After a long day of besieging steppe settlements, the Mongol hordes liked to kick back with a vigorous massage, a copy of the Daily Khan, and a nice warm glass of fermented yak's milk. Conquer your own serenity with today's Groupon at Nolas Salon and Day Spa in Fairlawn. Choose from three options:
- For $45, you get a haircut with a color retouch and balance or partial highlights (up to a $105 value).
- For $45, you get a 90-minute therapeutic massage (a $95 value).
- For $45, you get a 60-minute multivitamin power facial (a $100 value).
Nolas's cosmetic contractors train their artisanal gaze on sophistication-seeking clients with soothing salon and spa treatments designed to renovate unkempt bodies. Customize coifs with an identity-reinventing haircut, as hairscapers use stylish snips and a color retouch or highlights to rid follicle gardens of tousled looks, excess growth, and half-built bang gazebos. Comfort-seekers looking to improve bodily vibrations may opt for one of Nolas's spa treatments. The 90-minute therapeutic relaxation massage uses gentle Swedish strokes to untie muscles snagged by rush-hour stress or night jobs modeling knots for knitting circles. Patrons can also gussy up grills with a 60-minute multivitamin power facial, which combines a scouring exfoliation with pore purging and a hydrating seaweed mask to leave recalibrated countenances shining.
Pampered patrons wait their turn in Nolas's Fairlawn studio, sipping complimentary coffee in a spacious environment that resembles an inviting living room, as opposed to rows of cramped styling cubicles. Magnanimous clientele can also encourage the salon's charitable efforts by donating to the Glass Slipper Mission, a collection of gently used dresses, accessories, and frog princes to help cash-strapped high schoolers have a suitably sparkling prom season.
Reviews
Nine Yahoo! Locals give Nolas Salon and Day Spa an average of 4.5 stars:
- I have been looking for a full service salon and had problems finding any I liked. This place was exactly what I'm looking for. – MCAkron
- Everyone ive met at nolas is nice and professional. I have had manicures and pedicures there monthly for years, also have had facials and massages its very relaxing. – jane spa girl
Groupon Says
The Groupon Guide to: Famous Equations
Math and science have long been two of our most treasured sources of equations. Here's a look at some of these famous mathematical statements:
The Energy-Mass Equivalence: E=MC²
In 1905, Alfred Einstein was the first to posit that mass and energy are actually the same thing, despite the fact that they are clearly two different things. Several weeks later, this famous equation created the atomic bomb. Today, scientists agree that the atomic bomb was a bad thing, that mass and energy are clearly two different things (Just look at them!), and that Einstein should apologize.
The Pythagorean Theorem: a² + b²= c²
British philosopher Pythagoras put forward this important theory about the length of triangle sides, which states that the three sides of any triangle always add up to 180 centimeters. Although it might look funny to modern brains, the reason that the equation contains letters instead of numbers is that numbers had not yet been invented. Unfortunately, the Pythagorean theorem has largely fallen out of favor because triangles aren't used anymore.
Pi: π = A/r²
This tasty mathematical constant expresses the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter. Mathematicians must memorize all of pi's 100 digits to graduate from college and to receive the traditional mathematician's crown. Pi is closely linked to the mysterious circle, the boring geometric shape that contains a disappointing number of right angles. For most people, it's enough to remember pi's first three digits: three hundred fourteen.
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