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81. Chicago Theater Events Schedule, Guide, Directory, List Of Musicals, Drama, Come
Join winnie the pooh and all his friends live on stage, for an allnew fun-filled PBS’s top rated children’s program, Dragon Tales is coming to Chicago,
http://www.chicagotraveler.com/theater-events.htm
Chicago Theater Events
Our theater performance listings below include most of the major downtown venues in what is called the "Theatre District" as well as selected others. Below these listings, you can find many of the web sites for the numerous theaters all around Chicago. You can find information about the specific performances and show times for these other theaters by visiting these web pages. We also offer access to premium seating tickets to many of Chicago's most popular theater performances. For a listing of the most popular Chicago city and suburban theatres, see our Chicago Theatre Directory.
DOWNTOWN CHICAGO THEATER PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE
Run Dates Production Tickets Theatre Open Run The Blue Man Group Briar Street Theatre
Blue Man Group is best known for its award-winning theatrical productions which critics have described as "ground-breaking," "hilarious," "visually stunning" and "musically powerful." These performances feature three enigmatic bald and blue characters who take the audience through a multi-sensory experience that combines theatre, percussive music, art, science and vaudeville into a form of entertainment that is like nothing else. People from all over the world, from all walks of life and from all age groups have become fans of Blue Man Group's show.

82. Ask Me More Eeyore Review In Soft Toys At Review Centre
winnie the pooh s Eeyore Craft Here DLTK s Crafts for Kids Eeyore TP Roll Ask the children to guess what is Equipment Eeyore, Copy of winnie the pooh
http://www.reviewcentre.com/reviews65717.html
Ask Me More Eeyore Login How Can You Help? Section : Please Select Books Cameras Cars Computers Electronics Entertainment Finance Games Phones Sport Travel Websites this section Review Centre Games Toy Reviews Soft Toys
ASK ME MORE EEYORE
  • overview
Ask Me More Eeyore Reviews
Be the first to write a review. Ask Me More Eeyore Soft Toy
  • Ask Jeeves Results -Colouring Winnie Pooh
    www.ask.co.uk
    Walt Disney World Characters
    of characters. Katie had on a set of Eeyore ears and Eeyore had such a reaction we had to returnto return. It must have been the same Eeyore each time cause he would go straightforgot that day. So don't be afraid to ask you never know what will happen." It was amazing. Minnie Mouse, Tigger, Eeyore, Pooh, Goofy, and my son's favorite Donald
    www.wdisneyw.co.uk
    RETURN TO POOH CORNER
    lit up by the moon Posing our questions to Owl and Eeyore As our days disappeared all too soon Buthere no one knows where he goes So I sent him to ask of the Owl if he's there How to loosen a jar from
    www.theenchanted100acrewoods.50megs.com
    The Very Small Pond
    What questions do people ask? Click here to viewa damp and dismal patch a là Eeyore will do nicely. If you want to What questions do people ask? This is a sample What questions do people ask? Index

83. Lolla-POOH-looza
winnie the pooh and the Perfect Day has been accomplishing in its first stops in Much to the delight of children and parents alike, pooh s pals join him
http://entertainmentdesignmag.com/mag/show_business_lollapoohlooza/
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Sign up for ED's free email newsletter! FOR ADVERTISERS 2005 Media Kit Upcoming Advertising Opportunities RELATED SITES Lighting Dimensions ETS-LDI Trade Show Broadcast Engineering Electronic Musician ... Video Systems Lolla-POOH-looza Sep 1, 2004 12:00 PM One of the biggest summer tours of 2004 was actually not cancelled due to a damaged knee (Britney) or strained vocal chords (Christina) or emergency heart surgery (David Bowie) or a wardrobe malfunction (Janet) or lack of interest ( Lollapalooza , Marc Anthony), but happily rolled along from venue to venue, playing to thousands of screaming, adoring fans who leapt to their feet as their favorites appeared on stage. Yes, the worldwide tour of

84. Channelnewsasia.com : Bookstore
Children just love the idea of this great big loveable dog which does fun things . Disney s winnie the pooh Shapes By Andrea Doering, Angel Rodriquez
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/ages03/bookview/.html
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Sports Basketball Golf Soccer Tennis Children's Lit Fairy Tales Ages - 3 Ages 4 - 8 Ages 8 - 12 Pooh (Giant Board Book) By Ernest H. Shepard (Illustrator), A. A. Milne Big enough to be hugged, this is one of those must-haves for all Winnie-the-Pooh fans. Editor Buy @ Amazon.com Clifford, the Big Red Dog By Norman Bridwell What do you make of a gigantic red dog which catches cars with his mouth? Children just love the idea of this great big loveable dog which does fun things. Editor Buy @ Amazon.com Disney's Winnie the Pooh Shapes By Andrea Doering, Angel Rodriquez (Illustrator), A. A. Milne Great for teaching your little ones early learning concepts. Editor Buy @ Amazon.com By A. A. Milne, Ernest H. Shepard (Illustrator) A classic in its own right, this book is suitable for children of all ages. Spend hours of endless fun with your baby reading all about the Winnie the silly old bear and his wonderful friends. Editor Buy @ Amazon.com

