A set S of n points is 2-color universal for a graph G on n vertices if for
every proper 2-coloring of G and for every 2-coloring of S with the same sizes
of color classes as G has, G is straight-line embeddable on S. We show that the
so-called double chain is 2-color universal for paths if each of the two chains
contains at least one fifth of all the points, but not if one of the chains is
more than approximately 28 times longer than the other. A 2-coloring of G is
equitable if the sizes of the color classes differ by at most 1. A bipartite
graph is equitable if it admits an equitable proper coloring. We study the case
when S is the double-chain with chain sizes differing by at most 1 and G is an
equitable bipartite graph. We prove that this S is not 2-color universal if G
is not a forest of caterpillars and that it is 2-color universal for equitable
caterpillars with at most one half non-leaf vertices. We also show that if this
S is equitably 2-colored, then equitably properly 2-colored forests of stars
can be embedded on it.Comment: extended version of the paper "Hamiltonian alternating paths on
bicolored double-chains" presented at Graph Drawing 200