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The Claymore mine is a directional anti-personnel mine developed for the United States Armed Forces. Its inventor, Norman MacLeod, named the mine after a large medieval Scottish sword . [ citation needed ] Unlike a conventional land mine, the Claymore may be command-detonated (fired by remote-control), and is directional, shooting a wide ...
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The Food and Drug Administration is making moves to ban the synthetic food coloring Red No. 3.. Last week, Jim Jones, the FDA’s deputy commissioner for human foods, shared with the Senate Health ...
Manufacturers who use Red No. 3 in food have until Jan. 15, 2027, to reformulate their products, and ingested-drug makers have until Jan. 18, 2028, to comply with the ban.
The organization in support is "California Right to Know" and the organization against is "NO Prop. 37, Stop the Deceptive Food Labeling Scheme". As of November 6, 2012, the total donations to each side were $9.2 million in support, and $46 million in opposition. The top 10 donors to each side are as follows: [15]
Food companies exploit a loophole in the FDA’s rules that let them self-determine an additive’s safety, yielding obvious conflicts of interest.
> As such it is now usually referred to as the "M18A1 Claymore" or simply the "Claymore". not accurate (based on the flawed reasoning which precedes) - an "A1M1 tank" is commonly referred to as an "A1M1" but this is not noteworthy - i.e. this mention of the vernacular name of the "claymore landmine" being "claymore" needn't be included in the wiki.
California Governor Gavin Newsom has signed a law banning red No. 40 and five other chemicals from use in public school foods. Chemicals used in many popular food and drink products now banned ...