Path: bloom-picayune.mit.edu!snorkelwacker.mit.edu!americast.com!americast.com!americast-post Newsgroups: americast.twt.life From: americast-post@AmeriCast.Com Organization: American Cybercasting Approved: americast-post@AmeriCast.com Subject: Headline Article Date: Tue, 10 Nov 92 15:13:22 EST Message-ID: \SE E;LIFE;MERRIE-GO-ROUND \BY Merrie Morris \CR THE WASHINGTON TIMES HER BLONDENESS: Former first hairdresser Robin Weir says women aren't exactly flocking to his salon requesting to be made over in the image of Hillary Clinton. Nonetheless, That Haircut - fine bangs, a little shaping around the face, one length to the collar - is a Washington staple, not likely to become less popular now. Through a little legwork, we've also learned that Kristof, Hillary's Beverly Hills hairdresser, gets her blond color courtesy L'Oreal Magiblond 913X - a professional formula, natch. As for Hillary's going to Georgetown's Okyo salon, as reported elsewhere, for her inaugural 'do, don't count on it. Word is she wouldn't dare entrust her golden locks to a stranger; Kristof will be only to glad to watch over the First Blonde for the big night. Of course, much has been made of Hillary's increasingly glossy image, but she's been willing to pamper herself all along. For the past 12 years, when she goes to New York on business - and she has gone regularly - she's found time to get a facial at $65 a pop at the Georgette Klinger salon, a favorite haunt of Ivana Trump's. Hillary will be happy to know Washington has its own Georgette Klinger on Wisconsin Avenue. * Bill Clinton's been chatting about Chelsea's dancing in "The Nutcracker," which has folks at the Washington School of Ballet all aflutter. They'd like Chelsea to know that both Jackie Kennedy and daughter Caroline took their ballet lessons there. TWIRLING TIARAS: Buckingham Palace will announce within a few weeks that Charles and Diana are officially living apart - or so the London Mail said yesterday. But wags don't put a lot of stock in the report. With no lawyers involved, there's nothing substantial or new to announce. All the talk was prompted by the disastrous Korean tour, during which Diana's supposedly cured bulimia raged. SHORT TAKES: The Boss is still boss. MTV allowed him to break the rules and use amplifiers, something ordinarily not permitted during the "MTV Unplugged" segments. "Hey, he's Bruce Springsteen. He can do whatever he wants," was how the company explained the exception to the rules. "Bruce Springsteen Plugged" will be shown tomorrow night as part of a three-hour special on the Boss. * Jack Valenti hands out signed copies of his thriller "Protect and Defend" when the Friends of the Library, Montgomery County , celebrate their 10th anniversary tonight at the Bethesda Country Club. * ABC newsman Gary Shepard, whose skull was fractured during an election-day robbery at his Malibu, Calif., home, has been released from Santa Monica Hospital Medical Center. "He asked that I tell his fellow journalists that he felt great," hospital spokesman Ted Braun said Sunday. This article is copyright 1992 The Washington Times. Redistribution to other sites is not permitted except by arrangement with American Cybercasting Corporation. For more information, send-email to usa@AmeriCast.COM