Your days of avoiding healthful school lunches and filling up on cookies from the vending machine are numbered. The government is onto you.
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The new restrictions fill a gap in nutrition rules that allowed students to load up on fat, sugar and salt despite guidelines for healthful meals.
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For the first time, the U. S. Agriculture Department is telling schools what types of snacks they can sell.
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"Parents will no longer have to worry that their kids are using their lunch money to buy junk food and junk drinks at school." said Margo Wootan, a Center for Science in the Public Interest lobbyist who pushed for the new rules.
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Snacks that make the grade include granola bars, low-fat tortilla chips, fruit cups and 100 percent fruit juice.
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But starting in the fall of 2014, say goodbye to beloved school standbys such as doughy pretzels, chocolate chip cookies and those little ice cream cups.
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There are no vending machines at Lauren Jones's middle school in Hoover, Alabama, but she said there's a stand that sells chips and ice cream.
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That doesn't mean schools will sell only Brussels sprouts and broccoli.
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"Having something sweet to go with your meal is good sometimes." said Lauren, who is 13. Thank you.
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Some may survive in low-fat or whole-wheat versions.
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