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| 8/15/08 | California Focus: The State of California contains chemicals! Orange County Register: Chances are good that in the past 22 years, you've seen warning labels on everyday items cautioning that you've been exposed to chemicals that the state of California has deemed dangerous. |
| 7/30/08 | Food only part of obesity problem The Oklahoman: The cause of obesity isn't what you think. |
| 7/22/08 | Leave calorie counts off the menu; Nutrition is more complex than a few figures can convey. Los Angeles Times: Although The Times’ editorial was right that "laws that protect consumers from their own unhealthful habits have more than a whiff of the nanny state about them," its support for menu labeling is wrong. |
| 7/15/08 | Put Helmsley's billions to use in animal shelters Seattle Post-Intelligencer: PETA and HSUS have announced their intentions to claim big slices of the $8 billion bounty. But neither one has the track record to handle such a responsibility. |
| 5/24/08 | Exercise, not food cost, key to good weight South Florida Sun Sentinel: here's no shortage of scapegoats to take the blame for obesity. From our genes to our social circles, headlines over the last few decades have been filled with "surprising" and "new" causes of weight gain. |
| 4/12/08 | The mercury-in-the-fish story Providence Journal: Americans have been drowning in stories about “toxic” tuna sushi and high mercury levels in fish. |
| 4/11/08 | What's on the menu? Regulation Orange County Register: There are ways to ensure that consumers have access to a surplus of information without having it thrust in their faces on restaurant menus. |
| 1/6/08 | A Healthy Diet Doesn’t Mean You Are The Oregonian: Many health officials criticize the modern American diet, suggesting that our grandparents’ nutrition was notably superior. |
| 12/31/07 | Blame The Couch, Not Food Industry, For Obesity Tampa Tribune: Holidays are the season for nostalgia. Without fail, reference to the “good old days” often turns into debates over contemporary headaches. |
| 12/16/07 | Small choices and big bodies Ventura County Star: Deciding whether to walk or drive is just as important as the decision to go back for second helpings. |
| 12/5/07 | Preserve right to eat without guilt: Don't post calories of fast-food dishes San Jose Mercury News: Americans should still have a right to guilt-free eating. |
| 11/23/07 | Diet isn't the only answer Philadelphia Inquirer: A quick inventory of our homes and offices provides more insight into our weight woes than any nutrition survey. |
| 10/16/07 | California Focus: The new animal-rights battleground Orange County Register: The animal-rights movement is far from harmless. And since California seems to be the current animal-rights Ground Zero, it's worth considering what the movement stands for. |
| 10/2/07 | Americans should still have a right to guilt-free eating. The Desert Sun: Menu labeling- the latest quick-fix diet scheme proposed in the name of public health—assumes that consumers can’t tell the difference between French fries and fruit cups. |
| 5/20/07 | Food labels on menus make no sense Albany Times Union: Be warned. Perrier, plastic bags and Grandma's pot roast are the latest threats to public health. |
| 5/1/07 | Don't Trash Snacks; Encourage Exercise Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Taking its cue from these crash diets and the New Year's resolution to give up all "bad" food (this time for real), the Institute of Medicine has just proposed prohibitive new guidelines for eating in schools. |
| 2/13/07 | N.C. case exposed PETA's hypocrisy The Virginian-Pilot: Norfolk-based PETA regularly orders its staffers to kill animals. Records from Virginia’s Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services indicate that between 1998 and 2005, PETA “put down” more than 14,400 pets. |
| 9/29/06 | Deep-fried hysteria New York Daily News: First of all, New York, let's take a deep breath. Good? Good. |
| 9/13/06 | Animal-rights radicals fail to value human life Home News Tribune (East Brunswick, NJ): Six animal-rights extremists will go to prison, but many more are out there. While law enforcement can respond to arson fires and death threats, subtler attacks on the future of humanity demand everyone's vigilance. |
| 8/12/06 | Mercury Risk? Scares mislead American consumers The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel: How tiny are the traces of mercury in fish? University of Rochester scientists report in the New England Journal of Medicine that there haven't been any clinical reports of fish-related mercury poisoning since the 1950s and 1960s. |
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