85. Princeton Alumni Weekly: Features Web Exclusives
lit crit Frederick Crews *58, author of The pooh Perplex, pokes the Academy Milne wrote for children, but he also aimed over their heads at an adult
http://www.princeton.edu/~paw/web_exclusives/features/features_013002a.html
Web Exclusives: Features
January 30, 2002:
A.A. Milne gets mimicked, again
Lit crit Frederick Crews *58, author of The Pooh Perplex, pokes the Academy once more with his new book, Postmodern Pooh
By David Marcus '92 Frederick Crews *58 has returned in his writing to several major authors, among them Sigmund Freud, Nathaniel Hawthorne - and A.A. Milne. The Viennese psychiatrist and the New England novelist have been objects of academic study for Crews, but the English children's author has been an inspiration. In 1963 Crews wrote the satire Pooh Perplex, in which he offered a set of essays by fictitious English professors about Milne's Winnie-the-Pooh books. The combination of Pooh and literary criticism allows Crews to skewer the critics. Gulag calls Christopher Robin "a proleptic Mao figure." Another critic bearing a suspicious likeness to Yale University's Harold Bloom compares Pooh to Falstaff. In addition to advancing dubious propositions, Crews's critics quote from actual works. A recovered-memory expert cites an especially choice passage: "It is possible to prove how lasting and influential childhood memories can be, in lower forms of life. . . . Using his shock aversion technique on fruit-fly larvae, Tim Tully . . . has shown that childhood memories last through something as strikingly disruptive as metamorphosis."

86. Kid Stuff
In a poll to determine the nation s favourite reads, children s books made up over a From classics like Black Beauty and winnie the pooh to all four
http://www.goodreports.net/essays/kidstuff.htm
KID STUFF
By Alex Good
The headline of the BBC report announcing the results said it all: "Top 100 books are child's play." In a poll to determine the nation's favourite reads, children's books made up over a third of the titles chosen. From classics like Black Beauty and Winnie the Pooh to all four installments (thus far) of the Harry Potter franchise, kid stuff ruled. The news comes hard on the heels of a piece I wrote recently on the new popularity of children's lit. What set me off then was a column by Philip Marchand in the Toronto Star on the gender gap among readers. What I found even more interesting was the age gap. According to Professor David Booth at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE) at the University of Toronto, "Boys stop reading fiction at the age of 12 or 13 . . . If they read a novel after that, it's because they've been told to in school." As I pointed out, there was probably some explanation here of why The Lord of the Rings and The Catcher in the Rye hold top spot on all of those "favourite book" lists. These may be the

87. Software Choices
This program creates an environment where the child can learn to track print, Young children love the adventures of winnie the pooh and Friends.
http://lrs.ed.uiuc.edu/students/jacobs2/ci335/1d.html
Activity 1d Summer 1998 Michele Jacobs Tri-City Elementary Buffalo, IL Michele's Software Picks Broderbund Software, Inc. Arthurs Reading Race by Marc Brown A Living Books product. Grades K-2 Language Arts This program is an interactive reading program that alllows young readers the opportunity to explore reading without have all their reading skills in place. This program creates an environment where the child can learn to track print, build vocabulary, meet the characters in a story, and interact with each page of text. This program excites young readers with the graphics and interaction that takes place. A more skillful reader can also choose to read the story on their own. Therefore allowing each child to explore the software at their own level. This program can be either PC or Mac. To check out Arthurs Reading Race and perhaps purchase this product click here! Sunburst/Wings for Learning Sunbuddy Math Playhouse Grades K-3 Math and Language Arts Sunnbuddy Math Playhouse is a program that blens Math and Language Arts together to create activities that motivate young learners. The program is very animated which stimulates young readers to read along or play along with the Sunnbuddy characters. This program is designed for all levels easy to challenging which is very helpful in a classroom of emergent readers. The program also includes help screens in case the students need reinforcement of directions. The lively songs that accompany this program also help to hold the young readers attention. To check out Sunnbuddy Math Playhouse and perhaps purchase this product

