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BUSINESS
February 24, 2007 |
California is preparing to label new autos to show for the first time the vehicles' annual emissions of so-called greenhouse gases linked to global warming. The stickers, the first in the U.S., should be approved by the California Air Resources Board by June and should start appearing on 2009 model cars and light trucks, board spokesman Jerry Martin said. The board will hold a hearing next month on the labels.

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NATIONAL
March 15, 2007 |
Under pressure from the federal government, drug makers are revising the labels on Ambien, Lunesta and other popular sleep aids to warn that the pills may result in driving, eating and even having sex while sleeping, health officials said. The manufacturers of 13 medications are preparing information bulletins for users that will highlight the possibility of bizarre nighttime side effects.
HEALTH
March 19, 2007 | By Melissa Healy,
FOR the nutritionally conscious food shopper, a stroll down the supermarket aisle has become the visual equivalent of a frenetic day at the carnival: With each visit, new nutritional claims leap from boxes and packaging to hawk their products' healthful attributes, a cacophony of urgent and eye-catching messages. "Sensible Solution!" cry the packages of cookies, lunch meats and mac 'n' cheese. "Approved bestlife!" calls the reduced-fat mayonnaise. "3-a-Day!" sings the tub of yogurt.
FOOD
March 28, 2007 | By Corie Brown,
EVER wonder what goes into a bottle of wine? The story winemakers love to tell on the bottle label is one of a mystical alchemy of climate, soils, ancient practices and long traditions. Wine labels tend to focus on romance; the small amount of government-mandated information includes the percentage of alcohol, a warning against consuming wine when pregnant or driving, and a disclosure of sulfites.
SCIENCE
May 3, 2007 | By Denise Gellene,
The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday approved the strongest possible warning for antidepressants to alert doctors and patients that the drugs could increase the risk of suicidal thinking and behavior in adults 18 to 24. The so-called black box warning follows a similar labeling change approved in 2004 for children and adolescents.
BUSINESS
May 24, 2007 |
California's Napa Valley is making a name for itself in Europe with officials there declaring that wine bottles can't say "Napa" on the label if the grapes come from someplace else. The European Union's decision to grant Napa Valley what is known as "geographic indicator" status, reached this year and scheduled to be formally announced in San Francisco today, was hailed by vintners as a breakthrough.
BUSINESS
July 15, 2007 |
Cadbury Schweppes was sued by a consumer and accused of falsely labeling its Snapple juice drinks as "all natural." Hemant Mehta sued London-based Cadbury in New York federal court, asking to represent more than 1,000 people in a class-action suit and seeking damages of at least $100 million. The company markets Snapple drinks using slogans such as "made from the best stuff on Earth" when they contain high-fructose corn syrup and other "non natural" products, according to the complaint.
BUSINESS
July 20, 2007 |
The House Agriculture Committee voted Thursday night to require country-of-origin labels on meats beginning next year, striking a compromise as reports of tainted food from China raise consumer awareness about the safety of imported food. After days of negotiations, the committee agreed on a plan to allow the mandatory labels but soften penalties and burdensome record-keeping requirements that had concerned many food retailers and meatpackers who opposed the legislation.
BUSINESS
July 27, 2007 |
PepsiCo Inc. will spell out that its Aquafina bottled water is made with tap water, a concession to the growing environmental and political opposition to the bottled water industry. According to Corporate Accountability International, a U.S. watchdog group, the world's No. 2 beverage company will include the words "public water source" on Aquafina labels.
BUSINESS
August 2, 2007 | By Jim Puzzanghera,
Warning: Copyright threats on DVDs and TV broadcasts may be misstating the law. A high-tech trade group made that charge Wednesday to the Federal Trade Commission, alleging deceptive trade practices for the scary copyright warnings before movies and during sports broadcasts. The Computer and Communications Industry Assn. said it was trying to protect the public's legal rights from overzealous media companies, which in turn said they were simply trying to protect their content.
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