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Use vinegar, baking soda, lemon with salt, or Bar Keepers Friend to gently clean rust from fixtures. Try CLR or WD-40 for tougher rust or hard-to-reach spots. Prevent rust by drying fixtures, avoiding ...
President Trump has signed an executive order on Thursday aiming to provide resources that would push cities and states to remove homeless people from sleeping on streets and to crack down on drug use ...
Bleach is out, and a gentler alternative is now taking over on TikTok. Hypochlorous acid (HOCl), once used mostly in hospitals and dermatology offices, is now having a moment as one of the safest, ...
We may receive a commission on purchases made from links. If there's anything TikTok does with a degree of consistency, it's recommending bizarre life hacks often involving using food in decidedly non ...
US ice cream makers are planning to eliminate a number of artificial colors from their products by 2028, representing another milestone for Health & Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and ...
Peter Aitken is a Newsweek Politics Editor based in New York. His focus is domestic U.S. politics, but he has experience covering Foreign Affairs, Business and Technology. Peter joined Newsweek in ...
Researchers at Georgia Tech’s School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering (ChBE) have developed a promising approach for removing carbon dioxide (CO₂) from the atmosphere to help mitigate global ...
Festival season is well and truly underway, with Glastonbury wrapping up its 53rd year of the festival this weekend, and many more events including Forwards Festival, Creamfields, and All Points East ...
There are a lot of dangers PEAK players must avoid to make it to the final peak of the game in the fifth biome. One of the most prominent dangers in the first half of a run is poison, which tends to ...
Kraft Heinz says it will be removing all artificial food dyes from products sold in the U.S. starting in 2027, and it will stop making new products with these dyes, effective immediately. In a ...
Wild chimpanzees have been observed self-medicating their wounds with plants, providing medical aid to other chimps and even removing others from snares left by human hunters, new research suggests.