MONTREAL, Canada – Coca-Colas and fried foods are no longer for sale at Montreal’s Vanier College.

School administrators deemed those items too unhealthy.

And in case students weren’t intelligent enough to read the nutritional facts on the food labels, school officials implemented a color-code system this year to break it down for them: green is for healthy foods, yellow is for things like dark chocolate and chocolate chip cookies, and red foods are bad – chips, salted nuts, and processed chocolate bars, according to CJAD news.

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“We want to educate them to look at what they’re eating, and to develop good habits for life,” Normand W. Bernier, the college’s director general, told the news site. “Exercises is one thing, but healthy habits for life is another.”

“Vanier isn’t the only Montreal educational institution to implement some pretty radical changes to the on-campus food scene. McGill tossed out their Tim Hortons & Pizza Pizza location in the RedPath Library, which fueled many students’ all-nighters during exams, replacing both with a Premiere Moisson, and has been increasing their healthy food choices over the last five years,” MTLblog.com reports.

Reactions to the news were mixed.

“I go to Vainer. I love that they banned greasy food because they only sold greasy food,” Erika Rao posted to Facebook. “The only healthy option was an old $6 salad.”

Richard posted quite a different take to the CJAD story.

“Hypocrites,” he wrote. “They are not promoting anything … They are shoving it down their throats … Who are they to tell anyone what they can and cannot eat? Society will be better off when everyone learns to mind their own business.”

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Others agreed with Richard.

“So Vanier is telling the world that their students are too stupid to run their own lives?” Michael David Freel questioned on Facebook.

“Bad idea,” Allan Julius posted. “At that point in your life you are responsible enough to know what is going in your body. If the student chooses to consume fatty foods, that is his/her choice.”

“Kind of a ‘Big Brother’ move … It is (college) … NOT high school! Part of the learning process is to make responsible choices,” DRobert John wrote on the MTLBlog’s Facebook page.