Beauty Sally Store Supply

 Beauty Sally Store Supply Beauty Geek Wikipedia



 

 

List of retailers

Here are the retailers in Arlington Ridge Marketplace, listed counterclockwise geographically, starting with the Target anchor store: Target.

Famous Footwear.

Performance Bicycle.

Pet Supplies Plus.

Deals.

Great Clips.

Smoothie King.

Alltel.

Game Stop.

Sally Beauty Supply.

Panera Bread.

DeVille Developments said there is a lease signed with women's retailer Dots, and the company is in negotiations with another national women's retailer and two national restaurants to be in the strip mall. There is other space available, but there are no new outer lots.

Outer lots are currently occupied by Lion Garden Chinese Buffet and Seafood and Burger King.


2 robbery at Rte. 46 beauty store

SADDLE BROOK -- For the second time in two weeks, police are investigating an armed robbery at Sally Beauty Supply on Route 46.

A man and a woman, each wearing a cloth mask and a hooded sweatshirt, entered the store just after 5:15 p.m. Tuesday, said Detective Sgt. John Zotollo of the Saddle Brook Police.

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Florence police search for robbery suspect

Florence police are searching for a suspect who they say walked into a beauty supply store Saturday and robbed it at gunpoint, Florence Police Maj. Carlos Raines said. The incident happened about 9:40 a.m. at Sally’s Beauty Supply on West Palmetto Street, Raines said. Police say a man entered the store, asked for directions and then asked for change for a $5 bill, Raines said. As the clerk opened the register, she noticed the man had a gun and closed the register, Raines said. The suspect then demanded she opened the register again. He fled the scene on foot with an undisclosed amount of cash, Raines said. The suspect is described as a white man in his late teens or early twenties, with a slender build and about 5 feet, 6 inches tall. He was last seen wearing a green and black hooded sweatshirt with a black toboggan and baggy jeans, Raines said.


Author series readies lineup for fourth year

Dec. 21: Patrick McMullan, New York City social photographer, on Glamour Girls; David Patrick Columbia, social chronicler and editor, on Debbie: My Life. Jan. 11: Cathie Black, Hearst Magazines executive, on Basic Black: The Essential Guide for Getting Ahead at Work; Pete Hamill, novelist, essayist and journalist, on North River: A Novel. Jan. 25: Frances Kiernan, former New Yorker editor, on The Last Mrs. Astor: A New York Story; Dr. Nicholas Perricone, anti-aging expert, on Ageless Face, Ageless Mind: Erase Wrinkles and Rejuvenate the Brain. Feb. 8: Wil Schwalbe and David Shipley, editors, on Send: The Essential Guide to Email for Office and Home; Harold Koda, curator of the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute, on Poiret. Feb. 22: William Secord, art historian and gallerist, on Dog Painting, 1840-1940, A Social History of the Dog in Art; Norris Church Mailer, novelist, on Cheap Diamonds.


The End -- Tiny arcs of the unfinished

They left a prescient few with palms upturned, mouths agape, minds bewildered, wondering "Why?" and "What if?" Each forged a legacy. Some flopped famously, or simply skulked away. Others were snakebitten from the start. They may have been rudely disrupted by tragedy, taken from the shelves per marketing executives or left to wither away per the masses who grow bored and abandon a fad's band wagon.

These are the people and things from American pop culture that met their doom all too soon, extinguished in some way before the full weight of their glory could be brought to bear.

No realm is immune from a too-young-to-die story, be it fashion or fame, books or television, athletics or the automobile.

But as it goes, some lives and pop trends are cut off before a lot of people are done enjoying them.


Body Fat, Red Meat Linked to Cancer

Excess body fat and red meat are linked to an increased risk of common cancers and should be avoided, the World Cancer Research Fund and the American Institute for Cancer Research said.

About 40 percent of all cancers are linked to food, lack of exercise and body weight, the organizations said in a 571-page report. This is the most comprehensive evaluation of evidence linking personal habits to cancer risk, expert panelists said.

The findings are meant to guide future scientific research, cancer prevention education programs and health policy around the world, panelists said. The recommendations could prevent about a third of all cancers if adopted worldwide, said W. Philip T. James, panel member and chairman of the International Obesity Task Force in London.

"Part of the purpose of the report was to show that prevention of cancer by means of food, nutrition and associated factors is as feasible and crucial as prevention of coronary heart disease," researchers said.



 

 

 

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