Theodor Seuss Geisel Theodor Seuss Geisel was born on March 2, 1904 in Springfield, Massachusetts. |

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Father's Influence His father was the zookeeper at the Forest Park Zoo in Springfield, Massachusetts.
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College He attended Dartmouth College. "The 'Dr. Seuss' name is a combination of my middle name and the fact that I had been studying for my doctorate when I quit to become a cartoonist. My father had always wanted to see a Dr. in front of my name, so I attached it. I figured by doing that, I saved him about ten thousand dollars," explained Seuss. [3] |

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Mulberry Street As a child, Seuss lived on Mulberry Street. In 1936, on the way to Europe aboard a ship, he wrote And to Think that I Saw it on Mulberry Street which was rejected by the first 43 publishers to whom it was submitted. |
Cartoonist His first jobs were for life, Vanity Fair, and Liberty Magazines. He drew cartoons and wrote humerous articles. During World War II he joined the army. He produced documentaries about the war and created a cartoon entitled Gerald McBoing Boing for which he won an Oscar. |

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Political Cartoons Starting in 1941 Seuss wrote political cartoons for PM magazine. Dr. Seuss Goes to War by Richard H. Minear is a collection of 200 of those editorial cartoons. |
Green Eggs and Ham In 1960 Bennett Cerf bet Geisel $50 that he could not write a book using only fifty words. The result was Green Eggs and Ham.
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LeSeig Dr. Seuss wrote many of his books under the pseudonym LeSeig, which is"Geisel" spelled backwards. |