The name of Arezoo Kaviani might not ring a bell with most women, but the results of her work can be seen on stars such as Claudia Sciffer, Gwyneth Paltrow, Reese Witherspoon, Jake Gyllenhaal, Daniel Craig and Liam Neeson, her being the media-proclaimed biggest beauty and waxing guru in the UK. Since summer is alread... |
7 July 2009 16:21 GMT |
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Ever since women learned hair only looked good on the head, waxologists have gradually become accustomed to the weirdest requests from customers, like having the earlobes, cheeks and even the neck waxed. The latest trend, they stress, has also come to catch on so fast because it is necessary – clearly, no woman... |
18 May 2009 16:31 GMT |
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One of the most acclaimed and celebrity-endorsed beauty procedures of our time, the Brazilian wax, is on the verge of being banned in New Jersey because of the cases of two women who ended up in the hospital following several complications. While the ban from authorities is still pending, this type of waxing is not e... |
30 March 2009 15:51 GMT |
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Hybrid technology strikes again! No, not in the automobile industry, this time it reached onto ocean-going submersibles. The Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, famous for finding the wreck of the RMS Titanic near Newfoundland back in 1985, with the help of an Argo submersible, has just invented a new robotic glide... |
11 February 2008 09:27 GMT |
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1. The oldest known bee was found in amber coming from Myanmar: 100 million years old! This was during the Cretaceous, the last dinosaur era, and Melittosphex shared both bee and wasp traits. The honey bees (genus Apis) originated in southern Asia and only one species, Apis melifera, is found also in Europe and Afric... |
10 November 2007 08:38 GMT |
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Human taste for honey is millions of years old. Baboons and chimpanzees are known to indulge with honey when they find a bee colony. Cave paintings dated 15,000 years old found in South Africa and India depict honey hunting by Paleolithic people. In Cava D'Arana, discovered in 1919 in Valencia region (Spain), t... |
5 September 2007 07:12 GMT |
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A new Yale-Cambridge research reveals how ice sheets sometimes interlace when they shock, rather than overriding each other; researches assesses the implications of these phenomenon for other phenomena, from plate tectonics of the Earth's surface to the development of self-assembling nanostructures. "A surprisin... |
3 March 2007 07:54 GMT |
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