
The Blue-Haired LadyThe New York Times hues explosion.
Posted Sunday, Sept. 21, 1997, at 3:30 AM ET
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| SCHOOLCHILDREN TESTIFY IN LATEST ROUND OF CAMPAIGN FINANCE HEARINGS
By CAREY GOLDBERG |
time of this printing, it was unclear whether the color of Senator Thompson's belt was moss brown or cordovan. Repeated inquiries to his Senate office went unanswered.
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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1997 |
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| WEST SIDERS RALLY BEHIND MOCHA At Issue: Is it a Color or a Flavor? |
By FRANK BROWN A group of angry West Side residents stormed the Arts Students League of New York to protest its recent refusal to grant mocha official status as a color, relegating it instead to the realm of flavors and aromas. Led by comedian and community activist Elayne Boosler, the march began at Zabar's coffee counter and made its way down Broadway to the Arts League Building on West 57th Street in an effort to demonstrate how mocha has bridged the gap between coffee and color. The police arrived shortly thereafter, but no arrests were made. |
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Yellow at a Crossroads Time was, no one gave much thought to yellow. It was regarded as neutral and benign, the Switzerland of colors. But just as recent events have cast aspersions on the Swiss, so too is yellow's good name in peril. This summer, yellow has been at the forefront of two public relations disasters. It is one of two colors featured in the logo of Burger King, whose recent tainted-meat fiasco caused millions of carnivorous Americans to endure Whaler fish sandwiches. And most prominently, yellow showed its darker, more |
orangy side as the signature color of the post-literate, hyper-cynical advertising campaign of ABC TV. This may be a good time to remember that yellow is also the signal for caution at traffic lights. Yellow, ask not for whom the light blinks. It blinks for thee.
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| Manfred Kupchek, 79, Inventor of Burnt Sienna Crayon
Manfred Kupchek, a former director of research and development at Crayola Crayons, died yesterday at his home in Nanuet, N.Y., at age 79. Mr. Kupchek is credited with having invented the popular color burnt sienna. In a poll of preschool children conducted in 1990, burnt sienna was the fourth-favorite colored crayon, eclipsed only by plum, brick red and periwinkle. |
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--Mark Katz
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