How The Grinch Stole Christmas

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1 headnote for How The Grinch Stole Christmas
854 documents for How The Grinch Stole Christmas
  • How the Grinch Stole Christmas, que fue narrada con pasión y elegancia por Boris Karloff, el Frankenstein del clásico cinematográfico de los años 30, también ofrece en esta edición de coleccionista -y cuyo lanzamiento coincide con el 50 aniversario de la creación del Grinch- un cortometraje animado...

  • We asked readers to weigh in on their television-watching habits during the holiday season. How the Grinch Stole Christmas" or "A Nightmare Before Christmas"? The original "Miracle on 34th Street" or the new one?

  • At the end of Dr. Seuss' "How the Grinch Stole Christmas!" the titular villain undergoes a literal change of heart. His blood- pumping organ swells to three times its prior size. The ticker of the Burmese python similarly balloons, but the cause isn't Christmas cheer; it's a big meal. A new study of recently fed snakes suggests that a precise mixture of fatty acids in the blood drives this cardiac growth, unveiling a possible treatment for heart disease in humans. The Burmese python, an imposing Asian native that can stretch to more than 5 meters in length, is the incredible, inflatable snake. This squeezing predator frequently goes months without eating and then gorges, sometimes downing an entire deer. To accommodate the sudden rush of sugars, fats and proteins, its body go...

  • Shane and Desiree live in Louisiana. Shane is my cousin Elaine's son. He spends his days laboring over the homes of the rich and sometimes the famous as a hardwood floor installer. His days are long, and the work is backbreaking. Desi, his spouse, is a nursing student in her final semester. She also works as a nurse's aid. In late December, there was reason for celebration in Shane and Desi's household. Not only had Desi passed finals, she was looking forward to a restful break with her two elementary-age sons, Tristan and Dylan. In the past few months, Shane and Desi picked up every minute of overtime to purchase gifts from their boys' wish lists. They just might make it. Christmas was paid for. Desi's schooling was almost finished. Maybe they could even move back to their native Calif...

  • WANT TO GO? Home for the Holidays Presented by the West Virginia Symphony Orchestra WHEN: 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday WHERE: Clay Center TICKETS: $10, $22, $34, $50 and $62. No student or senior discounts. INFO: 304-561-3500 or www.wvsymphony.org Steven Stull admitted that when watching the famous cartoon classic "How the Grinch Stole Christmas," he was curious about the words sung by the Whos in Whoville.

  • In 1957, Dr. Seuss published his classic children's book "How the Grinch Stole Christmas," telling the story of a selfish character who seeks to steal Christmas. A generation later, we face a new Grinch seeking to eliminate the charitable deduction, pejoratively labeling it a tax loophole. Despite their unwillingness to reach agreement on virtually any issue, Republicans, with their flat-tax proposals, and Democrats, with their desire to raise revenue from the wealthy, appear poised to yield to the allure of eliminating the charitable deduction.

  • Rudolph. Charlie Brown. The Grinch. They're longtime favorites who always grab top billing when the networks roll out their holiday programs. But they didn't do it alone. After all, to achieve lasting pop-cultural shelf life, it usually takes teamwork. With that in mind, we salute five of the top - great characters who have the power to make us laugh, cry and sometimes wince, year after year after year: MAX THE DOG in 'Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas'

  • This Christmas many children will be sitting down to read "How the Grinch Stole Christmas!," or they'll be watching the TV special or movie based on it. Dr. Seuss' tale has been a mainstay at Christmas for more than 50 years, while most of his books have become required reading for youngsters. Dr. Seuss, or Theodore Seuss Geisel as he was known to family and friends, died in 1991. His work, however, is as fresh today as when it was released. One of the foremost scholars of Seuss' work knew that he had written stories for magazines that had long since gone out of print. Charles D. Cohen began a search of libraries and the Internet and tracked down these stories for a new collection.

  • From Dr. Seuss' "How the Grinch Stole Christmas" done in ice sculpture, to a hotel that celebrates Christmas all year long, Tennessee has plenty to get you in a holiday frame of mind. Melt your heart

  • Entertainment Editors NOTE TO MEDIA: Photo is available in a Smart News Release(TM) on Business Wire's Home Page at www.businesswire.com LAS VEG...



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