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...less than in his paintings one sees the colors that sign his Arlesian period, the yellow, ultramarine and mauve. In the late spring, "the landscape gets tones of gold of various tints, green-gold, yellow-gold, pink-gold, and in the same way bronze, copper, in short starting from citron yellow all the way to a dull, dark yellow color like a heap of threshed corn. And this combined with the blue-from the deepest royal blue of the water to the blue of the forget-me-nots, cobalt . .." Some artists' letters are unrevealing about their work; others mythologize...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Visionary, Not the Madman | 10/22/1984 | See Source »

Most Businessmen in the area said yesterday the store's closing came as a surprise, but some said the store's profits have declined in recent years. "The fad is over on yogurt," Sam Citron, manager of the Baskin-Robbins outlet in Harvard Square, said yesterday, adding, "I know yogurt sales are off all over...

Author: By Sophie M. Sparrow, | Title: Frozen Yogurt Store Closes After 9 Years | 10/2/1980 | See Source »

Elsie's and Belgian Fudge both advertise "homemade" ice cream, but Sam Citron, manager of Baskin-Robbins, charges that these establishments are not complying with regulations handed down by Massachusetts Attorney General Francis X. Bellotti that define "homemade" as "made of natural ingredients and made in the retail outlet in which it is sold...

Author: By Joseph B. White, | Title: Ice Cream Retailer Hot Over 'Homemade' Label | 6/26/1978 | See Source »

...smaller ice cream stores in the Square use a commercial mix base for their ice cream because the equipment needed to make ice cream from scratch costs half a million dollars, Citron said. The mix is supplied by large commercial concerns such as H.P. Hood...

Author: By Joseph B. White, | Title: Ice Cream Retailer Hot Over 'Homemade' Label | 6/26/1978 | See Source »

...hope for "is something brown, reminiscent of coffee, poured into a Styrofoam cup that, in most cases, you are advised to hold onto as it must also serve as your on-camera ashtray." Authors sometimes deserve no better. When Gore Vidal appeared to do New York's Casper Citron radio show, recalls Citron, "he walked in and said, 'Cash my check for $50, get me a drink, and what's your name?' " Vidal admits that he does TV interviews in a complete haze: "I have no memory of it when it's over...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Flogging It | 4/5/1976 | See Source »

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