88. The Amherst Student Online
PTA Moms will all probably scoff at the idea—analyzing winniethe-pooh? Please.It’sa children’s book, an uncorrupted display of all that is good and
http://halogen.note.amherst.edu/~astudent/2001-2002/issue12/arts/03.html

arts
A small smackerel of lit crit
Jennifer A. Salcido, Managing Arts Editor The essays and voices in this collection are as varied as the furry little creatures that populate the Hundred Acre Wood that it deconstructs. Everyone from renowned literary critics to militant feminists to cultural studies buffs sporting strobe-lights and MIDI-sequenced background music has a say in this piece of timeless cultural criticism. Here we have Marxist readings, feminist readings, queer readings, cyberculture readings, gender studies readings, postmodern readings, poststructuralist readings, parental readings; we have men talking about women, women talking about women, women talking about men talking about women, men talking about pigs and kangaroos and huge colonial oppressors (or, in laymen’s terms, the Heffalump). Seemingly every permutation (and yet they’ve barely scratched the surface! I’m left begging for a sequel) of “Pooh studies” are represented, and represented well. The reading is largely accessible, exceedingly interesting and always entertaining. The writers take as many shots at each other as they do at the zaftig bear and his creator (Milne), and they spare no time in overturning and complicating each other’s theses. What results from the interplay of the theories and their authors themselves is a carefully layered argument—an exercise in proving the benefits of not taking cultural texts for granted, no matter how simple they may seem. It is, after all, this same spirit of imagination and fantasy that Milne’s characters encouraged in the first place—why, then, should we be so reluctant to adopt this philosophy in writing/reading criticism of it?

89. Isabel Gaines | AUTHOR CATALOG
winnie the pooh has a hole in his basket! A Disney First Reader book paperbacksperfect for young children just beginning to read on their own. click
http://www.randomhouse.com/author/results.pperl?authorid=9567

90. Women Children's Book Illustrators--Ida Rentoul Outhwaite
Women Children s Book Illustrators of the 19th and 20th centuriesIda Books like Dr. Dolittle, Jungle Book, winnie the pooh and Babar had caught the
http://www.ortakales.com/Illustrators/Outhwaite.html
Ida Rentoul Outhwaite
Described as being just as petite and dainty as her fairies, Ida Rentoul Outhwaite was the first Australian children’s book illustrator to achieve world fame. She loved to paint fairies that often played with the native kangaroos, koalas and kookaburras that populated her beloved bush land. Childhood Ida Sherbourne Rentoul was born in Melbourne, Australia on 9 June 1888 to Annie Isobel Rattray and John Laurence Rentoul, a Professor at the University of Melbourne. Having lost two older children while they were still quite young, the remainder of the family consisted of two boys and two girls. The Rentouls were a well-educated family, interested in all forms of literature, art and music. Education It has been said that Ida was able to draw birds before the age of two and that she was able to copy the images on her nursery walls. While it was the eldest sister Annie (b. 1882) that was scholastically inclined, Ida chose to doodle in the margins of her books. For fear of squashing Ida’s emerging style, her parents decided against sending her to drawing lessons. Speaking about her early work, she had this to say: “I used to find great difficulty in drawing feet in those days, and was almost in despair until I hit on the happy plan of hiding them in deep luxuriant grasses (which was no doubt very wicked). I just had to plod along without having any teaching, which was a pity. I should have been a much better artist if I could have studied more and amused myself less.”

91. CM Magazine: Where Was Wonderland? A Traveller's Guide To The Settings Of Classi
London, UK Hamlyn Children s Books (Distributed in Canada by McClelland StewartInc.), 1997. (from the chapter on winniethe-pooh)
http://www.umanitoba.ca/cm/vol6/no3/wherewas.html
CM . . . . Volume VI Number 3 . . . . October 1, 1999 Where Was Wonderland? A Traveller's Guide to the Settings of Classic Children's Books. Frank Barrett.
201 pp., pbk., $14.99.
ISBN 0-600-59345-2. Subject Headings:
Literary landmarks.
Children's stories-History and criticism. Grades 5 and up / Ages 10 and up.
Review by Mary Thomas. excerpt:
The home of all the 'Animals in the forest' can be found between East Grinstead and Tunbridge Wells, at the village of Hartfield in Sussex. A useful map showing you the main places connected with the book is sold at the Pooh Corner shop in Hartfield itself. The map was produced by Maire McQueeny who leads walks through 'Pooh country' several times every year. One of the best places to begin is at Pooh Car Park near Chuck Hatch... (from the chapter on Winnie-the-Pooh) If you are a parent planning to take your young-to-adolescent-aged child(ren) to Britain this summer, this book will be a great help to your mutual enjoyment of the trip. You must, however, get started immediately, as the relevance and major interest of the walks described comes from an intimate acquaintance with the books in whose settings they take place.
What Frank Barrett has written is a travel guide to places that are readily recognizable as the settings of many favourite children's books, pointing out where the action has taken place as well as any significance the spots may have had in the lives of the authors. Therefore, we visit the Lake District in order to see, for example, the pub that is pictured in

