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- Creator is exactly "<p><strong>Carl Rose</strong> (1903 – 1971) was an American cartoonist whose work appeared in The New Yorker, Popular Science, The Saturday Evening Postand elsewhere. He received the National Cartoonist's Society Advertising and Illustration Award for 1958.</p>
<p>Rose created one of the most famous <em>New Yorker</em> cartoons, published December 8, 1928, with a caption by E. B. White. In the cartoon, a mother at dinner says to her young daughter, "It's broccoli, dear." Her daughter answers, "I say it's spinach, and I say the hell with it." (The phrase "I say it's spinach entered the vernacular; in 1932, Irving Berlin's popular Broadway revue <em>Face The Music</em> included the song "I say it's spinach (and the hell with it!)") Elizabeth Hawes adopted it for her critique of the clothing design industry: <em>Fashion is Spinach</em> (1938).</p>
<p>Rose illustrated Bennet Cerf's best-selling book <em>Try and Stop Me</em> and its sequel <em>Shake Well Before Using</em>. Rose also illustrated <em>Have Tux ,Will Travel</em>, the supposed autobiography of actor Bob Hope (actually ghost-written by journalist Pete Martin).<br /><br /><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Rose_(cartoonist)" target="_blank">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Rose_(cartoonist)</a></p>"
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