Some help from our friends...
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- Reduce hassle headaches with these tips to help bring your life under control.
- For frosh, here's a crash course in doing laundry and negotiating with messy roommates.
- Tara Aronson shows you how to get organized — and stay that way!
- The tireless professionals at the IEHA have a few tricks up their sleeves for accomplishing the most work in the shortest amount of time. Here are just a few that can help you keep your home looking like a showcase.
- After the storm, is the food in your refrigerator still safe to eat?
- Extend the useful life of upholstered furniture and keep it looking great by caring for it properly.
- TruthOrFiction.com evaluates the claims of this emailed rumor: Some dryer softener sheets can clog your lint filter.
- If not properly installed, maintained and operated, air duct components may become contaminated with particles of dust, pollen or other debris.
- The good news is that the most difficult and expensive measures are not always the most effective – nor are they always necessary.
- Q & A with Thad Godish, Ph.D.
- The ever-ready vehicle is stocked with the necessities that will make you look as organized as you really will be.
- Keep electrical cleaning appliances from becoming hazardous.
- How to make your own formulas for a more natural approach to cleaning.
- How to gain a clean victory
- Something about eliminating useless stuff just feels right.
- Simplify your day.
- Anyone who has washed or worn white clothes knows that white shirts stop looking white after a few washes and start to turn a shade of gray. A new laundry-detergent enzyme helps prevent this from happening, without the use of bleach.
- Pocket pets can transmit salmonella to people. Here's how to handle them safely.
- Every year the combination of winter storms and frozen pipes causes millions of dollars in water damage to homes and buildings. Here's what you can do to prevent problems or clean up.
- EPA's Science Advisory Board has identified perchloroethylene as a possible to probable human carcinogen.