92. How To Take Little Bites Of The Big Apple
Tips from children s book author Carol Weston on visiting NYC with children. behind glass, is winnie the pooh—with Eeyore, Tigger, Kanga, and Piglet.
http://www.nycvisit.com/content/index.cfm?pagePkey=1478

93. Companion Article: Interview About Harry Potter
There are lots of children s books, past and present, which have appealed to adults.I think I was seventeen when somebody introduced me to winnie the pooh.
http://www.covchurch.org/cov/companion/article/0009harryinterview.html
Harry Potter Interview Joyce Markle, professor of English at National-Louis University (NLU) in Evanston, Illinois, has been teaching popular literature (Pop Lit) since 1980, and was one of the first to teach popular literature at the university level. She talked with the Companion about some of the reasons why the Harry Potter books have sold so well. Covenant Companion: Why are the Potter books selling so well? Joyce Markle: Generally, popular books, as opposed to serious or classic literature, sell well when they accomplish at least three things: 1) They have to follow the formulas that have appealed to the target audience in the past. Popular literature is directed at a limited audience. A given work is not aimed at just anybody. Some target audiences are larger than othersand some works attempt to "cross over" and appeal to readers outside the primary target audience. But, the writer and the publisher know from the past history of a given genre what kinds of daydreamsimages, character, and plot ingredientsthe intended audience prefers. A successful work is creative and fresh, but always within the limits of those formulas. Violating those formulas will disturb the audience in ways it does not want to be disturbed when it picks up its favorite kind of pop lit.

94. Main Title
Puffin books were, and for all I know still are, children s books, The original winnie the pooh, on the other handa bogstandard Harrods teddy
http://www.aslan.demon.co.uk/truth.htm
What is truth? I am not going to be photographed with that bloody bear! Christopher Robin Milne, cica 1975, attrib. Pontius Pilate famously asked 'What is truth?' and did not wait for an answer. Had he done so, he would have found that Christ's words were, in Latin (or possibly Greek) an anagram of the phrase 'It is the man you see before you.' This information would be a good deal more impressive if not for the fact that I had learned it from the Puffin Book of Jokes. 'Puffin' books were, and for all I know still are, children's books, a sub-imprint of Penguin. When I was growing up they went to great lengths to instill a sense of brand loyalty and corporate identity in literate kiddies. There was a rather ludicrous Puffin club involving a cute enamel badge, a secret code and an annual exhibition where you could meet famous authors. I do not know the name of the author of the Puffin Book of Jokes, but he wrote it on my copy of the book. (Roald Dahl was there on the same day; if I'd joined his queue the book would probably be worth something.) I don't know precisely what Greek anagrams were doing in a joke book. I think that 'jokes' were understood to include puzzles, riddles and word-games. The anonymous or at any rate forgotten author wanted to make the point that people (but only silly people, with tonsures, in the Olden Days) used to think that anagrams were a serious business; that they pored over sacred texts to tease out hidden meanings. 'I can't imagine how much time they used to waste on this' said the author 'There are an awful lot of words in the Bible.'

95. UEA, Case Studies (Autumn 2005)
children s books from and into English, such as winnie the -pooh, Aschehoug, Oslo 1998 - sections on winnie-the -pooh, Tove Jansson and Roald Dahl
http://www.uea.ac.uk/eas/teaching/pgunits/casestudies05.shtml
School of American Studies (AMS)
School of Film and Television Studies (FTV)
School of Literature and Creative Writing (LIT)

University of East Anglia, Norwich, NR4 7TJ. Tel: +44(0)1603 592280. Fax: +44(0)1603 507728.
General email: wwweas@uea.ac.uk Home Admissions Events ... Fellowships
Postgraduate Courses - Modules
LITEM039: Case Studies (Autumn 2005)
MA in Literary Translation Tutor: Professor Janet Garton This seminar looks at ways in which specific authors/works pass into other cultures through translation. This year's set of case studies will involve close textual study of a range of different texts to examine how translators have tackled problems of linguistic and cultural difference. The source texts will be taken from a variety of languages including French, German, and Norwegian; the emphasis, however, will be on renderings into English, and it is not necessary to be familiar with any of the source languages in order to participate in the seminar. Photocopies of central texts will be provided. There will be two or three sessions where participants will be given the opportunity to produce and compare their own translations of texts into or from English. It would be useful preparation to read some women's writing, drama and children's literature in your native language before the seminar. The week-by-week plan is as follows: Week 1 : Introductory week.

