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Topic: Charles M. Schulz


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In the News (Tue 2 Dec 08)

  
 Charles M. Schulz - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charles M. Schulz was born in Saint Paul, Minnesota, to Dena and Carl Schulz.
(2002 reprinting) 50 Years of Happiness: A Tribute to Charles M. Schulz.
Schulz is a recipient of the Silver Buffalo Award, the highest adult award given by the Boy Scouts of America for his service to all American youth.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Charles_Schulz   (1589 words)

  
 Tribute to Charles M.Schulz
Thanks to Charles Schulz, Charlie Brown was a part of my childhood and yours, and I don’t think any of us can repay him the favor.
Schulz’ vision could be (and often was) parodied, but even the parodies retained an essential affection for the man and his comic strip.
Schulz introduced a natural minimalist style of drawing that truly was different from anything else in newspapers in the 1950s.
www.geocities.com /Hollywood/Academy/6351/schultz.html   (666 words)

  
 The My Hero Project - Charles M. Schulz
Charles Schulz was a great man and he is a very good role model for those who want to make something of life.
Charles Schulz is my hero because he spent his life working on cartoons and brightened the world with happiness by doing this.
Last but not least, I think of Charles Schulz as my hero because he didn't do drugs or any alcohol and he helped the community and the world by distrubuting money and making stuff that kids like, like an amusement park in Minnesota and California.
www.myhero.com /hero.asp?hero=Charles_Schulz   (1340 words)

  
 Charles M. Schulz: In Memoriam
Charles Schulz, creator of the "Peanuts" comic strip, died in his sleep on Feb. 12, 2000, after a battle with colon cancer.
Charles Schulz and Snoopy at the premiere of "Peanuts Gallery" at Carnegie Hall.
Schulz was born on Nov. 26, 1922, in Minneapolis.
www.infoplease.com /spot/schulz1.html   (662 words)

  
 schulz.html
Charles Monroe Schulz was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Schulz's first acknowledgement came from his fellow newspaper cartoonists: they gave him their Reuben Award in 1955, the first of many honours including, in 1978, being voted by his peers across the world of cartoonists as international cartoonist of the year.
Charles Schulz leaves a wife, Jeannie Forsyth, a daughter and a son.
www.derbydeadpool.co.uk /deadpool2000/obits/schulz.html   (662 words)

  
 MSN Encarta - Search View - Charles Schulz
Schulz, Charles M. Schulz, Charles M. (1922-2000), American comic-strip artist, creator of the comic strip “Peanuts.” Charles Monroe Schulz was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and wanted to be a cartoonist from an early age.
Schulz's drawing style was admired as clean and uncluttered, and his humor was personal, dignified, intelligent, and almost never topical.
Schulz received many awards and honors for his work, including the prestigious Reuben Award given by the National Cartoonists Society, which he won in 1955 and 1964.
encarta.msn.com /text_761579419__1/Charles_Schulz.html   (662 words)

  
 Charles M. Schulz - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ironically, Schulz had always predicted that the strip would outlive him (with his reason being comic strips are usually drawn a few weeks before their publication.) As part of his will, Schulz had requested that the Peanuts characters remain as authentic as possible and that no new comic strips based on them be drawn.
In November 1999 Schulz had a stroke, and later it was discovered that he had colon cancer that had metastasized to his stomach.
Schulz's father was a barber and his mother a housewife.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Charles_Schulz   (662 words)

  
 My Tribute to Charles M. Schulz
Charles M. Schulz, creator of the Peanuts comic strip, died in his sleep at the age of 77 on Saturday, February 12, 2000.
I am grateful to Charles M. Schulz for creating a comic strip that not only made us laugh, but that also taught us so much about ourselves.
I enjoy all of Schulz's characters, but it is Charlie Brown and Snoopy who stand out as having made the most significant influence on my life.
www.x98ruhf.net /schulz.htm   (361 words)

