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Peter Rocha, an artist from California, with his jelly bean model of the Statue of Liberty. All 40 flavours of the multi-coloured sweets were used to make the mosaic. Each jelly bean was coated in clear glue, wiped dry and placed in position. Jelly beans are becoming more popular in the United States since it was revealed the President, Ronald Reagan, keeps a bottle of them on his desk at the White House in Washington.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19861022.2.121

Bibliographic details

Press, 22 October 1986, Page 24

Word Count
75

Peter Rocha, an artist from California, with his jelly bean model of the Statue of Liberty. All 40 flavours of the multi-coloured sweets were used to make the mosaic. Each jelly bean was coated in clear glue, wiped dry and placed in position. Jelly beans are becoming more popular in the United States since it was revealed the President, Ronald Reagan, keeps a bottle of them on his desk at the White House in Washington. Press, 22 October 1986, Page 24

Peter Rocha, an artist from California, with his jelly bean model of the Statue of Liberty. All 40 flavours of the multi-coloured sweets were used to make the mosaic. Each jelly bean was coated in clear glue, wiped dry and placed in position. Jelly beans are becoming more popular in the United States since it was revealed the President, Ronald Reagan, keeps a bottle of them on his desk at the White House in Washington. Press, 22 October 1986, Page 24

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