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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">LOS ANGELES Two years ago, the Los Angeles Unified School District
tried to spruce up its lunch menu, with cafeteria ladies dishing out
chicken tandoori, sushi, and broccoli and beef with brown rice.The kids
hated it.So the nation's second-largest school district went back to basics.
The district overhauled the menu last year after students turned away from
unfamiliar fare. This year's menu will feature enchiladas, lasagna and beef
sliders."There's nothing that the kids said, out and out, 'Get rid of
that,'" Food Services chief David Hinkle told the Daily News of Los
Angeles (http://bit.ly/18RYnM7). "We're trying to keep the menu cycle the
same and interject a few new things here and there, based on
student feedback."The district will try to sneak some goodness into the
food. The fare, which will include taco salad and chicken-and-waffles, is
designed to cut down on fat, salt and sugar and to meet
federal nutritional guidelines."I'm really excited about the savory waffle,"
Binkle said. "It's a potato and chives, yeast-raised waffle with no sugar
added. Students tried it this summer, and I believe that it will
be a successful product."A few selections were created by students who won
district-run culinary contests held last year.Guadalupe Gonzalez of Panorama
High School came up with a breakfast tart containing fresh fruit and
fruit syrup.West Adams High School students Esther Segura and Jose Landaverde
contributed the "Tex-Mex Corn Bre
MIAMI The Justice Department has shifted course on whether terrorism defendants
deserve notice about evidence derived from formerly secret government surveillance
programs.Prosecutors in a Miami case involving two Pakistani-born brothers
now acknowledge they must notify the defendants if evidence from National
Security Agency phone and Internet surveillance programs were part of the
case. In May, the government insisted no such notice was required.The change
follows leaks by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden revealing the massive
surveillance programs to the public. The programs were authorized by amendments
to the Patriot Act in 2008.Despite the shift, prosecutors say they don't
plan to use any of this evidence to prosecute Raees Alam Qazi
and Sheheryar Alam Qazi. Both have pleaded not guilty to terrorism-related
charges involving an alleged New York bomb plot.
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