Grace
January 30th, 2008, 02:28 AM
Question #29
Category: Education
Difficulty: Medium
Link: http://www.mkforum.net/forum/quiz.php?do=Take&id=15
Answer to Question #28:
1998 Grand Slam of Figure Skating. Many of you answered 1998 World Pros. Here's an article:
Kwan snips high-maintenance hair; Debbie Becker
USA Today 09-28-1998
CHARLESTON, S.C. -- The biggest news from the Grand Slam of Figure Skating might not have been the debut of open competition among amateur and professional skaters, but Michelle Kwan's new hair.
Gone is Kwan's sleek long hair. She's sporting a spiky, sophisticated cut by Los Angeles stylist Laurent D, the man who cuts Sharon Stone's hair.
Kwan began her skating with a long ponytail before switching to a bun several years ago. Because her hair is so thick, her mother, Estella, had to piece it together with strands of yarn before each event.
Kwan said she's been thinking about cutting her hair for years. ''It took me two years to chop it off,'' she said. ''I was tired of my mom having to work on my hair. My arms would get tired fixing it. I couldn't use bobby pins because I was afraid they'd fall out and someone would get hurt.''
Kwan cut 20 pictures out of magazines searching for the look she wanted. She found the perfect cut in the pages of People.
Copyright 1998, USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co., Inc.
Category: Education
Difficulty: Medium
Link: http://www.mkforum.net/forum/quiz.php?do=Take&id=15
Answer to Question #28:
1998 Grand Slam of Figure Skating. Many of you answered 1998 World Pros. Here's an article:
Kwan snips high-maintenance hair; Debbie Becker
USA Today 09-28-1998
CHARLESTON, S.C. -- The biggest news from the Grand Slam of Figure Skating might not have been the debut of open competition among amateur and professional skaters, but Michelle Kwan's new hair.
Gone is Kwan's sleek long hair. She's sporting a spiky, sophisticated cut by Los Angeles stylist Laurent D, the man who cuts Sharon Stone's hair.
Kwan began her skating with a long ponytail before switching to a bun several years ago. Because her hair is so thick, her mother, Estella, had to piece it together with strands of yarn before each event.
Kwan said she's been thinking about cutting her hair for years. ''It took me two years to chop it off,'' she said. ''I was tired of my mom having to work on my hair. My arms would get tired fixing it. I couldn't use bobby pins because I was afraid they'd fall out and someone would get hurt.''
Kwan cut 20 pictures out of magazines searching for the look she wanted. She found the perfect cut in the pages of People.
Copyright 1998, USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co., Inc.