96. Life With Pooh (and Piglet): Alphabet Soup: - Commentary - Gauge At Metro Weekly
Like many kids, I fell in love with the winniethe-pooh literature when I wasyoung and I’ve always been captivated by children and the way they process
http://www.metroweekly.com/gauge/commentary.php?ak=225

97. Children's Classics - Youth Services
winniethe-pooh by AA Milne J MIL, J MIL, jcFIC MIL, jvFIC WIN The adventures ofChristopher Robin and his friends, in which pooh Bear uses a balloon to get
http://www.bartlett.lib.il.us/ysgreatreads/childclassics.html
Children's Classics
Youth Services
(Recommended by E.D. Hirsch in the book, Books to Build On
Little Women by Louisa Alcott
J ALC
J ALC J ALC jcFIC ALC ... jDVD FIC LIT
Chronicles the joys and sorrows of the four March sisters as they grow into young ladies in 19th century New England. Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie
J BAR
J BAR J BAR NetLibrary
The adventures of the three Darling children in Neverland with Peter Pan, the boy who would not grow up. Wizard of Oz by Frank L. Baum
J BAU
J BAU jcFIC BAU jvFIC WIZ ... jvFIC WIZ
After being transported by a cyclone to the land of Oz, Dorothy and her dog are befriended by a scarecrow, a tin man, and a cowardly lion. Caddie Woodlawn by Carol Brink
J BRI
jcFIC BRI jCD FIC BRI jvFIC CAD ... J DVD FIC CAD
The adventures of an eleven-year-old tomboy growing up on the Wisconsin frontier in the mid-nineteenth century. Old Mother West Wind by Thornton Burgess J BUR The adventures of Peter Rabbit, Johnny Chuck, Reddy Fox, the Merry Little Breezes, and all of their companions in the fields, the woods, and the streams. The Secret Garden by Frances Burnett J BUR J BUR jcFIC BUR jvFIC SEC ... jDVD FIC SEC Ten-year-old Mary comes to live in a lonely house on the Yorkshire moors and discovers an invalid cousin and the mysteries of a locked garden.

98. Catholic Online - Featured Today - Winnie Is Wise In The Ways Of Friendship
A young child wearing the bright orange badge of the safety patrol across his But it was the famous sage, winnie the pooh, who best described what had
http://www.catholic.org/featured/headline.php?ID=1547

99. CANOE -- WHAM! Gaming: - Video Games ARE For Kids
They include a feature we call “active leveling” which tracks a child’s Lizzie McGuire, Raven or winnie the pooh have an established fan base.
http://wham.canoe.ca/kids/2005/03/13/pf-1020497.html
March 13, 2005
Video Games ARE for kids
Don't let the news fool you games are still made for kids.
By Tony Tomas

Despite what seems like an over abundance of games designed for a mature audience, M rated games still take a back seat to what kids play. Video Gaming as an industry is still driven by the 12 and under crowd. With Spring Breaks happening all across Canada this month, and parents looking to give their kids something to do, we decided to steer you into buying your little ones a video game that doesn't promote excessive violence. Now it's no surprise how huge of an industry gaming has become in Canada, so listing stats which prove it could seem a bit obvious. Christmas time is a prime example of the popularity of gaming as it has replaced the two main forms of entertainment, movies and music, among Canadians. If the stats gathered concerning video games are correct, that facet of entertainment is probably a big part of your kid’s life and by extension your life. According to ESA (US), “Ninety-two per cent of parents surveyed who have children under the age of 18 say they monitor the content of the interactive games their children play.” So we know you’re watching – the question is, do you know what the heck is going on? It can be difficult for parents when trying to decide what to do when it comes to video games. What games do you buy? Should I worry about content? Are my kids actually going to like games designed for their age group? Should I even attempt to buy a game my kid hasn’t mentioned or bothered me about for 3 months?

100. IROSF -- Reviving Literacy Through SF & F
which is annexing works like Milne s winniethe-pooh to the Great Genre List As a child, I liked to read SF/F so that s what my father grandfather
http://www.irosf.com/forum/thread.qsml?thid=10244

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