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TotalEnergies profits drop as prices slide
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Volkswagen says tariffs will dampen business as profit plunges
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Jeep owner Stellantis suspends 2025 earnings forecast over tariffs
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China's Shenzhou-19 astronauts return to Earth
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French economy returns to thin growth in first quarter
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Ex-Premier League star Li Tie loses appeal in 20-year bribery sentence
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Belgium's green light for red light workers
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Haliburton leads comeback as Pacers advance, Celtics clinch
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Rahm out to break 2025 win drought ahead of US PGA Championship
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Japan tariff envoy departs for round two of US talks
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Djurgarden eyeing Chelsea upset in historic Conference League semi-final
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Haliburton leads comeback as Pacers advance, Pistons stay alive
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Bunker-cafe on Korean border paints image of peace
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Tunics & turbans: Afghan students don Taliban-imposed uniforms
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Asian markets struggle as trade war hits China factory activity
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Norwegian success story: Bodo/Glimt's historic run to a European semi-final
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Spurs attempt to grasp Europa League lifeline to save dismal season
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Thawing permafrost dots Siberia with rash of mounds
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S. Korea prosecutors raid ex-president's house over shaman probe: Yonhap
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Filipino cardinal, the 'Asian Francis', is papal contender
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Samsung Electronics posts 22% jump in Q1 net profit
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Pietro Parolin, career diplomat leading race to be pope
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Nuclear submarine deal lurks below surface of Australian election
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China's manufacturing shrinks in April as trade war bites
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Financial markets may be the last guardrail on Trump
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Swedish journalist's trial opens in Turkey
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Kiss says 'honour of a lifetime' to coach Wallabies at home World Cup
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US growth figure expected to make for tough reading for Trump
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Opposition leader confirmed winner of Trinidad elections
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Snedeker, Ogilvy to skipper Presidents Cup teams: PGA Tour
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Win or bust in Europa League for Amorim's Man Utd
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Trump celebrates 100 days in office with campaign-style rally
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Top Cuban dissidents detained after court revokes parole
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Arteta urges Arsenal to deliver 'special' fightback against PSG
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Trump fires Kamala Harris's husband from Holocaust board
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Pakistan says India planning strike as tensions soar over Kashmir attack
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Weinstein sex attack accuser tells court he 'humiliated' her
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France accuses Russian military intelligence over cyberattacks
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Global stocks mostly rise as Trump grants auto tariff relief
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Grand Vietnam parade 50 years after the fall of Saigon
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Trump fires ex first gentleman Emhoff from Holocaust board
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PSG 'not getting carried away' despite holding edge against Arsenal
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Cuban dissidents detained after court revokes parole
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Sweden stunned by new deadly gun attack
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BRICS blast 'resurgence of protectionism' in Trump era
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Trump tempers auto tariffs, winning cautious praise from industry
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'Cruel measure': Dominican crackdown on Haitian hospitals
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'It's only half-time': Defiant Raya says Arsenal can overturn PSG deficit
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Dembele sinks Arsenal as PSG seize edge in Champions League semi-final
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Les Kiss to take over Wallabies coach role from mid-2026

Biden relaunches cancer 'moonshot' to halve death rate
President Joe Biden announced a relaunch of the government's cancer "moonshot" effort in a White House ceremony Wednesday, setting a goal of cutting the US death rate from the disease by half.
The ambitious effort was first launched in 2016 with $1.8 billion in federal funds spread out over seven years. Only $400 million of that remains available to cover this year and 2023.
Biden, whose son Beau died of brain cancer in 2015 at age 46, spearheaded the original project as vice president under Barack Obama. Speaking to a packed room in the White House, he said he wanted to breath new life into "an American moment."
"This is a presidential priority," he said: to "end cancer as we know it."
The goal, Biden said, is to cut today's age-adjusted death rate from cancer by 50 percent over the next 25 years.
He proposed achieving this through leadership in marshalling resources for a more united effort between patients, hospitals, biopharmaceutical companies and researchers.
A White House Cancer Moonshot coordinator has been named and a cross-governmental cabinet will oversee goals, including expanding and reorganizing cancer screening networks.
Emphasis is also being put on addressing racial inequity in access to cancer care.
Biden said a particularly urgent step is to redress the backlog of nine million cancer screenings from canceled appointments during the Covid-19 pandemic.
"Screening is how you catch it early before it's too late," he said, adding that he knew a check-up could be "scary."
- 'Grief' and 'purpose' -
The initiative's name deliberately echoes the 1969 triumph of NASA landing the first humans on the Moon.
However, so far there is no new funding announced.
Biden urged Congress to help and a senior official told reporters he was "very confident that there will be robust funding."
"I've got to say, in these times of disagreements, there's certainly one thing on which we all agree, across party, across everything -- which is the effect of cancer on their lives," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
"I know nothing that unites us more and that is more bipartisan."
In speeches, Biden and his wife Jill spoke of the pain and shock they endured as they searched for solutions to their son's fatal illness.
"For Joe and me, it has stolen our joy. It left us broken in our grief," the first lady said. "But through that pain we found purpose, strengthening our fortitude for this fight to end cancer as we know it."
Vice President Kamala Harris also spoke movingly about her mother, a breast cancer researcher who died of colon cancer in 2009.
"My mother's discovery helped save women's lives," she said. Then "after a lifetime working to end cancer, cancer ended my mother's life."
However there is hope for a cure, the vice president said.
"Today we are closer than we have ever been. Since the turn of the century we have made significant breakthroughs," she said. "When we reach the Moon, we plant our flag on it."
Already since 2000, the death rate from cancer among Americans has fallen by around 25 percent as a result of better treatments, diagnosis capabilities, therapeutics, vaccines and a halving in adult long-term cigarette smoking.
S.Keller--BTB