Students at the new Northeast Magnet High School have lunch Thursday, Sept. 20, 2012. New school lunch guidelines aimed at combating obesity may have had an unintended consequence for some students -- hunger. A growing number of students, teachers and political leaders in Kansas and elsewhere say the new, smaller portion sizes don't provide enough calories for kids, especially teenagers and athletes, to get through a school day.
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Mike Hutmacher / The Wichita Eagle
Northeast Magnet High School food service worker Cheryl Glymph serves lunch Thursday, Sept. 20, 2012. New school lunch guidelines aimed at combating obesity may have had an unintended consequence for some students -- hunger. A growing number of students, teachers and political leaders in Kansas and elsewhere say the new, smaller portion sizes don't provide enough calories for kids, especially teenagers and athletes, to get through a school day.
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Mike Hutmacher / The Wichita Eagle
Northeast Magnet High School student Sam Eckels has chicken strips for lunch Thursday, Sept. 20, 2012. New school lunch guidelines aimed at combating obesity may have had an unintended consequence for some students -- hunger. A growing number of students, teachers and political leaders in Kansas and elsewhere say the new, smaller portion sizes don't provide enough calories for kids, especially teenagers and athletes, to get through a school day.
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Mike Hutmacher / The Wichita Eagle
Students at the new Northeast Magnet High School have lunch Thursday, Sept. 20, 2012. New school lunch guidelines aimed at combating obesity may have had an unintended consequence for some students -- hunger. A growing number of students, teachers and political leaders in Kansas and elsewhere say the new, smaller portion sizes don't provide enough calories for kids, especially teenagers and athletes, to get through a school day.
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Mike Hutmacher / The Wichita Eagle
Vicki Hoffman, nutrition director for USD 259, watches Northeast Magnet High School students have lunch Thursday, Sept. 20, 2012. New school lunch guidelines aimed at combating obesity may have had an unintended consequence for some students -- hunger. A growing number of students, teachers and political leaders in Kansas and elsewhere say the new, smaller portion sizes don't provide enough calories for kids, especially teenagers and athletes, to get through a school day.
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Mike Hutmacher / The Wichita Eagle
Students at the new Northeast Magnet High School have lunch Thursday, Sept. 20, 2012. From left are Reyanna Gauna, Craig Barkus, Jackie Perez-Espinoza, Chelsea Schlegel and Anthony Darnell. New school lunch guidelines aimed at combating obesity may have had an unintended consequence for some students -- hunger.
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Mike Hutmacher / The Wichita Eagle
Students at the new Northeast Magnet High School have lunch Thursday, Sept. 20, 2012. New school lunch guidelines aimed at combating obesity may have had an unintended consequence for some students -- hunger. A growing number of students, teachers and political leaders in Kansas and elsewhere say the new, smaller portion sizes don't provide enough calories for kids, especially teenagers and athletes, to get through a school day.
Link to image
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Mike Hutmacher / The Wichita Eagle