same name – and overflowing with stars ...
In Dr. Seuss‘ beloved 1971 book The Lorax, the titular mustachioed character has a very simple message: I am the Lorax. I speak for the trees. I speak for the trees for the trees have no tongues. Now, ...
In what may be seen as an ominous omen of our times, the tree that is believed to have inspired the truffula trees in Dr. Seuss’ eco-classic children’s book, The Lorax, toppled over in La Jolla, ...
A decades-old tree in California that is believed to have inspired the children's book The Lorax has toppled. The Monterey Cypress in Ellen Browning Scripps Park, San Diego, fell on Thursday, Fox 5 ...
CBS Local - Beth Goodpaster and Richard Duncan, of south Minneapolis, were devastated to find that the red oak tree in their front yard was rotting and needed to be removed. When they called, ...
A Monterey cypress (Cupressus macrocarpa) that is thought to have inspired the Truffula trees in Dr. Seuss' "The Lorax" has fallen, according to news reports. The shaggy tree was thought to be around ...
In the early 1970s, Dr. Seuss was struggling. Amid the growing environmentalist movement in the United States, punctuated by President Richard Nixon's creation of the Environmental Protection Agency ...