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Top 2 march 2026 News Today

#1
PWHL players who competed in the 2026 Winter Olympics
#1 out of 2
sports21h ago

PWHL players who competed in the 2026 Winter Olympics

  • 61 PWHL players from eight countries competed in Milan at the 2026 Winter Olympics.
  • Canada sent 23 PWHL players to the Games, the largest representation from any country.
  • The United States had 16 PWHL players compete, contributing to their Olympic team.
  • League origins: the PWHL launched in 2023 and paused during its third season.
  • Eight teams from the league were represented on Olympic rosters.
  • Canada’s roster included players like Laura Stacey and Hayley Scamurra on the list.
  • The ESPN hub page is highlighted as the source for the latest Olympic coverage.
  • Players represented Canada, United States, Czechia, Sweden, Finland, Germany, Switzerland, and Italy.
  • ESPN notes 61 PWHL players across eight nations participated in Olympic hockey.
  • The article lists player names by team affiliations including Seattle Torrent and Toronto Sceptres.
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#2
The real reason all of your eggs still aren’t cage-free
#2 out of 2
business9h ago

The real reason all of your eggs still aren’t cage-free

  • Ahold Delhaize extends its cage-free deadline to 2032 while promising two-year progress benchmarks.
  • The company will share progress annually and post signs in egg aisles highlighting cage-free cartons.
  • Activists credited the extended timeline as a significant policy shift in grocery store accountability.
  • Vox explains the broader context: grocery stores influence half of the US egg supply and drive cage-free progress.
  • Some competitors, like Costco and Trader Joe’s, advanced to near full cage-free egg supply.
  • Bird flu and price volatility are cited as reasons for delayed cage-free adoption.
  • The Accountability Board and activists pressed Ahold Delhaize with protests and media campaigns.
  • Vox highlights the cage-free movement’s two-pronged strategy: corporate pledges and state cage-free laws.
  • Vox notes that cage-free is not cruelty-free, but represents a major improvement for many hens.
  • The piece frames progress as a potential momentum shift for grocery-led animal welfare efforts.
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