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As anticipation mounts for their 30th Anniversary Tour, The Disco Biscuits have announced Between The Trees, a new outdoor concert series anchored in a Labor Day weekend celebration. From Aug. 29 ...
we’ve got new additions like a mini farmer’s market and a disco roller-skating night, alongside classic favorites like T-shirt tie-dyeing and, of course, Quadstock. The celebration starts with a ...
Many who have visited the tree over the years have posted photos on social media alongside musings about the tree as a sign of hope, a symbol of nature’s resiliency and an inspiration to stand ...
We all know what the moral to The Lorax is, right? Respect the environment and conservation. Well guess what, you're WRONG! At least, you are wrong if we are talking about the 2012 movie version ...
The Lorax was a magical creature associated with protecting the trees. However, after humans eradicated the trees from their modern plastic cities like Thneedville, it fell upon him to bestow the ...
Short, orange, and mustachioed, he famously speaks for the trees. He’s the Lorax, one of Dr. Seuss’s most beloved characters, known for his environmental activism. He also might be based on a ...
(AP) — Evan Nied’s Instagram biography says he’s “The Literal and Figurative Embodiment of the Lorax,” the title character of Dr. Seuss’ 1971 children’s book who stands up for trees.
It looks just as awesome as it sounds. New Yorkers can find the Disco Ball tree inside of the hotel's Chrystie Park garden at any time of the day, but we suggest visiting when the light show ...
Summer, autumn, winter, and disco!” Ted decides the best way ... But that’s not the right answer. As the Lorax tells him, “A tree falls the way it leans. Be careful which way you lean.” ...
Remember the little “oldish and brownish and mossy” guy with the bushy mustache who “speaks for the trees?” Dr. Seuss’ character, the Lorax, is 50 years old this week. And his messages ...
The conflict between the industrious, polluting Once-ler and the feisty Lorax, who "speaks for the trees," feels more prescient than ever. "Once-ler!" he cried with a cruffulous croak.