  
 CNN.com - US - 'Peanuts' creator Charles M. Schulz dies at 77 - February 13, 2000
Schulz several times was listed as one of Forbes magazine's best-paid entertainers, most recently in 1996, when his 1995-96 income was estimated at $33 million, ranking him 30th on the magazine's list.
Schulz was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, on November 26, 1922, and studied art after he saw a "Do you like to draw?" ad.
Gaye LeBaron, a close family friend of the Schulz family, told CNN she learned of his death from Schulz's wife, Jean.
archives.cnn.com /2000/US/02/13/schulz.obit.01   (975 words)

  
 Charles M. Schulz
When Schulz died February 13, 2000, the eve of publication for the last Sunday strip he would draw, the world mourned the passing of a gentle humorist and minimalist innovator, a comic strip artist who had become one of America's major pop philosophers, theologians, and psychologists in the last half of the twentieth century.
Schulz talks at length about life, theology, sports, the art of the comic strip, and the human condition in general.
Until Schulz's retirement, he never missed a deadline and was totally responsible for writing, drawing, and lettering the feature every day, a record matched by no other cartoonist in newspaper history.
www.upress.state.ms.us /catalog/fall2000/charles_m_shulz.html   (417 words)

  
 MichaelBarrier.com -- Interviews: Charles M. Schulz
SCHULZ: I was driving along one day, and came to a stop sign, and there was a truck in front of me, and glued to the window of that truck was a little cartoon character of Yosemite Sam.
SCHULZ: Yes, I wish that I could live right in Hollywood and work in Bill's studio and not have to do all these other things, but be right there when all these shows are done, and be there every day—work with the animators, and look at every scene, and have absolute tight control over them.
The Schulz LOL—based not just on my interview with Schulz, but also on interviews with his associates Nelson and Ellison and Robert Roy Metz, head of United Media and its UFS subsidiary—turned out very well, I thought, but, sadly, it was mangled at the last minute in the editorial process.
www.michaelbarrier.com /Interviews/Schulz/interview_charles_schulz.htm   (10241 words)

  
 Charles M. Schulz - Wikipedia
Literatur von und über Charles M. Schulz im Katalog der DDB
1975 erreicht Schulz in über 1600 Zeitungen bereits mehr als 90 Millionen Leser.
Ende der 1940er Jahre begann Schulz mit der Veröffentlichung seiner Comics in verschiedenen Zeitungen.
de.wikipedia.org /wiki/Charles_M._Schulz   (10241 words)

  
 Norman Rockwell Museum
Charles Monroe Schulz (1922–2000) revolutionized the comic strip and profoundly affected modern life through his dedication to art, wit, and everyday wisdom.
Speak Softly and Carry a Beagle: The Art of Charles Schulz was organized by the Minnesota Museum of American Art in Schulz's hometown of St. Paul, Minnesota, in partnership with the Charles M. Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa, California, the town in which Schulz spent most of his adult life.
Speak Softly and Carry a Beagle: The Art of Charles Schulz celebrates the life and career of this extraordinary artist and tracks the development of his unique band of characters who make up the world of Peanuts.
www.nrm.org /exhibits/schulz/biography   (10241 words)

  
 The Art of Peanuts - The Gold Scales
With a sharp sense of humor and a keen understanding of alienation, Charles Schulz made 'Peanuts' an indispensable cultural touchstone.
CHARLES Schulz: "Not long ago I had Linus' blanket-hating grandmother come to his house for a visit.
Schulz took much pride in the achievements of the strip, and at the same time struggled to believe that he was worthy of the respect and love his admirers showered on him.
oaks.nvg.org /sa4ra3.html   (10241 words)

  
 Farewell, Charles Schulz
Schulz maintained he only wanted to amuse, and to a great extent he kept that simple promise by chronicling the pure joys and traumas of childhood in a tone that was consistently droll, good-natured and without pretense.
Schulz, who was diagnosed with colon cancer and suffered a series of small strokes during emergency abdominal surgery in November 1999 and announced his retirement a few weeks afterward, died in his sleep at about 9:45 p.m., his son Craig Schulz said.
Schulz was pleased with the attention to religious nuance considering the cartoonist was a deeply religious man — he belonged to the Church of God and called himself a secular humanist — but "did not want to offend" readers with grandiose expressions of his faith.
www.users.cloud9.net /~cerbo/schulz2.html   (10241 words)

