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[Hallmark Cards, last month announced the name will be changed to Crayola on Jan. 1.
The name change is symbolic of an image revamp going on at one of the nation's best-known icons. Crayola is all done being a stodgy, buck-a-pack crayon company with tunnel vision and red-white-and-blue conservative values.
The company is working overtime this holiday to reinvent itself as a flashy maker of $20 gifts, from a "no-mess" spin-art machine to a mess-proof spray-painter that's emerging as one of its best-selling new products in decades. The company, which also owns the Silly Putty brand, is no longer a holiday advertising no-show, either. This year, it's tripling its holiday marketing budget, says Steven Ferry, a senior manager.]
Miller met Principal Ida Byrd-Hill at the laundry while the financial-consultant-turned-educator recruited for the school. Byrd-Hill looked at gas stations, party stores and clubs for teens who had failed at several attempts at high school and needed one last chance at a diploma.
"We found them," Byrd-Hill says. "We passed out a flier that looked like a party invitation."
The school's brightly colored promotional material shows jets, cars and jewelry. "Learn corporate survival techniques," it boasts, "Trillions of dollars are exchanged daily." "Financial Success, built on knowledge" appears in a school crest. The message is not subtle: "Join the hustle," the flier says.