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Show Ecology Center ses soap ; - " hit V "You'll be doing yourself and your sewer water a favor by using bio-degradeable soap," says Randy Cibbs of the University Ecology Center. "After all, that same water is going to come back to you to use again, eventually. So the Ecology Center, becoming a distributorship for bio-degradeable soap, is giving people a vehicle whereby they can clean up their water," said Mr. Gibbs. Beginning Monday, bio-degradeable cleaning products will be on sale in the University Ecology Center every Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The Ecology Center is located on the south end of the ground floor of the University Union. The products sold in the Ecology Center ' will begin to break down the compounds within 72 hours estimates Mr. Gibbs. He also noted that the phosphate level in the center's laundry soap is 21 percent, which he explained is just above the 20 percent minimum level set by the government as that needed to clean clothes so it will clean and still be safe for your sewers. The Ecology Center's laundry, bath, shampoo sham-poo and heavy-duty soaps all come in concentrated form. Mr. Gibbs suggests that this makes them not only safer but more economical than other commercial brands of soaps. He cited their shampoo which should be diluted five times before use. All of the profits made from the Center's bio-degradeable soap distributorship will go towards building a full-scale re-cycling center for the University. All salesmen are donating their time. i Itirct CjbbS S,ands next to a shelf fu" of bio-degradeable soaps. Such soaps can be I ned at the University's Ecology Center in the Union basement beginning Monday. if) |