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Cruz Azul thrash Vancouver Whitecaps to CONCACAF Champions Cup title

Cruz Azul thrash Vancouver Whitecaps to CONCACAF Champions Cup title

Reuters2 days ago

MEXICO CITY, June 1 (Reuters) - Mexican club Cruz Azul clinched a record-equalling seventh CONCACAF Champions Cup title with a crushing 5-0 victory over Canada's Vancouver Whitecaps in the final at the Olympic Stadium on Sunday.
Hosts Cruz Azul struck early, taking the lead in the eighth minute as Carlos Rotondi slid in to square the ball for captain Ignacio Rivero, who calmly finished in a one-on-one.
Lorenzo Faravelli doubled the lead 20 minutes later, winning back the ball and unleashing a superb strike that curled in off the far post, before Angel Sepulveda and Mateusz Bogusz added another two goals before the break.
While the Major League Soccer side failed to record a single shot, striker Sepulveda added his second goal with a 50th-minute header as Cruz Azul joined Mexican rivals America as the most successful clubs in the 60-year history of the competition.

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Major change coming to M&M's and other foods as RFK sets sights on nation's favorites
Major change coming to M&M's and other foods as RFK sets sights on nation's favorites

Daily Mail​

time21 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Major change coming to M&M's and other foods as RFK sets sights on nation's favorites

Americans may soon see a new label on their favorite snacks, warning them they are full of potentially dangerous ingredients. A new bill expected to be signed into law would require companies to print a label on their food products if they contain additives, including dyes and bleached flour. The legislation, backed by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr, is targeting additives and ingredients that are mostly banned or require warnings in other countries. While Senate Bill 25 is moving through lawmakers in Texas, because of the nature of production and sale of goods in the US, it is likely people across America will soon see the warning labels. The bill lists more than 40 ingredients, such as synthetic dyes, titanium dioxide, bleached flour, partially hydrogenated oils, melatonin and various food colorings, including Red dye 40 - which have been associated with childhood behavioral problems, cancer and infertility. 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Texas is not alone in its overhaul. Both California and West Virginia are passing laws to ban some artificial food colorings. There are at least 30 others, mostly Democratic state, considering similar legislation. This is not the first time lawmakers have sought to make America's food safer - and companies are being pressured to respond. Last week, Mars Wrigley, the global confectionery giant behind Skittles, quietly reformulated its recipe after a blistering new health report chaired by the secretary linked one of its ingredients to DNA damage and possible cancer risks. The company confirmed it removed titanium dioxide from its rainbow-colored candies in the United States. The move follows growing international scrutiny of the additive's potential health effects. Titanium dioxide is widely used in processed foods to give a bright, opaque appearance but it has increasingly come under fire for what experts warn may be genotoxic and carcinogenic properties. The change comes in the wake of a bombshell report from the Make America Healthy Again Commission, led by Kennedy Jr. The report warned titanium dioxide, among other food additives, 'may cause cellular and DNA damage' - particularly in children, who are exposed to such chemicals at higher rates through snack foods, candies, and sauces. For decades, titanium dioxide has been considered a 'safe' additive by US regulators but in 2022, the European Union banned its use entirely, citing concerns over its genotoxic effects after extensive European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) reviews. The sudden change made by Mars Wrigley to its product formula in order to comply with the agency may also be adopted by other manufacturers. Last month Kennedy Jr sought to have food petroleum based food dyes removed from sweets, cakes and other treats sold in the US - including Blue 1, Red 40, and Yellow 6. 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Trump to sign order doubling metals tariffs, White House says
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Reuters

time28 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Trump to sign order doubling metals tariffs, White House says

WASHINGTON, June 3 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump will sign an executive order on Tuesday making official his vow to double tariffs on steel and aluminum, White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told reporters in a briefing. Trump on Friday announced that he would increase tariffs on the two metals from 25% to 50%. On Monday, U.S. steel and aluminum prices jumped while shares of foreign steelmakers fell.

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