  
 The My Hero Project - Charles M. Schulz
Charles Schulz is my hero because he spent his life working on cartoons and brightened the world with happiness by doing this.
Charles Schulz was a great man and he is a very good role model for those who want to make something of life.
Last but not least, I think of Charles Schulz as my hero because he didn't do drugs or any alcohol and he helped the community and the world by distrubuting money and making stuff that kids like, like an amusement park in Minnesota and California.
www.myhero.com /hero.asp?hero=Charles_Schulz   (10241 words)

  
 Comic Art & Graffix Gallery Artist Biographies - Charles Schulz
Charles Monroe Schulz was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota on November 22, 1922.
Schulz again won the Reuben Award in 1964, and the following year Peanuts made its television debut in a prime time cartoon special that itself was not only a huge success but resulted in an Emmy award.
While he was still in high school, Schulz decided to take a correspondence course in cartooning, which he reportedly completed.
www.comic-art.com /bios-1/schulz01.htm   (10241 words)

  
 BBC - h2g2 - Charles M Schulz; a biography
Charles Monroe Schulz, known as “Sparky” to his family, friends and colleages, was born in St Paul, Minnesota, on 26 November 1922.
Schulz showed artistic talent from a very early age, and his kindergarten teacher predicted that he would be an artist.
Schulz himself sketched and wrote every running of Peanuts for 50 years, and had a clause inserted into his contract, preventing anyone else from releasing new "Peanuts" cartoons after his death.
www.bbc.co.uk /dna/ww2/A695559   (10241 words)

  
 Schulz, Charles --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Schulz, Charles M. For 50 years, Charles M. Schulz's strip “Peanuts” was a staple of the comics in the United States and around the world and was one of the most successful American comic strips of the mid-20th century.
comic strip drawn and authored by Charles Schulz (q.v.).
Schulz, the son of a barber, studied cartooning in an art correspondence school after graduating in 1940 from high school.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9066233?&query=charles   (10241 words)

  
 Random House Authors Charles M. Schulz
Charles M. Schulz was born in 1922 in Minneapolis, the only child of a housewife and a barber.
This beautiful album will dazzle fans of Charles M. Schulz and his art, providing an unprecedented look at the work of the most brilliant and beloved cartoonist of the twentieth century.
For the first time in one irresistible book, here are fifty love-struck years of Valentine’s Day strips from the inimitable Charles Schulz.
www.randomhouse.com /author/results.pperl?authorid=27350   (912 words)

  
 The Santa Rosa Press Democrat // Charles Schulz
Charles M. Schulz, creator of the most popular comic strip in history, was Sonoma County's most famous resident during the last half of the 20th century.
This is the museum that Charles Schulz once had his doubts about, and later hoped he might live to see.
When Schulz died Feb. 12, 2000, "Peanuts" appeared in 2,600 newspapers, with an estimated 350 million people in 75 countries turning to the comic strip each day to glean a simple joke, a bit of philosophy or a dose of dark humor.
www.pressdemocrat.com /evergreen/schulz   (732 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Peanuts: The Art of Charles M. Schulz: Books: Charles M. Schulz
It's definitely safe to say that Charles Schulz is my all-time hero for one reason: an ordinary man through a simple medium was able to affect so many people by making them aware of what it means to live and what it means to be human.
This book "Peanuts: The Art of Charles Schulz" is focused primarily on those early days of Peanuts, with most of the material from the first ten years of the strip (the 1950's).
Peanuts 2000: The 50th Year Of The World's Favorite Comic Strip by Charles M. Schulz
www.amazon.com /exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0375420975?v=glance   (2141 words)

  
 Charles M. Schulz - Wikiquote
I had expected to meet Charles Schulz for about 15 minutes; I had expected that we would have a couple of grip-and-grin photos taken, and then we would be shuffled out the door.
Charles Monroe Schulz (26 November 1922- 12 February 2000) American cartoonist and satirist; creator of the Peanuts comic strip.
Schulz should be considered part of the generation of authors who saw active duty during World War II; he is in the company of writers such as Joseph Heller, Kurt Vonnegut, and of course Sartre himself.
en.wikiquote.org /wiki/Charles_Schulz   (1980 words)

