NEWTOWN — Your dog or cat could help in cleaning up the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. The Animal Center, a Newtown-based charity for animal welfare, is requesting that pet owners bring in clean fur to Your Healthy Pet pet store in Newtown from May 14 to 28....
Making hair booms in Mobile. Photo courtesy of Amanda Bacon Thanks, everyone, who helped with finding out more about those hair booms or mats folks are donating clippings for to help protect the Gulf Coast. BP says its responders aren’t using the hair booms because...
VIRGINIA BEACH — ‘It’s all our water,’ says Dave Dunlap as he sits in a salon chair. ‘We’ve got to take care of it, and if this helps, that’s the best way to do it.’ With his hair clippings falling to the ground at Sport...
Fri, 14 May 2010 21:41:53 GMT — Oil continues to spill into the Gulf of Mexico but if you’d like to help it doesn’t take much. Hot Headz Salon in Leesburg is challenging hair salons across Southwest Georgia to collect as much hair as they can to help out...
5 A little off the top: Hair to help cut Gulf oil spill impact The rally behind Stamford’s Academy of Information Technology & Engineering Thursday had a ’60s vibe. Students played guitars, wore peace signs, and held posters painted in psychedelic...
It’s the reason behind the invention of shampoo: Hair collects oil. Pounds of hair from New Haven-area residents — and their pets — will be doing just that, on a larger scale. The hair will be used to sop up some of the more than 4 million gallons of...
EVANSVILLE, IN (WFIE) – As crews try to fix an oil pipe gushing into the Gulf of Mexico, the tri-state is getting involved in the cleanup efforts. Stylists at Shannon Aleksandr’s are sweeping up– and saving– every little bit of hair they trim...
Students at The Ohio State College of Barber Styling were doing more than learning the art of hairdressing on Thursday. The students were part of an effort to send hair clippings to help the Gulf Coast clean up the oil spill, 10TV’s Lindsey Seavert. “As a...
Bad news continues to flow more than three weeks after a massive oil-rig explosion 50 miles off the Louisiana coast, fueling collective senses of not just dread but frustration. Yet many Americans looking for a way to help counter this environmental (and economic)...