CORRECTION: February 27th
On today's article about the ban on high-sugar drinks in elementary schools, a word was misspelled when citing an interview with a parent. We wrote "-There was a pop-up desert station, where kids spent a couple of hours. The school provided sugary drinks when they expressed extreme thirst, but the administration could have provided water instead."
The word desert has been changed for the word dessert. While both instances would cause some thirst among children, the school is not engaged in any type of natural and/or ecological torture in the form of man-made extreme environments, such as deserts.
On today's article about the ban on high-sugar drinks in elementary schools, a word was misspelled when citing an interview with a parent. We wrote "-There was a pop-up desert station, where kids spent a couple of hours. The school provided sugary drinks when they expressed extreme thirst, but the administration could have provided water instead."
The word desert has been changed for the word dessert. While both instances would cause some thirst among children, the school is not engaged in any type of natural and/or ecological torture in the form of man-made extreme environments, such as deserts.
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