  
 Charles M. Schulz Honored with Congressional Gold Medal
Charles M. Schulz died in Santa Rosa, California on February 12, 2000 due to complications from colon cancer, only hours before his last original PEANUTS strip appeared in Sunday papers.
Charles Schulz gave more to society than just his comic strip.
Born in Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1922, Charles M. Schulz began his fascination with comic strips early, reading the Sunday comics from four different newspapers with his father each week.
www.senate.gov /~feinstein/releases01/charles_schulz.html   (574 words)

  
 City Pages - CHARLES M. SCHULZ
With these mordant strokes, Charles M. Schulz began his groundbreaking comic strip, Peanuts.
And Charles Schulz has spent a few of the many millions of dollars he has made off Peanuts on a palatial ice arena, which he visits every day, and where, rumor has it, he still occasionally dons his hockey skates.
Schulz's observational wit was accentuated by his decision to depict these fables in an unspecified place, a generic suburban sprawl that may be Schulz's ultimate comment on Minnesota (and, for that matter, America).
www.citypages.com /databank/19/927/article5974.asp   (1461 words)

  
 Schulz, Charles M. The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition. 2002
Schulz, Charles M. An American cartoonist who drew the syndicated “Peanuts&; comic strip from 1950 until shortly before his death in 2000.
Schulz, Charles M. The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition.
Unlike many other cartoonists, Schulz did not allow others to do the initial drawings for the strip.
www.bartleby.com /59/8/schulzcharle.html   (137 words)

  
 Peanuts ...Charles M Schulz,
Charles M. Schulz has been cartooning for an astonishing 50 years (the Peanuts strip itself debuted October 2, 1950, but he drew an earlier incarnation called Li'l Folks before that).
Make Way for the King of the Jungle : A Peanuts Collection; Charles M. Schulz
Schulz comments on the cartoons and his inspirations via notes in the margin, ranging from boyhood stories about his father (a barber, just like Charlie Brown's) to an account of the time the narcolepsy experts at Stanford University expressed concerns over Peppermint Patty's constant sleeping in class.
www.seatalebooks.com /peanuts.shtml   (540 words)

  
 Charles M. Schulz Biography
The National Cartoonists Society was to honor Schulz with a lifetime achievement award at their convention in New York on May 27.
With encouragement from his father and mother, Schulz enrolled in a correspondence course in cartooning at what is now the Art Instruction Schools, Inc., in Minneapolis.
Among numerous honors, Schulz received two Reuben Awards from the National Cartoonists society in 1955 and again in 1964, and has been inducted into the Cartoonists Hall of Fame.
www.animationusa.com /resources/aboutschulz.html   (516 words)

  
 Charles M. Schulz: Li'l Beginnings
Charles M. Schulz: Li’l Beginnings, with a foreword by Jean Schulz and annotations, editorial commentary and an introduction by Derrick Bang, includes all 135 of the panels that Schulz created for the St. Paul Pioneer Press, his hometown paper, between June 22, 1947, and January 22, 1950.
Li’l Folks, the weekly comic panel that Charles Schulz produced before turning his attention to Peanuts, is the subject of a book released February 21, 2004, by the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center.
All of us at the Charles M. Schulz Museum are excited to share this collection of rarely seen cartoons in a more accessible format.
www.dcn.davis.ca.us /Go/bang/lilbegin.html   (373 words)

  
 Charles M. Schulz
New Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center to Open August 17, 2002 in Santa Rosa California; Highlights include: a recreation of Schulz's studio, an extensive collection of original strips, a 7,000-pound morphing Snoopy, a tile mural of Lucy and Charlie Brown, and a Snoopy Labyrinth.
Charles M. Schulz: In Memoriam - Creator of Charlie Brown, Snoopy and the entire "Peanuts" gang by Beth Rowen Charles...
ADVISORY/Charles Schulz's Last Peanuts Ice Show Premieres During June 23 Media Preview At Knott's New Charles M. Schulz Theatre.
www.infoplease.com /ipea/A0154915.html   (317 words)

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