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POPSMake Your Own Heavenly Vanilla Soap This is just heaven. Easy as pie too. Melt, add scent, cool and you're done. Rose, lavender, vanilla, rolled oats, add whatever. This is a good way to save on nasty additives and it's cheaper than buying such heavenly divine soap ready-made. Ooh, it's so good! *LOL* Try it. .:)
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POPSMake your own soap I make soap as a hobby and side business. Although this is not my website, this site is always highly recommended by "soapers" as a newbie's first stop in their quest to learn how to make soap. We haven't used store bought soap since I started making it.
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POPSBreast growth in boys The lavender and tea tree oils found in some soaps, shampoos, hair gels and body lotions can produce enlarged breasts in boys, researchers reported on Wednesday...
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POPSWho Will Kill The Evil Germs? Mark Morford is one of my favourite columnists. He has a wonderfully quirky mind and uses it to express his ideas of the political and intellectually lacking aspects of our society. I urge you to read his entire column by clicking on the visit page link at the top.
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POPSDoubt in FDA View Of BPA BPA, first synthesized in 1891, is used to harden plastics, and it appears in everything from baby bottles to sunglasses. Studies suggest BPA may be associated with a variety of problems, including Type-2 diabetes, prostate cancer, genital defects in men, early onset of puberty in women and behavioral problems. There much more around. Triclosan in fluid soaps, shampoos and toothpaste, 90% positive tests for pesticides in random urine tests, transfat oils... Looks like weapons of mass destruction.:(
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POPSObama Bar Obama Soap Cedar and Sassafras Obama Soap from http://www.MyObamaBar.com - there's also a very funny video on YouTube http://www.youtube.com/myobamabar - it's a great product for gifts, election parties, christmas, or obama supporters
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POPSUsed Cooking Oil Turned Into Cosmetics Would you consider rubbing used oil from a deep-fat fryer into your face? We are turning an environmentally harmful waste product into something that is both safe and useful," says Shah. The prospect of turning waste cooking oil into biosurfactants has been investigated before, but Shah and colleagues have demonstrated the feasibility of the process by showing it can be done cheaply in commercial fermenters (Biotechnology Progress, DOI: 10.1021/bp0602909). Biosurfactants could net as much as $20 per litre when used in cosmetics, says Shah.