The Washington Post A popular school fundraiser is just «junk - food marketing to kids,» experts say If you've been a kid or had a kid over the past four decades, you're probably familiar with the concept of cutting
cereal box tops and other food labels for school - related rewards.
A few days later some of them stopped by the school with Campbell's Soup labels,
cereal box tops, and magazines.
Not exact matches
If you have supported a professional football club in England for any significant period of time, then at some point you're more than likely to have cheered and clapped a few, maybe more, of the following: racists, sexists, homophobes, bigots, petty criminals, bad husbands, bad fathers, adulterers, tax dodgers, wife - beaters, liars, people who don't close the
tops of
cereal boxes, Conservatives, and instances of any of the other shades and shapes of the evil that men do.
In the UK, Nestlé co-opted schools to promote its high salt, high sugar breakfast
cereals to pupils through its «
box -
tops for education «scheme.
The Minneapolis - based company has launched a national program called «
Box Tops for Education» in which it pledges to give schools 15 cents for every box top collected from any of the 37 General Mills cereal bran
Box Tops for Education» in which it pledges to give schools 15 cents for every
box top collected from any of the 37 General Mills cereal bran
box top collected from any of the 37 General Mills
cereal brands.
Box Tops for Education from General Mills involves collecting box tops from cereals and snacks and submitting them to the company in return for fun
Box Tops for Education from General Mills involves collecting box tops from cereals and snacks and submitting them to the company in return for fu
Tops for Education from General Mills involves collecting
box tops from cereals and snacks and submitting them to the company in return for fun
box tops from cereals and snacks and submitting them to the company in return for fu
tops from
cereals and snacks and submitting them to the company in return for funds.
To participate, just clip pink
box top labels from hundreds of participating products — including
cereal, snacks, office products and many others — then drop them into the collection
box in the school office.
«Every day, I go into homes that are packed to the gills, closets overflowing, and
cereal boxes stored on the
top of the refrigerator,» she says.