1 result for (book:tes7 AND session:298 AND stemmed:black)
[... 1 paragraph ...]
(The 75th envelope experiment used as object the employee record stub from Jane’s first check as a substitute high school teacher. Jane had of course seen it several times since receipt on October 28. The object is printed in black on green paper which contains a faint pattern. The green is itself a light tint. The large numeral in the upper right corner is in red. The back is blank. I placed the record between the usual double Bristols, then sealed it in double envelopes.
[... 33 paragraphs ...]
A call. The color black. Four numbers. A one and a nine. A date. Perhaps 1963, and a scroll of sorts. Connection with three people and a fourth, separated.
[... 5 paragraphs ...]
I am not sure. Holding onto, reaching out toward, with some urgency. An unassailable position. A Q. A great deal of fuss. A small rectangular object, perhaps of metal, with numbers upon it. Such as, for example, a small license plate, that would carry numbers and notations, and be metallic and connected with travel. And the color orange and black, and an automobile perhaps.
[... 13 paragraphs ...]
(“What does that call and the color black refer to?”)
[... 15 paragraphs ...]
(See page 141 for a copy of the envelope object, and the notes on the next page. As stated the object is the stub from Jane’s first paycheck as a substitute teacher, received on Friday, October 28. It is made of green paper, light in color, with a pale green pattern throughout. The printing is in black, with the large number in the upper right corner in red. The back is blank. The stub contains the amount of the check, tax deductions, the date, etc.
[... 11 paragraphs ...]
(“A call. The color black.” Seth adds a bit of data during the questioning, and verifies my first thought here, that this data refers to our having a telephone—black—installed because of Jane’s teaching job. Also, Jane insisted on a black phone.
[... 20 paragraphs ...]
(“A small rectangular object, perhaps of metal, with numbers upon it. Such as, for example, a small license plate, that would carry numbers and notations, and be metallic and connected with travel. And the color orange and black, and an automobile perhaps.” All of this refers to Jane’s taking a taxi to the various schools in town, whenever she was called. I was not available to take her, having already left for work except on the first occasion. The taxi she used was orange and black.
[... 4 paragraphs ...]
(6th Question: Can you give the color of the object itself? “No, except that it is not dark. A dim color. With perhaps dim dark overtones”, can be said to apply to the object. See page 141. The object is printed on paper of a pale green, which could also be called dim. The black printing is of course dark on this.
[... 3 paragraphs ...]
(8th Question: What does that call and the color black refer to? “Ruburt has a phone connection, of course.” Jane had to have a phone put in for the teaching job, since she would be on daily call. She insisted on a black wall phone, in the face of the company’s efforts to sell her more expensive colored phones, etc. We regard this as good data.
[... 11 paragraphs ...]